Tuesday, April 28, 2026

April 28, 1973: One of Three Dead at Civil-Rights Activist's Facility

A middle-aged balding Black man with eyeglasses and a bow tie
T.R. Mason Howard

Survivors of Julia Rogers, age 20, alleged that she underwent a safe and legal abortion performed by Theodore Roosevelt Mason Howard (pictured) at his Friendship Medical Center in Chicago on April 22, 1973. 

According to her obituary, Julia was a resident of Gary, Indiana, member of Shiloh Baptist Church and worked at Gary National Bank. She left behind her parents, four aunts, and two uncles among many other relatives and friends.

Her boyfriend, Raymond James, said that he had taken Julia to Friendship for the abortion and that she had suffered such severe bleeding that she was given a transfusion. This would indicate that Howard knew that he had injured her. However, he delayed admitting her to the hospital for 2 or 3 days, according to different news coverage.

Julia's death certificate states that her death April 28 at Chicago's Tabernacle Hospital was due to "bronchopneumonia and generalized peritonitis complicating extensive necrotizing endometritis and myometritis with sealed perforation." In other words, she developed pneumonia on top of peritonitis. A hole had been poked in her uterus, causing an infection that made the muscle tissue of her uterus start to rot inside her.  

To add to the tragedy, Julia's mother, Louise Rogers, hadn't even known that her daughter was pregnant. She only found out about the pregnancy and abortion when she got a call from the hospital that Julia was dying. 

Evelyn Dudley and Dorothy Brown also died after abortions at Friendship Medical Center.

A United Press International article printed in the May 1, 1973 Tipton Tribune noted that, according to Chicago assistant city health commissioner Jack Zackler, an average of 10 women a week were being admitted to Chicago Hospitals for abortion complications. This was leading city and state officials to somewhat belatedly decide that they might want to start regulating abortion facilities.

Watch One of Three Fatal Abortions at Friendship Medical Center on YouTube. 
Watch One of Three Fatal Abortions at Friendship Medical Center on Rumble

Sources:

April 28, 1990: Women Rejects Legal Abortion for Fatal Amateur Approach

Grok AI illustration

I believe I've identified the young woman previously called "Daisy" at the Cemetery of Choice. To preserve her privacy while making it easier for me to do my annual research, I have given her the pseudonym "Theresa Harper."

Theresa was a 32-year-old systems analyst for a defense contractor in California. She had an appointment scheduled for a safe, legal second-trimester abortion at a local abortion clinic on April 30, 1990.

For some reason Theresa didn't keep her appointment. Instead, she allowed her boyfriend to attempt a home abortion with a piece of aquarium tubing. She died of complications of that abortion on April 28.

Watch Mysterious and Fatal Decision on YouTube.
Watch Mysterious and Fatal Decision on Rumble.

Life Dynamics has records on file confirming Theresa's death and the surrounding circumstances: California Certificate of Death, File no. 90-079380 and San Bernardino County Coroner's Investigation Case No. 90-2384).

April 28, 1880: Death Under the Care of Midwives

SUMMARY: Sophia Berghusen, age 33, died in Brooklyn, NY from abortion complications on April 28, 1880 while under the care of midwives Mary and Margaret Kaufmann.

Mrs. Sophia Berghusen, age 33, of Brooklyn died on April 28, 1880, under the care of the mother-and-daughter midwife team of Mrs. Mary Kaufmann and her 18-year-old daughter, Margaret "Maggie" Kaufmann. The coroner concluded that Sophia had died of abortion complications, specifically traumatic peritonitis. 

Sophie had been found moribund at the Kaufmann house. Before her death she indicated that the two women had been her abortionists.

Sophia was a native of Germany who had come to the United States at the age of 22. 

The police went to the midwives' home on Stanton Street on April 26 and knocked on the door. When nobody answered, they threatened to force the door. 

They were admitted to the home and took the younger Kaufmann woman into custody, but discovered that her mother had fled through a second-floor bedroom window onto the roof of a shed, thence she climbed several fences and vanished. 

The police staked out the house and the following day were able to follow her son to her hiding place and arrest her as well.

