Clutter family farmhouse. |
This year is the 60th
anniversary of the brutal murders of the Clutter family in Kansas.
One of the best-selling crime
books of all time is In Cold Blood by Truman Capote. This author spent six years
researching this horrific crime.
Truman Capote at the Farmhouse. |
A film, of the same name, was
released in 1967, based upon Capote’s book. I saw this film when I was young.
The scene at the end when the heartbeat stops, freaked me out--- not that I had
or have any sympathy for the murderers.
Herb Clutter, his wife Bonnie
and two of his four children, Nancy, 16 and Kenyon, 14 were asleep when two
drifters broke into their farmhouse outside Holcomb, Kansas, in 1959, intending to rob
the family.
Herb, Bonnie, Nancy and Kenyon Clutter. |
These two thugs, Richard
“Dick” Hickok, and Perry Edward, traveling across Kansas had heard a rumor that
a wealthy wheat farmer had $10,000 stashed in his house.
But once inside the Clutter
home they realized there was only fifty dollars.
The two murderers. |
Enraged the two men then
proceeded to shoot each family member with a shotgun. Bonnie and Nancy were
killed in their beds, and Herb and Kenyon were bound and killed in the
basement.
Each family member was shot
point blank in the head. Mr. Clutter’s throat was slit as well.
Kansas State Prison gallows where they were hanged. |
Six weeks after these two
murders, the two men were arrested when a “jailhouse snitch” told on them. They
were tried and convicted, and after five years of appeals, they were both
executed by hanging.
Since the Clutter family
deaths, two other families have owned the farmhouse. In 2006, the house was put
up for auction, but there were no takers.
Local witnesses claim the
house is actively haunted. They believe the ghost present is Nancy, Herb’s
youngest daughter. Her spirit is seen, after dark, wandering the home and
property off Oak Avenue.
A short excerpt in Joanne
Austin’s book, Weird Happenings, True Tales of Ghostly Places states something
else odd happens at this farmhouse.
A bloodstain believed to be
Herb Clutter’s blood remains on one basement wall. Over the years, regardless
of how many times it has been scrubbed or painted over –it returns.
Photograph of the bloodstain. |
The last family to own this
house gave tours for a fee. But after being accused of making money off this
tragedy, they stopped. The farm is private property, and trespassing is not
allowed.
The family that last owned the house was gracious enough to let us tour the home.
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