The Mysterious Persecution of Lillian Hawkins. Part 1.

I came across this peculiar story and despite some frustrating unknowns, it’s a fascinating mystery with lots of twists! I would love to hear your theories about the case.

Our story begins in April of 1900 when 19-year-old Lillian Hawkins left her home in Trumbull County, Ohio and moved 40 miles north to the town of Ashtabula to take a job doing domestic work for a local family. Her room and board was included as part of her employment with them.

Being on her own and earning her own living for the first time should have been an exciting time but, not long after starting her new job, Lillian became very sick.  The doctors diagnosed the girl with “nervous prostration,” a generic diagnosis used excessively by Victorian era physicians to diagnose female ailments. Lillian’s problems seemed to be rather serious.  At one point, the newspapers reported that she was “delirious for four days without regaining consciousness.”

Unable to work, Lillian moved to the tiny town of Rock Creek, some 15 miles south of Ashtabula, to recover at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Knowlton. Nina Knowlton was the younger sister of Lillian’s mother.  The family doctor, C. G. Morrison, was called in to see Lillian and he disagreed with the diagnosis of the Ashtabula doctors. He announced the girl was suffering from spinal meningitis.

Lillian’s health gradually improved enough for her to return to work in Ashtabula, but soon she was back in Rock Creek struggling with another bout of illness. Dr. Morrison said Lillian would recover. It seemed only her eyes were tremendously weakened by her illness.

Fred and Nina Knowlton had two young sons so their home wasn’t an ideal place for a young woman who needed peace and quiet to recuperate. Instead Lillian’s mother and brother joined her in Rock Creek and they rented a small cottage near the Knowlton home.

That’s when Lillian began to receive a regular influx of threatening and demeaning letters. Though the papers did not quote the letters, the Cincinnati Enquirer said the messages “reflected upon her reputation…Some of them, it is alleged, were signed with the name of a woman relative and others were unsigned.” But did the relative really send some or all of the letters? The police were mystified by the letters and had no luck tracing them.

Meanwhile, bad luck continued to plague the girl.

In August, a sudden summer thunderstorm caused a hard rain to pour down. Lillian was at home when it began to rain and she hurried across the living room to close the window. As she pulled the glass down, a bolt of lightning struck her and rendered her unconscious for several hours. Dr. Morrison managed to bring her back around.

I assumed that most people who are struck by lightning were killed but, after looking into it, I can say for sure that most people actually survive. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has detailed data on it. Lightning strikes the United States about 40 million times each year, but the odds of being struck by lightning are less than one in a million. Nearly 90% of people who are struck by lightning survive it. The CDC tracked people who were struck by lightning and made some very interesting findings. Looking at fatal lightning strikes specifically, men are four times more likely to be victims than women. Also, one-third of deaths from lightning strikes happen indoors. The CDC estimated that, over a 15-year period, between 6 – 15 people were killed by lightning strike in Ohio.

Depending on how you look at it, Lillian was either very fortunate or very unfortunate. Being struck by lightning was unlucky, but she was fortunate not to be killed—or even to suffer any long-term health issues from the incident.

However, Lillian was struck by lightning a second time two months later.

To paraphrase Oscar Wilde, to be struck by lightning once may be regarded as a misfortune. To be struck twice looks like carelessness.

No details about the second incident could be found but Dr. Morrison later confirmed his patient had total amnesia for several days. The papers did not mention whether anyone was in the house with Lillian when either of these incidents happened.

Despite the lightning strikes, the anonymous letters continued to arrive all summer, throughout the fall, and into the winter. On the night of December 5, Lillian received a letter demanding she return the previous threatening letters she had received and warned her that, if she didn’t give them up, she would be “compelled” to do so. The letter did not explain how Lillian was supposed to hand over the letters.

It was evidently a serious threat. The following night, Lillian was home alone. She was dozing in her bedroom when someone crawled through the front window, tearing through some vines as they boosted themselves into the house. Lillian awakened with a start as the dark figure was framed in her doorway.  Before she could scream, the intruder swiftly leaned over her, stuffing a gag saturated with chloroform into her mouth. Lillian lost consciousness.

When she awoke a few minutes later, she was tied to her bed and still gagged. The intruder was still in the room and appeared to be rummaging through Lillian’s trunk. The girl watched and wisely did not advertise the fact she had awakened. When the stranger left a few moments later, Lillian saw that letters taken from her trunk were stuffed in her assailant’s pockets.

When Lillian’s mother returned home to find her daughter lying on her bed, still bound and gagged, she summoned the police at once. The officers questioned Lillian closely. The girl said she had no idea who the assailant was. The one helpful thing she could tell them was that she was sure the intruder was a woman, dressed in men’s clothing.

The police wanted to know about the stolen letters, but Lillian said they were just ordinary messages from family members. She had burned the threatening letters for which the woman was evidently searching.

“The local authorities worked on the case a short time, but gave it up as an unfathomable mystery,” the Buffalo Times wrote.

Everyone seemed to believe that after this strange incident, Lillian’s persecutor was finished with her, but they couldn’t have been more wrong.

Click here to read Part 2.

6 thoughts on “The Mysterious Persecution of Lillian Hawkins. Part 1.

  1. Pingback: The Wickedness Harriet Wrought. Part 3 | old spirituals

  2. Pingback: The Persecution of Lillian Hawkins & the Murder of Ruby Reed w/ Kimberly Tilley : MOST NOTORIOUS!

  3. Pingback: Most Notorious Episode | old spirituals

  4. Pingback: New Murder, Old Questions | old spirituals

  5. Pingback: Things I didn’t know about the Statue of Liberty | old spirituals

  6. Pingback: 3 Electrifying Photographs of Nikola Tesla | old spirituals

Share your thoughts on this post