So back in January when I was working on our exposé on the Hatchetman Murders, I discovered to my chagrin that I had never taken pictures of the tombstone of Henry Hellman, old Andy’s son. Recently, we went back there and did that, and I thought, well, hey, might as well put something together that reviews the cemetery itself in official Headstoner style. So I’m back on it.

log-har-Jul52006-sunsetflag

As I described in my final Hatchetman post, “Harrod Cemetery is of a decent size, was established in 1898, though it has graves dating from before then, and is still in use. Some graves go back into the trees, but I don’t recommend poking around because the cemetery is fiercely bordered by poison ivy. It is well-maintained . . . Common last names include the eponymous ‘Harrod,’ as well as ‘Abel’ and ‘Oder.’ There is only one road through the cemetery, with two exits (or entrances, or one exit and one entrance), and the side closest to the twp. road is where the more modern burials are/continue to take place.”

It is one of the early Headstoner cemeteries, to be sure, and a lot of our research on the Andrew Hellman case influenced us in the founding of this website and our Headstoning cause of, well, you know, Headstoning (vb. To go from cemetery to cemetery to look at headstones). We go there a lot, frequently to kill time, or just as often to eat pickanick style. So I got to thinking that Herrod deserves a more thorough writeup of its own merits apart from the presence of the urban legendary Andrew “Hatchetman” Hellman.
log-har-Jun202009-HenryBut before we move away from the Hellmans entirely, I would like to dedicate a moment to dear Henry, dear Henry. Henry Hellman is one of my favorite dead guys. My surprise that I had previously never taken a picture of his tombstone before was partially fueled by the fact that it’s one of the neatest. His name (there’s a closeup in the gallery at the end) is all cool and wavy.

Just to recap the story briefly, Henry managed to escape the fate of his brother and sister (if, indeed, they were poisoned; Andrew repeatedly denied that he had murdered his children, but Henry himself asserted that poison was involved in his siblings’ deaths). The day his father killed his mother, Mrs. Hellman had sent him to her brother’s house (one of the Abels in the area), and this was how he avoided that fate as well. Check out my other posts on the Hellmans if you want more of the story. There’s a really fascinating anecdote about the young Henry (age 12, as I recall) being brought to the jail to see his father. Just because I don’t want to do the whole thing a third time, I’ll sum up with Henry living a good, full life, having married and had a daughter. On to the rest of the cemetery!
(more…)

Herrod Cemetery

Harrod Cemetery

So now I’m back for the next bit on Andrew Hellman. Hope I didn’t leave anybody hanging! (Pun intended. Haha.)

I first read this ghost story in a Logan county newspaper a long time ago and didn’t think much of that. For awhile, we disinterestedly tried to find the cemetery “Hatchetman” was said to haunt–Harrod Cemetery on Twp. Road 56–though it took us awhile. Just because it’s fun, here’s the longitude and latitude of Harrod Cemetery: 40.423172,-83.783855. 

Harrod Cemetery is of a decent size, was established in 1898, though it has graves dating from before then, and is still in use. Some graves go back into the trees, but I don’t recommend poking around because the cemetery is fiercely bordered by poison ivy. It is well-maintained, and apparently haunted. Which is what I hope to bust in this post. Common last names include the eponymous “Harrod,” as well as “Abel” and “Oder.” There is only one road through the cemetery, with two exits (or entrances, or one exit and one entrance), and the side closest to the twp. road is where the more modern burials are/continue to take place.

On our first visit, we verified a few things. First of all, that Louisa and John Hellman were born and died when they should have and were buried there. (Note that according to the source I tagged in the last post, Louisa and John were buried in the same grave.) That small white stone is barely legible, but it does belong to Mary Hellman.

Louisa and John Hellman

Louisa and John Hellman

Mary Hellman's Stone

Mary Hellman's Stone

Additionally, proving that Henry did survive, there is a small cluster of graves belonging to him and his family in the southwest part of the cemetery. For some inexplicable reason, even though Henry is my favorite, we don’t have any pictures of his marker–which is very pretty, too! I don’t understand that. We have to do something about that. He’s cool.

