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Anton PROBST
Classification: Mass murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 8
Date of murders:
April 7,
1866
Date of arrest:
5 days after
Date of birth: 1843
Victims profile: Christopher
and Julia Dearing and four of their children;
Cornelius Carey
(boy employee)
and
Elizabeth Dolan (family friend)
Method of murder:
Beating with an axe and a hammer
Anton Probst, a farm hand, systematically lured all eight
members of the Deering family into a barn, then axed them to death.
Beginning about 8:00 in the morning and finishing
around 1:30 p.m., he then went into the farmhouse and put on Mr.
Deering's fine clothes, sat down and ate the food in their kitchen (a
man's got to eat), then plundered the house one room at a time until
evening.
He then went into Philadelphia to his favorite saloon,
bought drinks for the house with his new found wealth, gambled and lost
at bagatelle (an early form of pool) and then treated himself to a lady
of the evening until the following morning when he was thrown out of the
whorehouse almost penniless. Managing to come up with more money for
whoring for the next five days,
Probst was finally captured and
subsequently hanged, His body was then used for chilling medical
experiments at the local college.
Strong evidence also suggests he was also a cold-blooded
serial killer who roamed the east coast and enjoyed butchering families.
THE PHILADELPHIA MASSACRE
By Troy Taylor
The Murders of the Dearing Family
In recent times, many people in
America have longed for days gone by, when life was simpler and
people were kinder to one another. These same people often speak
of the "good old days" before the streets were rampant with crime
and before stories of serial killers and murderers appeared quite
so often in the news. Those were better times, these people will
say, but an event in 1866 proves that the good old days weren't
always good -- and that bloodthirsty killers are not a product of
our modern times. This was proven by a man named Anton Probst in
that year when, for a few dollars, he committed a massacre that
shocked the city of Philadelphia, and the entire nation, with its
brutality.
Anton Probst was born in Germany in
1843 and came to the United States in 1863, during the height of the
Civil War. Almost immediately upon arriving in New York, he young man
volunteered for service in the Union Army. He did not do so because of
some patriotic zeal but rather because recruits were being paid $300 in
those days.
Probst decided to use this to his advantage and he
volunteered for the army several times. He would collect a bounty for
his enlistment, serve a few weeks in a training camp and then desert,
moving on to another northern city, where he would enlist again for
another $300. He never saw any action but he did manage to make a
comfortable living during the bloody days of the war.
His racket came to an end in 1865 and
by the fall of that year, Probst found himself penniless in Philadelphia.
Living on the streets, he found out that a man named Christopher Dearing
was looking for a handyman to work on his farm. Probst applied at the
small homestead on Jones' Lane and was soon hired.
The Dearing farm was
only a few acres in size with a small house, a barn where a horse and
one pig were kept and some grazing space for cattle. Dearing, his wife,
Julia, and their five children supported themselves by raising and
selling cattle. They were not wealthy by any means, but they were a
happy family who managed to get along on the little they earned.
Probst soon revealed his true
personality but only to Julia Dearing. She noticed how he did little
work and would lounge in the barn when he was supposed to be tending the
cattle. After he made several lewd comments to her, she urged her
husband to fire the strange young man after just three weeks. Dearing
agreed and Probst, claiming to be in poor health, was taken in by a
Philadelphia charity hospital. He lingered here from December 1865 to
the following February. While lying on his cot in the poor house,
Probst
schemed to rob the Dearing's and to get even with them. He returned to
the farm on March 2, 1866 and begged Christopher Dearing to hire him
back. Dearing, who felt sorry for the man, agreed.
Over the course of the next month,
Dearing worked harder than he ever had in his life. He pretended to be
quite friendly with the family and even Julia began to feel kindly
towards the young man. All the while, Probst continued to scheme and on
April 7, decided to put his plan into action.
That morning, Christopher
Dearing traveled by buggy to the Philadelphia docks to meet a visiting
family friend, Miss Elizabeth Dolan from Burlington, New Jersey.
Meanwhile, Probst and Cornelius Carey, a boy employed to help on the
farm, worked in a field. Events began just as started to rain at about
nine that morning.
As the rain began to fall, Probst and
Carey took shelter under a tree. When the boy looked away for a moment,
Probst clobbered Carey with the blunt end of an ax and when he fell,
stunned, Probst turned the ax over and severed the boy's head with it!
He quickly hid the body in a haystack and then, with methodical
precision, Probst lured the entire family --- one by one --- into the
barn.
There, he struck them senseless with a hammer and then chopped
them with the ax until Julia and four of her children, including an
infant, had been slaughtered. When Mr. Dearing arrived home with
Elizabeth Dolan, Probst was waiting for him. He told him that there was
a sick animal in the barn and after they went inside, Probst attacked
him with the hammer and ax as well. Miss Dolan, who had gone into the
house, was also lured into the barn and she was also slain.
When he was finished, Probst neatly
lined all of the bodies up inside of the barn and tossed hay over them.