Mrs. Kaufmann was described as "handsomely dressed," the daughter as "richly attired," and "handsome and ladylike in appearance" in The Brooklyn Eagle. The two refused to give a statement to the police. In contrast, Sophia had buried two of her five children and was the wife of a milk dealer.

Sophia had made the abortion arrangements without her husband's consent, making two visits to the Kaufmann home for their ministrations.

Both the Kaufmann women were arrested and tried but acquitted, though the sources do not say what was lacking in the case against them. Given the strength of the evidence, it's likely that Sophia's deathbed statement had been ruled inadmissible.

Sources:

Monday, April 27, 2026

April 27, 1990: Mom Bleeds to Death in Front of her Children

 SUMMARY: Sandra Milton, age 28, bled to death in front of her three children on April 27, 1990 after an abortion performed by Carl Armstrong at Toledo Medical Services in Toledo, OH.

B&W high school yearbook photo of a smiling white teenage girl with long hair parted in the middle
Sandra Milton

On April 27, 1990, 28-year-old divorcee Sandra "Sandy" Earle Milton underwent an abortion, performed by Dr. Carl Armstrong at Toledo Medical Services in Ohio. (Armstrong is John Roe 67 in Lime 5.) Neither her ex husband nor her parents had known that she was pregnant.

Who Was Sandy Milton?

Sandy, who came to the US from England with her family when she was a toddler, had attended Fremont Ross High School and the Vanguard Vocational Center.

A high school friend, John McKeever, reported that Sandy would return home at her 10 pm curfew then sneak out her bedroom window and stay out most of the night. "We used to have a helluva lot of fun. We didn't really do a whole lot. Sometimes we'd just go downtown and watch the traffic go by."

One day John introduced Sandy to his girlfriend, who had an older brother named Tom Milton. The two couples went on a double date and the romance started. Sandy was only 15 years old. 

Tom Milton admits that Sandy's parents never approved of him, and that this likely made him even more attractive to the rebellious teen. 

Their first child, a son, was born in October of 1979, and the couple married in June of 1980, when Sandy graduated from high school. She was 18 and Tom was 20. They had two more children together. 

Friends described Sandy as "always happy, always bubbly. She always had places to go and things to do. They were ordinary activities but Sandy enjoyed them: card games, ceramics classes, pizza, and movies.

But Sandy was not happy about her life . She divorced her husband in February of 1987, alleging abuse over the seven years of their marriage. She moved from Fremont to the village of Green Springs, where she took at job on the assembly line of the Whirlpool appliance factory in Clyde. She and Tom had little contact after that -- just enough to arrange for Tom to pick the children up for visitation.

Sandy's Life Comes to an End

The weekend before April 27, 1990, the slender Sandy told her mother that she was going to lose 20 pounds. Sandy's mother didn't make a connection between this comment and a pregnancy that her daughter was planning to abort.

Sandy went to Toledo Medical Services on the morning of April 27. The abortion was performed by Carl Armstrong at 10 a.m., and Sandy was discharged shortly thereafter for the 90-minute drive home.

The babysitter stayed with Sandy and her three children, ages 10, 7, and 5, for three hours as the young mother slipped in and out of consciousness and suffered pain and abdominal swelling. Twice the alarmed babysitter called the clinic, but was told that the symptoms were normal. The third time the babysitter called the clinic, she got no response at all, and summoned an ambulance. Sandy was pronounced dead on arrival at Fremont Memorial Hospital at 6:01 p.m..

Tom had come to the house to pick up the children on that afternoon, but nobody was home so he went fishing. His brother tracked him down to tell him that Sandy was dead.

The Findings

Dr. Carl Armstrong

The medical examiner performed an autopsy on Sandy's body and found a one-inch uterine perforation. Her abdomen was full of blood. She had bled to death internally. Seneca County Coroner Dr. Samuel Lowry estimated that Sandy had been 22 weeks pregnant. This is a particularly interesting observation, since Toledo Medical Services claimed that they would not perform abortions at 18 weeks or later. 