(more…)

Today I’d like to tell a ghost story. We’re beginning to acquire a reputation for ghost-busting, and I kind of like this reputation, so I’m going to keep it up. So here’s the story, accentuated with quotations from an account in an 1844 atlas (which appears to be a synopsis of the longer account seen here).

The year was 1843. A good year, by all accounts; a common year starting on a Sunday. A Christmas Carol is first published. Edgar Allan Poe publishes “The Tell-Tale Heart.” Frederick VIII, King of Denmark, was born, though presumably was not king yet. Henry James was born. Good for him. A few good deaths–Noah Webster, for one–but one death caused attention to stir in at least two states that had been irrevocably touched by the “blood-stained wretch.” Which would be the death I’m going to talk about today.

The date was January 12, which has prompted me to post this now, 164 years later to the day. Andrew Hellman, alias Adam Horn, was hanged in Champaign County for the offense of murder. Lots of people got executed in Ohio for murder that year. But not a lot of them ended up getting a whole urban legend dedicated to them. Here’s how the story goes.

Part I. Andy H. was born in Worms on 24 June 1792 and immigrated to America in 1820. He was either a farmer or a taior by trade. He found himself in the good graces of the Abel family of Loudon County, Virginia, and, in the colorful language of the day, “was allowed to engage the affections of one of [Farmer Abel's] daughters . . . Mary Abel . . . then in her twentieth year, a blithe, buxom, and light-hearted country girl, whose previous existence had never been marred by unhappiness or misery. The arch-fiend, Hellman, succeeded in smothering his feelings of hatred, thus showin that even his wooing was characterized by duplicity and deceit.” To shorten it, they were married in December 1821.

Hellman, characterized as a fiend, bloody devil, etc., had added to his epitaphs “unnatural father” when Louisa was born in 1822. Two more children followed by 1836, and these were Henry and John. (Apparently this “unnatural father” declared to his wife that if a fourth child were ever to be born, he would kill her.) Hellman bought a farm not far from a brother-in-law’s in Logan County, Ohio, and proceeded to “deny his family everything but the bare necessities of life.” He attempted and failed to poison his wife, and then poisoned his three children; John and Louisa died in April. (For what it’s worth, old Hellman denied having poisoned them.) Five months later, Hellman completely flipped his lid, if you will, and went after Mary with a hatchet. (According to Henry’s own testimony, his mother sent him out of the house to his uncle’s, thus saving his life.) “The mutilated remains of the poor wife were found in a room of the house,” and old Andy H. was arrested. He tried to say that there had been a robber who had wounded him, but a physician pronounced him unharmed. Despite being arrested, he broke out of jail in Bellefontaine, Ohio, and escaped. His wife was buried with Louisa and John in Harrod Cemetery in McArthur Township, the final resting place of a great deal of the Abel clan.

Part II. Andy escapes from prison in Bellefontaine, flees to Maryland, and adopts the name Adam Horn. For some reason, he gets married again, this time to Malinda Hinkle. The honeymoon didn’t last long, as shortly after that, he not only killed her, but cut up her body and hid the remains all over the farm. “The head was severed from the trunk, and was never found, despite the most minute search. The body was found partly in an up-stairs room of the house, and the remainder buried in a coffee sack in a gully which traversed Hellman’s orchard.” (Instant urban legend material.) He was tried and pronounced guilty. He was subsequently executed in Champaign County, Ohio. (Declaration and death warrant.) (Also, interestingly, a review of his confession.) (Description of the execution.)

Now, perhaps I’ve given too many details and too many citations for it to be much of a ghost story, so I’ll get on with it. According to the legend, Andrew Hellman, buried in the same cemetery as his first wife and three children, haunts the nearby Township Road 56, terrorizing drivers, particularly females, whose cars break down on the road. His tombstone is also said to glow.

I know there weren’t any pictures in this post. I’m leaving it there. Tomorrow I’ll be back to BUST this story . . . I hope.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.