He then ransacked the farm house, looking for money. He found $10 in
Dearing's wallet, of which $4 was later found to be counterfeit, as well
as revolver and a battered old watch. He also managed to find $3 in Miss
Dolan's purse but that was all.
Probst then used Dearing's razor to
shave off his beard and exchanged clean clothes and boots for his own
blood-soaked apparel. After that, he ate some bread and butter and then
went to his room for a nap. He slept peacefully, unconcerned about the
murders, and before leaving the farm, he took the time to feed the dogs
and chickens and the put out feed for the horses and the cow in the barn,
just steps away from where the bodies of the Dearing family lay
stiffening under the hay. Only one of the children survived the massacre.
Willie Dearing, the oldest son, had gone to stay with friends a few days
before the crime occurred.
After feeding the animals, Dearing
leisurely strolled away and spent the next few days on the streets.
Neighbors came to the farm on the day after the murders and found the
bodies of the family in the barn. They notified the police, who had
little trouble tracking down Probst. He had sold Dearing's revolver to a
bartender and his watch to a jeweler.
On April 12, five days after
Philadelphia's first mass murder, he was arrested by a single policeman
while drinking in a tavern at 23rd and Market Streets. He surrendered
without a fight.
At first, the killer protested his
innocence but the evidence against him was so strong that at the end of
his trial on May 1, the jury took only 20 minutes to find him guilty. He
was executed on June 8 but before this occurred, he made a complete
confession of his crimes.
Strangely, even after death, Anton Probst has
remained in Philadelphia. Following his execution, his body was
delivered to the medical college, where it was dissected. His mounted
skeleton then went on display in the museum of the college, which still
operates today. It was a strange and macabre (although perhaps fitting)
ending for this vicious killer.
After the massacre of all but
a boy, family lives to tell the tale
By Daniel Rubin - The Philadelphia Inquirer
Apr. 12, 2009
The headline in the Inquirer needed but a single
word to sink the hook:
Horror!
Eight persons lured one by one
to a barn and then killed with an ax: a father, mother, four children,
family friend, visiting aunt. A German farmhand gone missing.
The events of the day became
known as the Murders in the Neck, for the canal-laced district at the
tip of South Philadelphia. The "most horrible" murders in the city's
history, the paper called them on April 12, 1866, after a neighbor
stumbled upon the bodies.
Maybe because only one child
survived - William Deering, age 10 - the ghastly murders have captivated
Susan Kushner.
Or maybe because that boy was
her great-grandfather.
Anton Probst, a solitary, morose
Civil War deserter, would be arrested a few evenings later while walking
toward West Philadelphia, his hat pulled low on his brow.
After the murders he'd fed the
horses, shaved, picked out some of Christopher Deering's clothes, then
sat down at the tenant farmer's kitchen table and devoured a butter
sandwich. He grabbed two pocket watches, two pistols, and $17, then set
out for a favorite Northern Liberties brothel. The motive, he'd soon
confess, was robbery.
Justice moved quickly in those
days. Within the month Probst was tried, and in June he'd hang from the
gallows at Moyamensing Prison.
Tuesday was the 143d anniversary
of the murders. Kushner observed the day "just reflecting on who they
were." Speaking from her home outside Indianapolis, the 49-year-old is
one of more than 60 descendents of William, who at the time of the
killings was living with his grandparents in West Philadelphia, where he
attended school.
Kushner was about William's age
when she came upon an old clipping from the Philadelphia Bulletin in the
family Bible. The article pictured her father, about 25, and an aunt,
and focused on the treasure some believed was buried on the family farm.
The Deering family slaughter
long intrigued her father. For years he enlisted Susan and her brother
Michael to accompany him by train from their Bensalem home to Center
City, where he'd pore through old maps and papers at the Philadelphia
Free Library and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
The former Philco engineer had
hoped to write a book about the killings, but got sick at age 59, and
had to put down his quest. His daughter carried on. She shared her
archives with a young writer named G. Jordan Lyons, whose account of the
killings, The Philadelphia First Ward Horror, has just been
published.
Reading about a distant massacre
has had an unexpected effect on her, she said. "I feel I am grieving for
them," Kushner said. "It brought them to a special place within me."
Today the Deering family lies
buried in a mass grave at Holy Cross Cemetery in Yeadon under a statue
of the Blessed Mother. Their bodies were moved from a church graveyard
at 10th and Moore in the 1950s for the construction of St. Maria Goretti
High School. This continues to trouble Kushner.
She has asked the archdiocese if
the family can put a marker on the grave, in part because during her
research she was horrified to read how her ancestors' bodies had been
put on gruesome display before burial and thousands of people bought
tickets to the spectacle.
I sought out Roger Lane, a
Haverford College historian who has written at length about Philadelphia
deaths, to explore how such a sideshow could happen.
During that period, he said, "nothing
was too gruesome to be exploited commercially."
Robert E. Whomsley, director of
the Catholic Cemeteries Office, told Kushner that the family could not
put up a marker because it would be unfair to the rest of the 8,471
adults and children buried in the grave.
Kushner wonders if more
attention should be paid to her people's near-annihilation. Dark as it
is, it's a chapter of the city's history. "This is a whole family that
no one knows about," she said.
