1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:07,840 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,200 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales are 3 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:14,680 Speaker 1: right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. 4 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:31,200 Speaker 1: Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. On June, the authorities 5 00:00:31,240 --> 00:00:34,800 Speaker 1: showed up to arrest her. I realized that it might 6 00:00:34,840 --> 00:00:37,400 Speaker 1: have come as a shock to her, but for all 7 00:00:37,440 --> 00:00:40,440 Speaker 1: her neighbors and the community beyond them, it had only 8 00:00:40,479 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 1: been a matter of time. Justice would eventually win the day. 9 00:00:46,040 --> 00:00:50,240 Speaker 1: Her crime was murder. Just a little over two months prior, 10 00:00:50,680 --> 00:00:53,720 Speaker 1: on Easter Sunday, in fact, she had walked into the 11 00:00:53,800 --> 00:00:58,080 Speaker 1: home of her neighbors, the Lafontse, and found the place empty, well, 12 00:00:58,640 --> 00:01:01,960 Speaker 1: not entirely. There was a cradle off to one side 13 00:01:02,000 --> 00:01:04,960 Speaker 1: of the main room, and in it slept the family's 14 00:01:05,000 --> 00:01:09,840 Speaker 1: youngest son. I'm not sure I fully understand why she 15 00:01:09,959 --> 00:01:13,559 Speaker 1: did what she did next, but some people simply make 16 00:01:13,640 --> 00:01:17,600 Speaker 1: bad choices. She chose to harm the boy, as horrible 17 00:01:17,680 --> 00:01:20,800 Speaker 1: as that sounds, and as a result of his injuries, 18 00:01:21,319 --> 00:01:24,760 Speaker 1: the boy died. Whether or not that was her intent 19 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:29,000 Speaker 1: is irrelevant. She was guilty of murder, and so they 20 00:01:29,040 --> 00:01:34,480 Speaker 1: came to arrest her. The trial was swift, so many 21 00:01:34,520 --> 00:01:37,639 Speaker 1: people came forward to testify against her that her guilt 22 00:01:37,800 --> 00:01:43,120 Speaker 1: was without question. Still, witnesses were examined and cross examined, 23 00:01:43,440 --> 00:01:47,760 Speaker 1: testimonies were heard. The judge deliberated and then returned to 24 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:54,600 Speaker 1: the courtroom to declare his verdict. Guilty. Her sentence was execution, 25 00:01:55,120 --> 00:01:59,560 Speaker 1: specifically by hanging, so a gallows was hastily built nearby 26 00:01:59,720 --> 00:02:03,680 Speaker 1: and preparations were made. On the appointed day, she was 27 00:02:03,800 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 1: led to the wooden platform by strong men. Her hands 28 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:09,920 Speaker 1: and feet were bound, and a noose was slowly fitted 29 00:02:09,960 --> 00:02:14,320 Speaker 1: around her neck, and then after a pronouncement by a priest, 30 00:02:14,840 --> 00:02:19,680 Speaker 1: the trap door was opened and she fell. I wish 31 00:02:19,760 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: I could offer a happy ending to this story. Then 32 00:02:22,840 --> 00:02:25,960 Speaker 1: at the last minute a witness came forward to reverse 33 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:29,239 Speaker 1: the charges, or that the news snapped and the killer 34 00:02:29,320 --> 00:02:32,480 Speaker 1: was given a second chance. But this isn't one of 35 00:02:32,480 --> 00:02:37,160 Speaker 1: those stories. No, the killer was guilty and she hanged 36 00:02:37,200 --> 00:02:42,440 Speaker 1: for her crime the end. I suppose in that way, 37 00:02:42,480 --> 00:02:46,520 Speaker 1: this story isn't really anything special. Sadly, the pages of 38 00:02:46,560 --> 00:02:49,680 Speaker 1: history are filled with the names of killers, and most 39 00:02:49,720 --> 00:02:53,239 Speaker 1: of them met a similar fate. But this story has 40 00:02:53,280 --> 00:02:57,200 Speaker 1: one small difference that deserves to be pointed out, the 41 00:02:57,280 --> 00:03:02,680 Speaker 1: killer you see was special. No, she wasn't a queen 42 00:03:03,160 --> 00:03:08,280 Speaker 1: or a celebrity or even well off. She wasn't even human. 