On this date in 1925, German serial killer Fritz Haarmann dropped his head in a basket in Hanover.
One of the most iconic and most terrifying among Weimar Germany’s ample crop of mass murderers, Haarmann is thought to have slain dozens of boys and young men from 1918 to 1924. (He was charged with 27 murders and convicted in 24 of them; Haarmann himself suggested the true number might be north of 50.)
Such gaudy statistics require teamwork.
This predatory pedophile partnered with one Hans Grans, a younger lover-slash-confederate; together they would lure fresh “game” (Haarmann’s word) for a meal and more.
Everyone dined well — Haarmann especially. Notorious as one of the most prolific “vampire” killers (the press also favored him with this moniker its its search for some epithet equal to the offenses; “werewolf” and “butcher” were also current), Haarmann liked to gnaw through his victims’ throats.
A chilling ditty paid tribute to the unsubstantiated rumor that Haarmann would even butcher the human flesh and sell it as “pork” on the black market. (He was known to trade in black-market meat.)
Just you wait ’til it’s your time,
Haarmann will come after you,
With his chopper, oh so fine,
He’ll make mincemeat out of you.
In the 1931 Fritz Lang classic M, for which Haarmann is one of several influences on the fictional serial killer at the center of the action, this rhyme appears with the name “Haarmann” replaced by “black man”.
Much deeper delves into the mind of this particular madman are to be had here, here and here.
And here:
That accomplice of his, Hans Grans, drew a death sentence too, but Haarmann somehow exculpated him successfully. Not only did Grans get out of prison, the once-notorious homosexual killer lived out the Nazi regime in Hanover un-tortured.
On this day..
- 1327: Beomondo di San Severo
- 1939: Aleksei Gastev, Soviet scientific manager
- 1345: Giovanni Martinozzi, missionary Franciscan
- 1505: One Bolognese thief hanged, and another saved by Saint Nicholas
- 1851: James Jones and Levi Harwood, but not Hiram Smith
- 1715: Thomas Nairne, Charles Town Indian agent
- 1793: Philibert Francois Rouxel de Blanchelande, governor of Saint-Domingue
- 1921: Mailo Segura, a Montenegrin in Alaska
- 1905: Chief Zacharias Kukuri
- 1982: Khalid Islambouli and the assassins of Anwar Sadat
- 1881: The assassins of Tsar Alexander II
- 1947: Fernand de Brinon, Vichy minister with a Jewish wife