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The Axeman of New Orleans
A serial killer terrorized New Orleans, attacking victims with their own axes. He promised to spare anyone playing jazz music. On that night, the city played. The killer was never caught.
May 1918 - October 1919
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
50+ witnesses
The Axeman of New Orleans was a serial killer who attacked residents with axes and chisels in 1918-1919. His letter promising to spare anyone playing jazz remains one of crime history’s strangest documents.
The Attacks
According to documented records:
Over 18 months, the Axeman:
- Attacked at least 12 people
- Killed at least 6
- Used victims’ own axes or similar tools
- Entered through cut panels in doors
- Targeted Italian-American grocers initially
- Expanded to other victims
The Letter
On March 13, 1919, newspapers published a letter from the “Axeman”:
- He claimed to be a “fell demon from the hottest hell”
- He promised to pass over any house playing jazz
- The designated night: March 19, 1919 (St. Joseph’s Night)
- He would spare those playing music
That Night
New Orleans responded:
- Dance halls were packed
- Private parties played jazz
- The city filled with music
- No attacks occurred that night
- A song called “The Mysterious Axeman’s Jazz” was composed
The Victims
Targets included:
- Joseph Maggio (grocer) and wife - killed
- Louis Besumer and Harriet Lowe - attacked
- Anna Schneider - attacked (pregnant, survived)
- Joseph Romano - killed
- Charles and Rosie Cortimiglia - attacked, daughter killed
- Many others
Pattern
The attacks followed a pattern:
- Entry through door panels
- Victims’ own axes used
- Often struck in sleep
- Not robbery—money sometimes left behind
- Usually survived if they woke during attack
Suspects
Various theories include:
- A deranged individual
- Organized crime (targeting Italian grocers)
- Multiple attackers
- Joseph Mumfre (killed by a victim’s widow in 1921)
The End
The attacks stopped:
- After October 1919
- The killer was never identified
- Joseph Mumfre was shot by Esther Albano (her husband was a victim)
- She claimed Mumfre was the Axeman
- This has never been confirmed
Historical Context
The era matters:
- Italian immigrant community
- Jazz was emerging
- Post-WWI tension
- Racial and ethnic prejudices
- Fear of outsiders
Legacy
The Axeman case:
- Is one of America’s most bizarre unsolved cases
- Inspired American Horror Story
- Represents New Orleans’s dark history
- The jazz connection is unforgettable