Dr. David Miller, an ob/gyn in Bowling Green, OH, pointed out that in Ohio, each department of a hospital is inspected separately by the state and is regulated. "That is not true regarding abortion," he pointed out. In fact, the people at abortion clinics say that if they had to comply they would go out of business."

Carol Dunn, president of the Center for Choice II abortion facility in Toledo, made excuses for why abortion clinics didn't adhere to safety standards. "It's more or less a doctor's office.... It's a simple procedure and we want to keep it that way." She scoffed at safety standards, saying "We don't have doors that are wide enough to fit a gurney. We don't have hospital carts. People walk around here, not ride." The idea that EMS would need to get a gurney through a doorway if a woman suffered a life-threatening complication clearly wasn't worth her consideration. 

As for the three motherless children, it's unclear who cared for them after Sandy's death. 

Watch Bled to Death in Front of her Kids on YouTube.
Watch Bled to Death in Front of her Kids on Rumble.

Sources:

April 27, 1871: New Hampshire Doctor Convicted in Abortion Death

 SUMMARY: Elvira Woodward died on April 27, 1871 from an abortion perpetrated by Dr. Charles P. Wood of Manchester, New Hampshire.

The Admission

Dr. Charles P. Wood admitted that Elvira Woodward had come to his house in Manchester, New Hampshire, on April 1 and remained there until her death on April 27, 1871. He said that she’d expelled a dead fetus on April 3, and that she suffered from puerperal fever.

Elvira took ill, languishing. On the morning of April 27, Wood said, Elvira told him that she had a sense of impending death. She died that afternoon at about 2:30. 

Daniel White's Testimony

Daniel K. White testified on Wood’s behalf, saying, “I knew Elvira Woodward; saw her at Dr. Wood’s house the morning of the day she died; found a very large gash in her throat; Dr. Wood stepped to the bed and removed a towel from her throat. I saw Dr. Ferguson there; Dr. Wood went for him about ten minutes after I got there; she looked pale, quite so; apparently recognized me by a nod of the head; I observed nothing else, except that her throat was cut, and there was a good deal of blood upon her bed-clothes; she said she did not expect to live till noon; that she was sorry she didn’t do the deed at once, and go where her mother was; that she would be glad to die; that she didn’t expect to live till noon, and probably shouldn’t.”

White said that only he was present when Elvira made that statement, because Dr. Wood had gone to fetch Dr. Ferguson.

Elvira's Sister Speaks

Elvira’s sister, Florence Woodward, testified in a deposition that she’d seen Elvira at Dr. Wood’s house twice on the day she died.

She made the first visit at around 10 or 11 in the morning. Dr. Wood and his wife were there, and a Mrs. Eaton had accompanied Florence. They stayed with Elvira about an hour. Elvira didn’t speak to them, but seemed to recognize her visitors. A man who Florence believed to be Dr. Ferguson passed through Elvira’s room briefly.

Florence visited her sister again between 2 and 3 in the afternoon, at which time Elvira was unconscious and clearly dying. Florence said that she’d never seen Elvira at Dr. Wood’s house before that day. Florence also indicated that it wasn’t until after Elvira’s death that she knew her sister died from any cause other than fever.

Dr. Ferguson's Statement

Dr. Ferguson was called in Dr. Wood’s defense. He testified that Dr. Wood had summoned him and he found Elvira looking “very pale, worn, emaciated, and desponding.” He removed a cloth from her throat and found it wounded. “I asked her why she had attempted to hasten death by suicide. Told her that her condition was so low already that a few hours would extinguish life. I said to others in her presence and hearing that she would possibly die in the morning, or in the early part of the afternoon. She said she did not much care; that she had no desire to live.”

On cross-examination, Dr. Ferguson said that the cut on Elvira’s throat was superficial. Nevertheless, he didn’t expect her to survive the day. He sutured Elvira’s throat at Dr. Wood’s request. He also noted that Elvira was frequently vomiting.

Dr. Ferguson testified that all he knew of oil of savin is what he’d learned from reading, and that it was supposed to be capable of causing abortion. He thought that oil of savin might be responsible for Elvira’s condition when he saw her.

