Billy Gohl

William Gohl (February 6, 1873 – March 3, 1927) was a German-American serial killer who, while working as a union official, murdered sailors passing through Aberdeen, Washington.[2] He murdered for an unknown period of time and was a suspect in dozens of murders until his capture in 1910. Spared from the death penalty by a request for leniency by the jury, he was sentenced to life in prison at Walla Walla State Penitentiary where he died in 1927 from lobar pneumonia and erysipelas complicated by dementia paralytic caused by syphilis.[1]

Billy Gohl
Born
William F. Gohl

February 6, 1873
Died (aged 54)
Cause of deathLobar pneumonia, erysipelas, syphilis
Other namesGhoul of Grays Harbor
"Billy Montana"
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Details
Victims2 (but possibly 100+)[1]
Span of crimes
1902–1910
CountryUnited States
State(s)Washington
Date apprehended
1910

Occupation and murders

Gohl was employed as a union official at the Sailors' Union of the Pacific. Before this he had been employed as a bartender after returning broke from the Yukon.[3] Already an accomplished criminal,[3] Gohl was suspected of being responsible for many of the large numbers of deceased migrant workers that were found washed up on shore during his tenure as a bartender, as well as a number of other crimes.[3]

In 1905, during the great waterfront strike Gohl was charged with "assembling men under arms" and is also alleged to have forcibly abducted non-union crewmen from the schooner Fearless for which he was fined $1,250 in the Superior Court.[4][5] As a union official, Gohl used his reputation and intimidating size to discourage strikes and "recruit" new union members.[3]

The Union building proved to be a location that was ideal for his crimes, both in providing victims, and in concealing the evidence of their murders.[2] Sailors arriving in the port of Aberdeen would usually visit the Sailor's Union building soon after disembarking. There they could collect their mail and, if they wished, set some money aside in savings.[2]

Gohl would usually be on duty, alone. Typically, Gohl would ask if the sailors had any family or friends in the area. Then he would turn the conversation to the topic of money and valuables. If the sailor was just passing through, and would not be missed by anyone in the area, and had more than a trivial amount of cash or valuables on hand, Gohl would choose him as his next victim.[2]

Gohl would kill most of his victims in the union building by shooting them. Then after relieving them of their money and valuables, he would dispose of them in the Wishkah River, which ran behind the building and into Grays Harbor.[2] According to some reports, there was a chute which descended from a trapdoor in the building directly into the river.[2] Other reports state that Gohl would use a small launch to murder his victims and dump the bodies directly in the harbor.[3] Though suspected of being responsible for the large number of sailors who would disembark in Aberdeen and disappear,[6] nothing was done to stop him until an accomplice, John Klingenberg, was brought back to Aberdeen after trying to jump ship in Mexico to escape prosecution, or possibly to escape Gohl.[2][3]

The Arrest

Klingenberg was able to testify to seeing Gohl alone with a sailor, Charles Hatberg/Hatteberg, whose body had recently been found in the harbor at Indian Creek February 2, 1910,[7] soon after his disappearance [2][3] on December 21, 1909. Hatberg had been shot with a .38 Automatic pistol which had been found in the salt flats by his body. The ownership was traced to Gohl.[8] The motive according to Klingburg's confession was that Gohl claimed Hatberg had told a "detective Miller" that Gohl had shot a cow the previous summer.[9]

Gohl had already been arrested in February 1910[4] for the Hatberg murder and was convicted of two counts of murder, though suspected of 41 or more,note A[2][10] found guilty May 12, 1910[11] and sentenced to life imprisonment[3] and taken to the State Prison June 13, 1910.[12] Besides Hatberg, the second count was for the murder of John Hoffman,[13] a witness to the Hatberg murder who was shot and injured by Gohl on the night of the murder, and killed the next day by Klingenberg, for which Hoffman's killer was sentenced to 20 years.[3][14]

Hoffman had been killed December 23, 1909, after the Hatberg killing, and had been robbed of $400.00[13][15] and also disposed of in the Harbor near Indian Creek. In July 1910, a human skeleton was found in Indian Creek; however, it is not known whether these were the remains of Hoffman.[16][17] Gohl was later transferred to an asylum for the criminally insane, where he died in 1927.[2][3] He is buried in an open field above West Medical Lake, Eastern State Hospital[18]

