On May 20, 1870, Mrs Matilda Henningsen, aka Matilda Hunt, died at No. 182 East Seventh Street in Brooklyn. Mr. A. A. Wolff,
from Denmark, purported to be a physician, but is not identified as
such in the source document. Six fetuses, along with various
instruments, were found in his office. The jury determined that Wolff
had performed the fatal abortion.
Dr. Claude C. Long
ran a rather fishy medical practice in San Francisco. He, his wife
Isabel, and a relative named Ann Fisher, were charged with the May 20, 1937
murder of 26-year-old Genevieve Arganbright. Long admitted -- once he'd
been caught -- that Genevieve had died while he'd been performing an
abortion on her. The jury acquitted Mrs. Long and Ann Fisher, but found
Dr. Long guilty of manslaughter.
On May 20, 1939, 37-year-old Hilja Johnson of Butte, Montana, died from
complications of an incomplete abortion, leaving behind a widower. A surgical nurse, Gertrude Pitkanen
(pictured), admitted at the coroner's inquest that Hilja had come to
her office, and that she had later visited Hilja at her home and advised
her to go to a hospital. Pitkanen was charged with murder in Hilja's
death.
Pitkanen, born in 1878 in Lincoln, Nebraska, completed her nurse's
training at Cook County Hospital in Chicago. She moved to Butte in 1907,
and was one of the first surgical nurses at St. James Community
Hospital, assisting her husband, Dr. Gustavus Pitkanen. Dr. Pitkanen was
an abortionist until he was jailed for sedition in 1917, whereupon his
wife took up the curette
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