Another Defense Witness

One of Dr. Wood’s defense witnesses said that on the morning of her death, Elvira said that she’d been operated on previously by a Dr. McCooms for an abortion. Dr. McCooms had operated on her three times at a place in Manchester and once at Suncook. She also reportedly told the witness that Dr. McCoombs had prescribed oil of savin for her, which she ingested. She said that she’d expelled a fetus on April 3.

The Landlady's Testimony

Mrs. Merrill, Elvira’s landlady, testified that she’d accompanied Elvira to Dr. McCoomb’s rooms at the Manchester House on February 8. Elvira spent about an hour with Dr. McCoomb in an inner room. Mrs. Merrill said that she herself only briefly been in the inner room herself, at which time she saw Dr. McCoomb performing an abortion on Elvira.

Joseph Ferrin Chimes In

A man named Joseph Ferrin testified that he’d lent Elvira a shawl on March 29. She told him that she was going to Lowell. When she returned the shawl, Ferrin testified, she said that she’d gone to have an operation performed.

Dr. Webb's Perspective

Dr. Webb of Boston testified that at the request of an attorney, he’d examined Elvira on March 20, 1871. He said her uterus was enlarged and he could feel movement in the womb and he heard a fetal heartbeat. He estimated that she was four or five months pregnant.

Dr. Buck's Point of View

Dr. Buck testified that he performed a post-mortem examination of Elvira’s body at North Troy, Vermont, on May 2. He said that there was no fetus, but that there was evidence that she’d been “delivered by artificial means.” Dr. Buck said that he saw no signs that Elvira’s kidneys or stomach had been damaged by any kind of poison, and that any drug that would cause an abortion that far advanced into a pregnancy would also damage the mother’s organs. A Dr. Gilman Kimball concurred in his testimony.

Mr. Ober's Testimony

A Mr. Ober testified that he’d heard reports prior to the trial that Dr. Wood had once had an office or lying-in hospital in Hollis, and that it was reported that Dr. Wood performed abortions there.

The Outcome

Dr. Wood was convicted of performing the fatal abortion on Elvira. It is unclear how the prosecutor or the jury identified him, from among all the doctors who had attended Elvira, as the guilty party. Still, Elvira’s abortion was typical of pre-legalization abortions in that it was performed by a physician.

Coverage of the trial included a bit of Wood’s history:

Dr. Wood has resided in this city for several years, and, until recently, has been regarded as a good citizen and a respectable man. Some years ago, desiring to make a living more easily, he left a mechanical pursuit, studied dentistry a few months, and opened an office. Meeting with no serious obstacle in this branch of business, he enlarged his sphere of operations, and in a little time became a homeopathic physician and subsequently undertook the allopathic system, and was announced as a Doctor. He opened a hospital in Museum Building and took patients home for treatment, and at first was not suspected of violating the laws of the State. At length it came to be understand that his place was mainly appropriated to the treatment of those unfortunate women who have sought to cover one crime by the commission of another.


Sources:

Sunday, April 26, 2026

April 26, 1926: Second Death Attributed to Chicago Nurse

On April 26, 1926, Mrs. Hazel Fern Strecker, age 26, died at West Suburban Hospital in Oak Park, Illinois from an abortion performed in Chicago.

The coroner fingered the person responsible for Fern's death as a 55-year-old nurse named Elizabeth Schade, who, like many doctors and midwives, was operating an illegal abortion business at a Chicago location. Schade had already killed Helen Skoza in a 1917 abortion.

Keep in mind that things that things we take for granted, like antibiotics and blood banks, were still in the future. For more about abortion in this era, see Abortion in the 1920s.

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion


April 26, 1914: Woman Implicates Chicago Doc in Abortion

On April 26, 1914, eighteen-year-old Florence S. Lindquist died of septic peritonitis in a Chicago home where an abortion had been performed on her. 

On her deathbed Florence implicated Dr. Arthur F. Schulz, age 36, who lived at the home in question.

 Schulz was arrested for her death, as was a man named Charles Miller, named by Florence as the father of her baby.

