Lucy "Louisa" Hagenow |
I find it a bit odd that there was no real investigation of the death. There is simply no explanation that makes any sense other than that Emma had gone to known Hagenow, had an abortion at the maternity home, thought she was recovering, went home, and died. Considering that there had recently been three Hagenow patients dying from botched abortions -- Louise Derchow, Anna Doreis and Abbia Richards -- one would think that they'd dig deeper into the circumstances surrounding Emma's death. Furthermore, a man named Franz Krone had died on August 13 at Hagenow's maternity home, leaving behind jewelry and money that was never accounted for.
Hagenow relocated to Chicago, began using the name Lucy rather than Louise or Louisa, and began piling up dead bodies there as well. She was implicated in numerous abortion deaths, including Minnie Deering, Sophia Kuhn , Emily Anderson, Hannah Carlson, Marie Hecht, May Putnam, Lola Madison, Annie Horvatich. Lottie Lowy, Nina H. Pierce, Jean Cohen, Bridget Masterson, Elizabeth Welter, and Mary Moorehead.
Mid-20th Century Philadelphia
Doris Ostreicher |
The dead woman was Doris Jean Silver Ostreicher, a 22-year-old heiress. Doris had made front page news when she eloped in a "fairy tale romance" with Earl Ostreicher, a 29-year-old motorcycle cop from Miami Beach, in late June of 1955. Ostreicher was the son of a Chicago fuel dealer. He held that he'd not known that his beautiful red-haired bride was wealthy. She'd told him, he said, that her father was a butcher, not vice president of the Food Fair chain of grocery stores.
But fairy tale romances don't always lead to fairy tale marriages. Within a few weeks, Doris evidently was disillusioned, and had separated from her husband, returning to her family's Philadelphia home. When she learned that her short-lived marriage had left her pregnant, her mother, Gertrude Silver, helped her to arrange an abortion, which was perpetrated with some sort of instrument and a "vegetable compound." Doris collapsed and died.
Rosalie and Milton Schwartz |
Doris' mother, who was hospitalized for "bereavement shock" in the early days after her daughter's death, was charged as an accessory. She was fined and given a suspended sentence for her role in her daughter's death. The judge said that he considered the memory of how her daughter had died "substantial punishment."
Wow, This is a sad story. But how would you respomd to pro choices who would say that this situation is a perfect example of why it should be legal.I mean, if she would have gone to a Dr. (The woman in philly) she would have had much less a chance of dying. Any Dr. Even Dr. Emma up above would have more of a chance doing a safe abortion that moms with mustard.
ReplyDeleteAnd just for the record, I am pro life. I'm just getting increasingly sick of people in the pro life community not being critical of themselves and not being intellectually honest.
DeleteAnd just for the record, I am pro life. I'm just getting increasingly sick of people in the pro life community not being critical of themselves and not being intellectually honest.
DeleteWow, This is a sad story. But how would you respomd to pro choices who would say that this situation is a perfect example of why it should be legal.I mean, if she would have gone to a Dr. (The woman in philly) she would have had much less a chance of dying. Any Dr. Even Dr. Emma up above would have more of a chance doing a safe abortion that moms with mustard.
ReplyDelete