Whomsley has invited her to
visit, which she said she would, this summer, with scores of other
descendants of what was once this city's most horrific mass murder.
"It will be kind of a family
reunion," she said.
Anton
Probst
Anton Probst was born in Germany in 1843 and came to the United States
in 1863, during the height of the Civil War. Almost immediately upon
arriving in New York, the young man volunteered for service in the Union
Army. He did not do so because of some patriotic zeal but rather because
recruits were being paid $300 in those days. Probst decided to use this
to his advantage and he volunteered for the army several times. He would
collect a bounty for his enlistment, serve a few weeks in a training
camp and then desert, moving on to another northern city, where he would
enlist again for another $300. He never saw any action but he did manage
to make a comfortable living during the bloody days of the war.
His racket came to an end in 1865 and by the fall of that year, Probst
found himself penniless in Philadelphia. Living on the streets, he found
out that a man named Christopher Dearing was looking for a handyman to
work on his farm. Probst applied at the small homestead on Jones' Lane
and was soon hired. The Dearing farm was only a few acres in size with a
small house, a barn where a horse and one pig were kept and some grazing
space for cattle. Dearing, his wife, Julia, and their five children
supported themselves by raising and selling cattle. They were not
wealthy by any means, but they were a happy family who managed to get
along on the little they earned.
Probst soon revealed
his true personality but only to Julia Dearing. She noticed how he did
little work and would lounge in the barn when he was supposed to be
tending the cattle. After he made several lewd comments to her, she
urged her husband to fire the strange young man after just three weeks.
Dearing agreed and Probst, claiming to be in poor health, was taken in
by a Philadelphia charity hospital. He lingered here from December 1865
to the following February. While lying on his cot in the poor house,
Probst schemed to rob the Dearing's and to get even with them. He
returned to the farm on March 2, 1866 and begged Christopher Dearing to
hire him back. Dearing, who felt sorry for the man, agreed.
Over the course of the next month, Dearing worked harder than he ever
had in his life. He pretended to be quite friendly with the family and
even Julia began to feel kindly towards the young man. All the while,
Probst continued to scheme and on April 7, decided to put his plan into
action. That morning, Christopher Dearing traveled by buggy to the
Philadelphia docks to meet a visiting family friend, Miss Elizabeth
Dolan from Burlington, New Jersey. Meanwhile, Probst and Cornelius
Carey, a boy employed to help on the farm, worked in a field. Events
began just as started to rain at about nine that morning.
As the rain began to fall, Probst and Carey took shelter under a tree.
When the boy looked away for a moment, Probst clobbered Carey with the
blunt end of an ax and when he fell, stunned, Probst turned the ax over
and severed the boy's head with it! He quickly hid the body in a
haystack and then, with methodical precision, Probst lured the entire
family --- one by one --- into the barn. There, he struck them senseless
with a hammer and then chopped them with the ax until Julia and four of
her children, including an infant, had been slaughtered. When Mr.
Dearing arrived home with Elizabeth Dolan, Probst was waiting for him.
He told him that there was a sick animal in the barn and after they went
inside, Probst attacked him with the hammer and ax as well. Miss Dolan,
who had gone into the house, was also lured into the barn and she was
also slain.
When he was finished, Probst neatly lined
all of the bodies up inside of the barn and tossed hay over them. He
then ransacked the farm house, looking for money. He found $10 in
Dearing's wallet, of which $4 was later found to be counterfeit, as well
as revolver and a battered old watch. He also managed to find $3 in Miss
Dolan's purse but that was all. Probst then used Dearing's razor to
shave off his beard and exchanged clean clothes and boots for his own
blood-soaked apparel. After that, he ate some bread and butter and then
went to his room for a nap. He slept peacefully, unconcerned about the
murders, and before leaving the farm, he took the time to feed the dogs
and chickens and the put out feed for the horses and the cow in the barn,
just steps away from where the bodies of the Dearing family lay
stiffening under the hay. Only one of the children survived the massacre.
Willie Dearing, the oldest son, had gone to stay with friends a few days
before the crime occurred.
After feeding the animals,
Probst leisurely strolled away and spent the next few days on the
streets. Neighbors came to the farm on the day after the murders and
found the bodies of the family in the barn. They notified the police,
who had little trouble tracking down Probst. He had sold Dearing's
revolver to a bartender and his watch to a jeweler. On April 12, five
days after Philadelphia's first mass murder, he was arrested by a single
policeman while drinking in a tavern at 23rd and Market Streets. He
surrendered without a fight.
At first, the killer
protested his innocence but the evidence against him was so strong that
at the end of his trial on May 1, the jury took only 20 minutes to find
him guilty. He was executed on June 8 but before this occurred, he made
a complete confession of his crimes. Strangely, even after death, Anton
Probst has remained in Philadelphia. Following his execution, his body
was delivered to the medical college, where it was dissected. His
mounted skeleton then went on display in the museum of the college,
which still operates today. It was a strange and macabre (although
perhaps fitting) ending for this vicious killer.