Schulz, a 1907 graduate of Dearborn Medical College, was an allopath who had begun practicing in Chicago in October of 1911. During that era, most Chicago abortions were perpetrated by either physicians or midwives. Though he was arrested, he was likely not incarcerated for Florence's death, since he was still listed as living in his own household in Chicago in the 1920 U.S. census. He died later that year of pneumonia.

Florence left behind her parents, John and Hilma Lindquist, four sisters and a brother.

Florence's abortion was typical of pre-legalization abortions in that it was performed by a physician.

Note, please, that with ordinary public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good. For more information about early 20th Century abortion mortality, see Abortion Deaths 1910-1919.

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion



Sources:

April 26, 1920: Fatal Midwife in Chicago

SUMMARY: On April 26, 1920, 26-year-old Catherine Kasper died in Chicago after an abortion perpetrated by midwife Rose Preib.

In April of 1920, 26-year-old homemaker Catherine McGowan Kasper made a connection to 47-year-old midwife Rose Preib, one of Chicago's underground abortion practitioners. Most were physicians or midwives.

On April 26, Catherine died at Columbus Hospital in Chicago from sepsis caused by the abortion. Preib, whose profession is listed in the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database only as "abortion provider," was arrested and charged in the death. She was acquitted on February 29, 1924.

Keep in mind that things that things we take for granted, like antibiotics and blood banks, were still in the future. For more about abortion in this era, see Abortion in the 1920s.

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion

Sources:

April 26, 1921: Unknown Chicago Perp

On April 26, 1921, 25-year-old Mrs. Dorothy Friedland died at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Chicago of peritonitis after an abortion performed by an unknown perpetrator.

According to her death certificate, Dorothy was a cashier at an ice cream shop. 

Sources: 

April 26, 1908: Chicago Midwife Arrested in Abortion Death

On April 26, 1908, 32-year-old restaurant cashier Cora Johnson died at Wesley Hospital in Chicago from septicemia caused by a criminal abortion perpetrated on April 18.

Mrs. Dietrich, listed on the death certificate as a midwife, was arrested, but acquitted for reasons not given in the source document.

Cora, a native of Iowa, was the wife of Olaf Johnson, a railroad conductor. They had a daughter who was about 11 years old. She left an estate of $600 to her family.

Cora's abortion was atypical in that it was not performed by a physician.


Note, please, that with issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good. For more about abortion and abortion deaths in the first years of the 20th century, see Abortion Deaths 1900-1909.

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion


Sources:

Saturday, April 25, 2026

April 25, 1899: Perpetrator's Profession Unknown

According to the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database, Sarah Messinger, age 30, died in St. Luke's Hospital in Chicago on April 25, 1899, from an abortion performed by Marie Kampfer. 

Sarah died on the day the abortion was performed. 

Kampfer, whose profession is not listed, was held for $5,000 bond by Coroner's Jury. Most Chicago abortionists of that era were physicians or midwives.

According to public records, Sarah and her husband, Henry, had three sons: Henry, Edward, and Walter. Henry had just turned 5 years old nine days before his mother's death. Edward had turned 3 less than a month earlier. Walter was only 8 months old. To add to the family's tragedy, baby Walter only outlived his mother by two months, dying on July 2. 

April 25, 1997: Third Death for Reputable Abortion Doc

SUMMARY: Nichole Williams, age 22, died April 25, 1997 after an abortion performed by Robert Crist at Reproductive Health Services in St. Louis, MO.

Abortionist_Robert_Crist_small.jpg
Robert Crist

Twenty-two-year-old Nichole Lachea Williams was the third patient known to have died of safe and legal abortion complications under the dubious care of Dr. Robert Crist. The others were Latachie Veal and Diane Boyd. Nichole, a mother of three (ages 7, 3, and 1), lived with her boyfriend and died after an abortion at Reproductive Health Services, run by Planned Parenthood, in St. Louis, MO. As a young Black woman, she was statistically at higher risk of an abortion death than a white counterpart.

Some of the cost of Nichole's $550 abortion came from a national foundation which Planned Parenthood refused to name.

Crist started the first-trimester abortion at 2:00 on Friday, April 25, 1997, administering lidocaine and vasopressin for a procedure expected to last about five minutes. "Seconds" before finishing the abortion, he noticed that Nichole had breathing problems, finished the abortion, and instructed staff to call 911.