Notes

^note A – Little is known about Gohl's early life though at one point as an adult, he went to the Yukon chasing gold. He was unsuccessful, and on his return to Aberdeen he took on work as a bartender. During this time it is believed he may have been responsible for numerous murders. The bodies of migrant workers were found after washing up on the shores, robbed of any valuables or money they were known to have. Allegedly, from 1905 to 1910, 40 bodies were found floating near Aberdeen.[19] It is alleged Gohl started a fire that burned an Alaskan saloon and that a man and woman who lived in a cabin owned by Gohl "vanished".[20] In March 1912, a human skull was found buried near a cabin owned by Gohl; another skull had previously been found near the same spot on a beach and was thought to have been of "Red" Miller who had "disappeared" and was believed to have been a victim of Gohl.[21] Other corpses found in the Grays Harbor area were suggested to be victims of Gohl, including the body of Carl O. Carlson, found on April 27, 1910, floating in the harbor.[22]

See also

References

  1. Hughes, John; Beckwith Ryan. On the Harbor: From Black Friday to Nirvana. Stephens Press. p. 209. ISBN 1-932173-50-1.
  2. Lane, Brian; Wilfred Gregg. The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Berkley Books. p. 179. ISBN 0-425-15213-8.
  3. Morgan, Murray C. The Last Wilderness. University of Washington Press. pp. 122–128. ISBN 978-0-670-41936-4.
  4. "Sailors' agent is held for murder". The Colfax Gazette. February 11, 1910. p. 6.
  5. San Francisco Call August 23, 1906 reports that on a man from the Fearless was found drowned and that Gohl had led an armed party which taken two sailors from the Watson A West
  6. Los Angeles Herald May 3, 1910-Mayor Benn of Aberdeen in 1908 had heard of Gohl being responsible for the "Floater Fleet"; Benn had Police Chief Dean begin an investigation although it took over a year because of the scarcity of evidence for a prosecution
  7. "Murder by Wholesale" The Spokane Press February 3, 1910 .p.1
  8. "Slayer of Hadberg tells story of deed" The Newport Miner May 12, 1912 .p.3
  9. "Confession of Klingenberg" Aberdeen Herald April 27, 1910 .p.2
  10. San Francisco Call April 7, 1910 attributes the number of victims as 50 to 60
  11. "Mrs. Gohl Will Stick To Husband Who Has Been Found Murderer". The Tacoma Times. May 12, 1910. p. 6.
  12. "Slayer Taken To Prison". The San Francisco Call. June 14, 1910. p. 9.
  13. Los Angeles Herald February 6, 1910 reports Hoffman had withdrawn $450.00 prior to his disappearance; Gohl was also reported to have taken Hatberg personal belongings from the Indian Creek Shack where the victim had lived
  14. San Francisco Call October 16, 1910 Klingenberg was found guilty of manslaughter in Hatberg murder; the jury recommended leniency
  15. San Francisco Call April 7, 1910 reports it was Gohl who killed Hoffman
  16. "Sixty Murders traced to Gohl". The San Francisco Call, April 7, 1910.
  17. "Another Dead Body Found Near Aberdeen". The San Francisco Call. July 25, 1910. p. 2, at foot.
  18. [The Spokesman-Review - Mar 6, 2004]
  19. "May Lynch Suspect". The Tacoma Times: p. 1 and p. 8. February 4, 1910.
  20. "Weaving a Web About Gohl". The Tacoma Times. February 5, 1910. p. 6.
  21. "Skull found may be victium of Gohl" Aberdeen Herald March 7, 1912
  22. "Items of Interest to Mariners in the Pacific". The San Francisco Call. April 28, 1910. p. 17. Retrieved April 24, 2013. At the Library of Congress.

Further reading

  • Goings, Aaron (2020). The Port of Missing Men: Billy Gohl, Labor, and Brutal Times in the Pacific Northwest. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-74741-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.