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In 1928 a troubled young man stared at the dollar bill in his palm and watched George Washington's face slowly become the face of the man who had cursed him. That man was the gentlest soul in the county, and naming him was a death sentence.
This is the true story of the Hex Murder. The night three frightened people walked down into a dark hollow in York County Pennsylvania to beat a gentle old healer to death and break a curse that was never real.
They called Nelson Rehmeyer the Witch of the Hollow. The truth was stranger and far sadder. He was a powwow doctor, a Pennsylvania Dutch folk healer who spent his whole life laying his hands on sick children and frightened farmers and drawing the trouble out of them. He had even once healed the very man, John Blymire, who would come back years later to kill him.
This week on Dust and Echoes we follow Blymire down into Hex Hollow. A man who believed with his entire heart that he had been hexed. A River Witch named Nellie Noll who looked into a dollar bill and handed him a name. A two hundred year old healing tradition called Braucherei. And a book called The Long Lost Friend that promised to make its owner proof against fire, water, and the malice of his enemies. One cold November night dragged an entire quiet culture into the national headlines as the Hex Murder and the Witch Trial, and the wound it left never fully healed.
It is a story about poverty and grief and a mind coming apart in a time that had no language for any of it. About the terrible logic of fear. And about how the only tool these people were ever handed for an invisible pain was the one thing that got a kind man killed.
By James Cawley4.9
4141 ratings
In 1928 a troubled young man stared at the dollar bill in his palm and watched George Washington's face slowly become the face of the man who had cursed him. That man was the gentlest soul in the county, and naming him was a death sentence.
This is the true story of the Hex Murder. The night three frightened people walked down into a dark hollow in York County Pennsylvania to beat a gentle old healer to death and break a curse that was never real.
They called Nelson Rehmeyer the Witch of the Hollow. The truth was stranger and far sadder. He was a powwow doctor, a Pennsylvania Dutch folk healer who spent his whole life laying his hands on sick children and frightened farmers and drawing the trouble out of them. He had even once healed the very man, John Blymire, who would come back years later to kill him.
This week on Dust and Echoes we follow Blymire down into Hex Hollow. A man who believed with his entire heart that he had been hexed. A River Witch named Nellie Noll who looked into a dollar bill and handed him a name. A two hundred year old healing tradition called Braucherei. And a book called The Long Lost Friend that promised to make its owner proof against fire, water, and the malice of his enemies. One cold November night dragged an entire quiet culture into the national headlines as the Hex Murder and the Witch Trial, and the wound it left never fully healed.
It is a story about poverty and grief and a mind coming apart in a time that had no language for any of it. About the terrible logic of fear. And about how the only tool these people were ever handed for an invisible pain was the one thing that got a kind man killed.

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