Historic Pelham Blog Archive
March 31, 2005
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Thursday, March 31, 2005
William Hahn Will Forever Be Known as the Least Intelligent Criminal
Ever To Attempt To Prey On Pelham
On a quiet Wednesday evening, April 12, 1893, wealthy Pelham lawyer
James M. Townsend, Jr. wandered upstairs to bed at about 10:30. While
nostalgic residents of those days might have reminisced about the "good
old days" when no one ever locked their doors in Pelham, Mr. Townsend knew
better. He typically followed a nightly ritual of examining the "locks and
bolts of the doors and windows previous to retiring".
That night, however, lawyer Townsend did not follow his ritual.
Unfortunately, the same night a burglar had chosen to advance his
questionable career on the premises of Mr. Townsend's abode. Fortunately,
it turned out, the burglar was particularly stupid.
Mr. Townsend slept soundly and heard nothing during the night except
that between 4:00 and 5:00 a.m. he was awakened briefly by a strange cat
that wandered into his bedroom. He supposed that the cat had gotten into
the cellar during the evening when the house was open and had made its way
upstairs during the night. He rolled over and went back to sleep, never
suspecting that the little creature likely had walked into the house
through a door left open downstairs by burglars.
He later told police that two different "nurses" who cared for his
young children awoke to care for crying youngsters in the middle of the
night but heard nothing. It was not until one of his servants wandered
downstairs at about 7:00 a.m. that the burglary was discovered. Mr.
Townsend told police:
"Immeditately on her notifying me, I made a thorough investigation of
the house and found one of the dining-room windows open, and also the
dining-room door leading to the porch. On the back lawn we found Mrs.
Townsend's long cloak trimmed with fur. There were muddy footprints on the
piazza and also on the window sill of the dining room. . . . The work of
entrance must have been skillfully effected, for there was no indication
that any of the doors or windows had been forced. Through the dining room,
hall, and library were numerous spots of candle grease indicating a
systematic and careful examination of these apartments. One of the dining
room sideboards was fairly cleaned out of its silverware, while the desks
and bureaus in all the apartments visited by the burglars had evidently
all been thoroughly searched and ransacked. The men showed great
discrimination, too, not burdening themselves with anything but solid
silver, leaving a candelabra and other plated goods behind and taking the
solid pieces standing right beside them. In all, they got about $2,000
worth of booty."
Two watchmen, including one for the Village of Pelham Manor who
regularly patrolled the street on which Mr. Townsend lived and a second
private watchman detailed to patrol the area around Mr. Townsend's home as
well as the adjacent homes of Robert C. Black (a principal of the jewelry
firm of Black, Starr & Frost) and Assistant District Attorney Stapler said
that they saw and heard nothing during the night. Perhaps most oddly, Mr.
Townsend's little black French poodle which "as a rule, is on his legs and
barking at the slightest sound" seems to have slept through the entire
affair even while the burglars were exploring in the same room with him.
Mr. Townsend even noted that he was so perplexed by the yappy little
poodle's behavior that he examined the dog the next day for signs that it
had been "ill used or drugged." He found nothing amiss.
The burglars had left behind plenty of evidence including muddy
footprints and candlewax drippings. Police needed none of that, however.
It seems that in their haste to depart with their ill-gotten gains, one of
the intellectually-challenged burglars left something rather important
behind -- HIS DIARY in which he had kept "a record of his doings". Mr.
Townsend found the diary by the piazza of his home "evidently dropped in
his haste by one of the thieves."
An account published in The New York Times documents what
happened next:
"Inspector McLaughlin put the case, with the clue of the diary, into
the hands of Detective Sergeants Thomas Mulvey and George A. Doran. A name
mentioned in the little book put them on the track of a well-known
professional thief they had been watching for some time, and on Saturday
afternoon they burst into the apartment, at 125 Chrystie Street, of
William Hahn, aged twenty-eight. Hahn was out of the back window and down
the fire escape into the street in a twinkling, with the officers hot foot
at his heels.
Through Chrystie Street Hahn scudded, doubling and twisting, to Grand
Street, and from Grand Street to the Bowery. He darted out of the Bowery
up Hester Street to Elizabeth Street the detectives were fast overhauling
him. To throw them off he ran through a hallway into the back yard,
scaling the fence and dropping into Hester Street again. There the chase
ended.
In Hahn's room was found much property, afterward identified by Mr.
Townsend as his, and a full set of burglar's tools. Hahn was remanded for
examination yesterday morning in the Jefferson Market Police Court. Other
arrests, it is expected, will soon follow."
Source: This Burglar Kept A Diary, N.Y. Times, Apr. 17, 1893,
Pg. 1.
On May 16, 1893, The New York Times reported that "William
Hahn, the burglar who entered James M. Townsend's residence at [Pelham]
Manor a few weeks ago, was sentenced yesterday to nine years' imprisonment
in Sing Sing Prison." See City And Suburban News, N.Y. Times,
May 16, 1893, p. 6.
There seem to be no further reports to tell us what happened to William
Hahn who may go down in history as the least intelligent criminal ever to
attempt to prey on Pelham. . . . .
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
7:40 AM
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