The 911 transcript indicates that Nichole was having difficulty breathing and was conscious but not alert.

RHS staff began resuscitation, but Nichole was in full cardiac arrest when medics arrived fifteen minutes later. Efforts to revive her continued in the ambulance and at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, to no avail, and she was pronounced dead at 3:12 p.m.

There were questions raised after Nichole's death about why it took so long for the ambulance to arrive. Even more bewildering, the ambulance crew spent 20 minutes at RHS trying to revive Nichole, rather than transporting her immediately to a hospital. It somehow also took medics three minutes to get to the patient after arriving at the facility. The fact that it was not the city ambulance -- accustomed to emergency calls -- but rather a private service only used as a back-up when a city ambulance isn't available, might have been a factor.

Nichole's death was officially attributed to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), a clotting disorder that can be triggered by trauma, illness, or foreign material in the blood stream. Hers is the only case I've ever read of linking DIC with first-trimester abortion. Prolifers were skeptical about the reports of DIC, and say that they believe Nichole's uterus was ruptured.

In addition to her children and boyfriend, Nichole was survived by the grandmother who raised her, Mildred Savage. Her mother, Dorothy Williams, commented to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on the death of the youngest of her six children, "I'm just feeling pain. That's all I can say. I'm just hurting, hurting, hurting."

naflogo.jpgReproductive Health Services, a National Abortion Federation member facility, was operated by Planned Parenthood of St. Louis. The National Abortion Federation (NAF) is an organization of abortion facilities and practitioners, and promises that its members adhere to the highest standards of care. This claim seems remarkable when one considers that Dr. Abu "The Butcher of Avenue A" Hayat was an active NAF member when he performed the abortions that killed Sophie McCoy and maimed Ana Rodriguez. Other dubious NAF members include Family Planning Associates Medical Group, a clinic chain with at least sixteen dead abortion patients to its discredit, and Abraham Alberto Hodari, whose Detroit clinic is responsible for at least three abortion deaths including an illegal third-trimester abortion on an underage girl at the behest of her abuser's sister.

Crist serves as medical director of Reproductive Health Services.

Another death blamed on RHS is that of 14-year-old Sandra Kaiser, who committed suicide after a 1984 abortion at RHS, performed without her mother's knowledge or consent.


Watch Third Death for Reputable Abortion Doc on YouTube.
Watch Third Death for Reputable Abortion Doc on Rumble.


Sources:

April 25, 1932: Teen Bride Rounds Out Thacker's Abortion Deaths

SUMMARY: Nancy Jo Lee, age 17, died on April 25, 1932 after an abortion perpetrated by Oklahoma City osteopath Dr. Richard Thacker.

Nancy Jo Seay Lee

Dr. Richard E. Thacker, an osteopath, maintained an office and operating rooms in the Terminal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Thacker fled the state but was eventually captured and put on trial for the April 25, 1932 death of Nancy Joe Seay Lee.

During the trial, Thacker testified that he met Frank Lee, a University of Oklahoma football player, some time about noon Saturday, April 23, 1932. Frank, Thacker said, reported that his wife had chronic appendicitis, and had had it for a long time; he brought his wife to the office about 2 o'clock that afternoon. Thacker had asked for $75, but Frank had bargained down to $30 because that was all the money he had. Frank's roommate, John Clevidence, and friend Harry Horner, confirmed Frank's testimony.

The distraught husband tearfully told authorities that he had witnessed the abortion, and that Thacker had not examined Nancy prior to beginning. Frank admitted that he and Nancy lied about her health because "We were both nervous and didn't know what we were doing."

Frank wept on the stand as he told of the couple's whirlwind courtship, how they married at the home of Nancy's father and stepmother in Wichita Falls, TX, between semesters, and how they were keeping the marriage secret so that his brother would not cut off his financial support.

After Nancy took ill, Frank rushed to her side, "It was too late then," he said, "but we had her taken to [Oklahoma City General Hospital]." The doctors there testified that "she was about dead when she arrived."

