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The Macabre Story Of Ed Gein, The Serial Killer Who Used Human Body Parts To Make Furniture
Bettmann/Getty ImagesAlso known as the Butcher of Plainfield, Ed Gein murdered two women and robbed untold graves in 1950s Wisconsin then turned their skins into keepsakes.Most people have seen classic horror films like Psycho (1960), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974), and The Silence of the Lambs (1991). But what many may not know is that the terrifying villains in these three movies were all based on one real-life killer: Ed Gein, the Butcher of Plainfield.When police entered his Plainfield, Wisconsin home in November 1957, following the disappearance of a local woman, they walked straight into a house of horrors. Not only did they find the woman they were looking for dead, decapitated, and hung from her ankles but they also found a number of shocking, grisly objects that Ed Gein had crafted using human body parts.Police found skulls, human organs, and gruesome pieces of furniture like lampshades made of human faces and chairs upholstered with human skin. Geins goal, as he later explained to police, was to create a skin suit to quasi-resurrect his dead mother with whom hed been obsessed for years.Bettmann/Getty ImagesEd Gein leading investigators around his property in Plainfield, Wisconsin.This is the disturbing true story of Ed Gein, the murderer and grave-robber whose atrocities remain uniquely haunting to this day.Ed Geins Early Life With His Overbearing Mother And His First MurderBorn Edward Theodore Gein on August 27, 1906, in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Ed came of age under the influence of his religious and domineering mother, Augusta. She raised Ed and his brother Henry to believe that the world was full of evil, that women were vessels of sin, and that drinking and immortality were the instruments of the devil.Frantic to protect her family from the evil which she believed lurked around every corner, Augusta insisted that they move from La Crosse a sinkhole of filth, she thought to Plainfield. Even there, Augusta had the family settle outside of town since she believed that living in town would corrupt her two young sons.As a result, Ed Gein only ever left his familys isolated farmhouse to go to school. But he failed to establish any meaningful connections with his classmates, who remembered him as socially awkward and prone to odd, unexplained fits of laughter. Whats more, Eds lazy eye and speech impediment made him an easy victim of bullies.Despite all this, Ed adored his mother. (His father, a timid alcoholic who died in 1940, cast a much smaller shadow over his life.) He absorbed her lessons about the world and seemed to embrace her harsh worldview. Though Henry sometimes stood up to Augusta, Ed never did.So, its perhaps not a surprise that Ed Geins first victim was likely his older brother, Henry.Bettmann/Getty ImagesEd Geins farmhouse, where he collected body parts for over a decade and used bones and skin to make gruesome objects.In 1944, Ed and Henry set out to clear some vegetation in their fields by burning it away. But only one of the brothers would live through the night.As they worked, their fire suddenly got out of control. And when firefighters arrived to put out the blaze, Ed told them that Henry had vanished. His body was found soon afterward, face down in the marsh, dead from asphyxiation.At the time, it seemed like a tragic accident. But accidental or not, Henrys death meant that Ed Gein and Augusta had the farmhouse to themselves. They lived there in isolation for about a year, until Augustas death in 1945.Then, Ed Gein began his decade-long descent into depravity.The Horrific Crimes Of The Butcher Of PlainfieldBettmann/Getty ImagesThe interior of Ed Geins home. Though he kept some rooms pristine in memory of his mother, the rest of the house was a mess.Following Augustas death, Ed Gein transformed the house into something of a shrine to her memory. He boarded up rooms that shed used, keeping them in pristine condition, and moved into a small bedroom off the kitchen.Living alone, far from town, he began to sink into his obsessions. Ed filled his days by learning about Nazi medical experiments, studying human anatomy, consuming porn though he never attempted to date any real-life women and reading horror novels. He also began to indulge his sick fantasies, but it took a long time for anyone to realize it.Indeed, for a full decade, no one thought much about the Gein farm outside of town. Everything changed in November 1957 when a local hardware store owner named Bernice Worden vanished, leaving nothing behind but bloodstains.Bettmann/Getty ImagesEd Gein, whose chilling true story helped inspire The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, pictured in court after his arrest.Worden, a 58-year-old widow, had last been seen at her store. Her last customer? None other than Ed Gein, whod gone into the store to buy a gallon of antifreeze.Police went to Eds farmhouse to investigate and found themselves in the middle of a waking nightmare. There, authorities found what would later inspire horror movies such as Silence of the Lambs, Psycho, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.What Investigators Found Inside Ed Geins HouseGetty ImagesTrooper Dave Sharkey looks over some of the musical instruments found in the home of Edward Gein, 51, suspected grave robber and murderer. Also found in the house were human skulls, heads, death masks and the newly-butchered corpse of a neighboring woman. January 19, 1957.As soon as investigators stepped into Ed Geins house, they found Bernice Worden in the kitchen. She was dead, decapitated, and hung by her ankles from the rafters.There were also countless bones, both whole and fragmented, skulls impaled on his bedposts, and bowls and kitchen utensils made from skulls. Worse than the bones, however, were the household items that Ed Gein had made from human skin.Frank Scherschel/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAn investigator carries a chair made of human skin out of Ed Geins house.Authorities found chairs upholstered in human skin, a wastebasket made of skin, leggings made from human leg skin, masks made from faces, a belt made of nipples, a pair of lips being used as a window shade drawstring, a corset made of a female torso, and a lampshade made from a human face.Along with the skin items, police found various dismembered body parts, including fingernails, four noses, and the genitals of nine different women. They also found the remains of Mary Hogan, a tavern keeper whod gone missing in 1954.Frank Scherschel/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesEd Geins bedroom, in a state of extreme disarray.Ed Gein readily admitted that hed collected most of the remains from three local graveyards, which hed started to visit two years after Augustas death. He told police hed gone to the graveyards in a daze, looking for bodies that he thought resembled his mother.Ed also explained why. He told authorities that he had wanted to create a woman suit so that he could become his mother, and crawl into her skin.How Many People Did Ed Gein Kill?Following the police visit to Ed Geins house, the Butcher of Plainfield was arrested. He was found not guilty by reasons of insanity in 1957 and sent to the Central State Hospital for the Criminally Insane, where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Then, his farmhouse mysteriously burned to the ground.JOHN CROFT/Star Tribune via Getty ImagesEd Gein being led away from his house in handcuffs after admitting that hed killed two women.Ten years later, Ed was deemed fit to stand trial and was convicted of the murder of Bernice Worden but just of Bernice Worden. He was never tried for Mary Hogans murder because the state allegedly saw it as a waste of money. Ed was insane, they reasoned he would spend the rest of his life in hospitals either way.But that raises a chilling question. How many people did Ed Gein kill? Until his death in 1984 at the age of 77, he only ever admitted to murdering Worden and Hogan. The other bodies and police found as many as 40 in his home he claimed hed robbed from graves.As such, we may never know how many people fell victim to the Butcher of Plainfield. But it is certain that Ed Gein stands as one of historys most disturbing serial killers. Hes also seen as the inspiration for the mother-loving Norman Bates of Psycho, The Texas Chain Saw Massacres skin-wearing Leatherface, and The Silence of The Lambs Buffalo Bill.Those movies have terrified generations of movie audiences. But they arent quite as chilling as the real-life story of Ed Gein himself.After learning about the disturbing crimes of Ed Gein, read about still-unsolved case of the Cleveland Torso Murders. Then, read up on the horrific crimes of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.The post The Macabre Story Of Ed Gein, The Serial Killer Who Used Human Body Parts To Make Furniture appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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