43 00:03:10,000 --> 00:03:28,000 Speaker 1: She was a pig. He was failing all of his classes, 44 00:03:28,160 --> 00:03:31,760 Speaker 1: and that meant his plan was working. Before long, he 45 00:03:31,760 --> 00:03:36,640 Speaker 1: would be expelled and everything would be okay. That probably 46 00:03:36,720 --> 00:03:39,080 Speaker 1: doesn't make a lot of sense right now, so perhaps 47 00:03:39,120 --> 00:03:42,080 Speaker 1: we need to take a step backwards. Ed didn't have 48 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:45,000 Speaker 1: the best of luck no matter how he tried, and 49 00:03:45,120 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: it started young too. By the age of three, both 50 00:03:48,160 --> 00:03:51,680 Speaker 1: of his parents were gone, leaving him an orphan. Thankfully, 51 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:54,400 Speaker 1: some friends of the family took ed in and raised 52 00:03:54,440 --> 00:03:58,680 Speaker 1: him as their own. Even that was riddled with trouble though. 53 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:01,560 Speaker 1: As he grew older, Ed started to fall out with 54 00:04:01,640 --> 00:04:05,320 Speaker 1: his adoptive parents. They fought constantly, and not all of 55 00:04:05,360 --> 00:04:07,880 Speaker 1: it could be chalked up to the head butting between 56 00:04:07,920 --> 00:04:11,880 Speaker 1: strict parents and angst written teens. The fact was his 57 00:04:11,960 --> 00:04:14,560 Speaker 1: father was a bit of a jerk. The guy was rich, 58 00:04:14,720 --> 00:04:17,360 Speaker 1: you see, but he refused to share that wealth with 59 00:04:17,440 --> 00:04:21,200 Speaker 1: his family, which is why it was ironic when Ed's 60 00:04:21,200 --> 00:04:23,599 Speaker 1: father sent him to college to get him out of 61 00:04:23,640 --> 00:04:26,880 Speaker 1: the house and and the quarreling because he didn't send 62 00:04:26,880 --> 00:04:29,880 Speaker 1: the young man away with any cash. Ed was a 63 00:04:29,920 --> 00:04:32,839 Speaker 1: smart guy and he did well during his first term, 64 00:04:33,279 --> 00:04:36,760 Speaker 1: but those classes were expensive, and since he was broke, 65 00:04:37,240 --> 00:04:41,400 Speaker 1: the debt just sort of added up. When Ed asked 66 00:04:41,440 --> 00:04:43,800 Speaker 1: his father later for the money to pay off his school, 67 00:04:43,839 --> 00:04:47,120 Speaker 1: that's the man pulled him out of college instead. With 68 00:04:47,200 --> 00:04:49,200 Speaker 1: one door closed to him, the young man had to 69 00:04:49,240 --> 00:04:52,560 Speaker 1: find a different path. A few weeks later, he enlisted 70 00:04:52,560 --> 00:04:55,359 Speaker 1: in the army, which came with a little pay and 71 00:04:55,440 --> 00:04:58,840 Speaker 1: a lot of commitment, but nothing close to a college education. 72 00:04:59,480 --> 00:05:02,039 Speaker 1: He stuck with that for two years before begging his 73 00:05:02,120 --> 00:05:06,000 Speaker 1: father to help him go back to school, and it worked. 74 00:05:06,720 --> 00:05:09,160 Speaker 1: Ed's dad helped the man get into West Point, of 75 00:05:09,160 --> 00:05:12,080 Speaker 1: all places, and for a while it seemed that everything 76 00:05:12,200 --> 00:05:14,960 Speaker 1: was going to be all right. But again, he did 77 00:05:15,000 --> 00:05:17,880 Speaker 1: all of this without his father's money, so of course, 78 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:21,080 Speaker 1: the debts returned. At one point, the school sent him 79 00:05:21,080 --> 00:05:24,640 Speaker 1: a letter asking for payment, and Ed replied that he 80 00:05:24,760 --> 00:05:27,359 Speaker 1: kept trying to ask his father for the cash, but 81 00:05:27,400 --> 00:05:31,120 Speaker 1: the man was drunk a bit too often, so West 82 00:05:31,120 --> 00:05:36,760 Speaker 1: Point did something sneaky. They forwarded Ed's letter to his father. Naturally, 83 00:05:36,839 --> 00:05:40,359 Speaker 1: the man was embarrassed and upset, but he also paid 84 00:05:40,360 --> 00:05:44,040 Speaker 1: the debt off. Oh and then he disowned Ed and 85 00:05:44,200 --> 00:05:48,400 Speaker 1: cut off all communication with him, which was unfortunate because 86 00:05:48,600 --> 00:05:52,040 Speaker 1: Ed needed his father's permission to withdraw his enrollment from 87 00:05:52,040 --> 00:05:56,400 Speaker 1: the school. So there you go. That's why Ed was 88 00:05:56,520 --> 00:06:00,240 Speaker 1: purposefully failing his classes at West Point. He didn't want 89 00:06:00,320 --> 00:06:03,880 Speaker 1: to stick around, In fact, he couldn't afford to, so 90 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:06,280 Speaker 1: he needed to do everything in his power to make 91 00:06:06,360 --> 00:06:09,760 Speaker 1: his time there as short as possible. He stopped going 92 00:06:09,800 --> 00:06:13,680 Speaker 1: to classes, he stopped going to the required chapel gatherings, 93 00:06:13,720 --> 00:06:17,320 Speaker 1: even stopped eating. But after a while, this school caught 94 00:06:17,360 --> 00:06:21,240 Speaker 1: on and because West Point is a military college, they 95 00:06:21,360 --> 00:06:25,279 Speaker 1: arrested him and then dismissed him for negligence of duty. 96 00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:29,960 Speaker 1: Ed did all right, though life would continue to be 97 00:06:30,040 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 1: tough for him, but he poured that pain and suffering 98 00:06:32,880 --> 00:06:37,440 Speaker 1: into his true passion writing. Over the next eighteen years, 99 00:06:37,560 --> 00:06:39,880 Speaker 1: he would build a name for himself, and while he 100 00:06:39,920 --> 00:06:42,799 Speaker 1: would never again be on good terms with his father, 101 00:06:43,080 --> 00:06:45,880 Speaker 1: John Allen, he would carry the man's name with him 102 00:06:45,920 --> 00:06:49,520 Speaker 1: for the rest of his short life. Ed, you see, 103 00:06:50,120 --> 00:06:53,720 Speaker 1: was one of America's first literary celebrities, and we still 104 00:06:53,760 --> 00:06:57,799 Speaker 1: read his work today. So be thankful that his father 105 00:06:57,920 --> 00:07:01,320 Speaker 1: disowned him and that West Point kicked him out of college, 106 00:07:01,920 --> 00:07:06,000 Speaker 1: because without those failures, the world might never have met 107 00:07:06,920 --> 00:07:14,880 Speaker 1: Edgar Allan Poe. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour 108 00:07:15,040 --> 00:07:19,120 Speaker 1: of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, 109 00:07:19,200 --> 00:07:22,760 Speaker 1: or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast 110 00:07:22,960 --> 00:07:26,720 Speaker 1: dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Manky 111 00:07:27,080 --> 00:07:30,560 Speaker 1: in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award 112 00:07:30,560 --> 00:07:34,120 Speaker 1: winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, 113 00:07:34,200 --> 00:07:36,760 Speaker 1: and television show, and you can learn all about it 114 00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:40,400 Speaker 1: over at the World of Lore dot com. And until 115 00:07:40,480 --> 00:07:42,360 Speaker 1: next time, stay curious.