Thacker denied perpetrating an abortion, testifying:

A white man of about 60 years of age, with a very high forehead, large nose, and grim facial expression
Dr. Richard Thacker

I treated her by putting a sedative into the vagina and had her take a laxative; I directed him to take her some place for observation, a hospital or a nurse; the purpose of this suppository or sedative tampon was intended to relieve the pain, and I followed it up with gauze, as it was literally necessary for something to retain it in the vagina; I did not examine her uterus; I never saw her after that time; I gave him the number of a place he could take her where the expense would be reasonable. I did not perform an abortion on Mrs. Lee.

But 17-year-old Nancy was taken to Oklahoma City General Hospital, near death. Before dying, Nancy said that Thacker had performed an abortion on her.

Frank said that he learned about Thacker's practice from some of his friends at the university.

The death of his bride left him alone utterly bereft. His father had died earlier, and he was still grieving the death of his mother, when Nancy died. 

Thacker and Oklahoma osteopath John Eisiminger were not ordinary doctors who just did abortions on a few patients. They were abortionists, and quack abortionists at that. Singly or as a pair they were implicated in a string of deaths:

Sources:

  • "Abortion Ring", Time, Monday, 9 May, 1932
  • Time, Monday, 9 May, 1932;
  • Thacker v State. 1933 OK CR 119. 26 P.2d 770. 55 Okl.Cr. 161. Decided: 10/27/1933. Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals;
  • "Hunt Extended for Doctor as Result Deaths," Cushing (OK) Daily Citizen, April 28, 1932
  • "Thacker Held Without Bond," Abilene Morning News, Jul. 22, 1932
  • "Probe of Coeds' Deaths To Center Here Today; School Aiding Officers, The (Norman) Oklahoma Daily, April 28, 1932
  • "Capital City Doctor Sought for a Murder," Bartlesville (OK) Enterprise, April 28, 1932
  • "Frank Lee Tells Tragic Story of Wife's Death," Bartlesville (OK) Enterprise, April 28, 1932
  • "At Least Five Girls Dead After Illegal Operations in Oklahoma City District," Mexia (TX) Weekly Herald, April 29, 1932
  • "Investigation of Many Suspected Cases Under Way," Oshkosh Daily Northwestern, Apr. 29, 1932
  • "Illegal Surgery Kills Seven Girls," Asbury Park (NJ) Press, Apr. 29, 1932
  • "Jail Osteopath, Seek Doctor in Co-eds' Deaths," Elmira (NY) Star-Gazette, Apr. 29, 1932
  • "Probe Of Illegal Operations Shows Scores of Deaths," Shawnee (OK) Evening Star, April 29, 1932
  • April 25, 1932: Hard-Working Co-Ed's Fatal Abortion

    Update: My annual research found that Virginia Lee Wyckoff had died on April 25, not April 24. 

    Poor qualilty profile shot of a middle-aged white man with eyeglasses.
    Dr. J. W. Eisiminger

    Virginia Lee Wyckoff, a University of Oklahoma student, age 21, died from complications of an abortion on April 25, 1932 Hers was one of a string of deaths in the city that year. 


    According to her obituary, Virginia also operated a dressmaker shop near the campus. She was a sophomore in the college of fine arts and a member of the Polo and Riding Association. She was survived by her mother, sister, and brother. They took her body to Centerville, Iowa for burial.

    Dr. J.W. Eisiminger, an osteopath, was tried and convicted of murder in Virginia's death. He admitted to having treated her in his office on April 3, but said that he didn't believe she was pregnant. Nevertheless, Virginia spent several days in a private home where Eisiminger kept recovering abortion patients under the care of Mrs. Luther Bryant Price. 

    Dr. Richard Thacker, who had an abortion patient of his own die on April 24, 1932, also used Mrs. Price's home as a recovery center for his abortion patients.

    Virginia was transferred from Mrs. Prices's home to Oklahoma City General Hospital, where she died of septicemia, first having told doctors there that Eisiminger had performed the fatal abortion.. A deathbed statement absolving Eisiminger was proven to be a forgery.

    Eisiminger was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to murder in her abortion death. The sentence was later reduced to 15 years.

    Sources: