On November 29, 1926, 25-year-old stenographer
Mary Moorehead died from a criminal abortion in the Chicago office of Dr.
Lucy Hagenow.
Hagenow (pictured) was arrested November 13. She was sentenced to 14 years at
Joliet Penitentiary, but was able to get her conviction overturned by
the Illinois Supreme Court, which ordered a new trial in 1929.
The judge, noting that there was no new evidence, dismissed the case,
telling Hagenow, "You had better make your peace with God, Lucy Hagenow.
I do not think your months on earth are many."
Hagenow, who also went by the name of Louise or Louisa Hagenow, had a
long and unsavory history of being involved in women's abortion deaths.
The first were in San Francisco before Hagenow relocated to Chicago
around 1890.
The abortion deaths Hagenow was linked to include:
While we know who Mary's killer was, the next anniversary we mark today so far remains a mystery. Seventeen-year-old
Dorothy Jasinski was brought to St. Mary's Hospital
in Chicago by two unidentified women on November 17, 1930. Dorothy was
treated there until her death on November 29. The coroner determined
that Dorothy had died from an abortion performed in Michigan City,
Indiana, the day she'd been brought to the hospital. The coroner
recommended identification of the person or persons responsible, and his
or their arrest on charges of murder.
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