Mayhem, Murder Through Little Eyes and Big Ears

By John Ramsey Miller

I come from a town most people would describe as a slow, sleepy Mississippi Delta backwater. Cleveland, Mississippi is where I lived for six years, and I consider it my home town because those were my high-school years and I am connected to the people I knew there. Thomas Harris spent time living there as a young man, and has relatives there still. The town library was named for the Carpenter family whose members died from asphyxiation when their heating system malfunctioned and filled the house with smoke. The home had just been renovated and the windows painted shut. One of the bodies was found at a window and there were scratch marks …well I won’t delve into details. This week a friend of mine from high school wrote me a Facebook note that suggested that Harris modeled Hannibal Lechter on a man that was caught in our old town with a collection of human heads and human jerky in his pockets.

This took place in the late thirties and I’m sure Harris heard this story about the grave-robbing, head-collecting, human meat-eating Mr. Robinson. Mr. Robinson, an African/ American also murdered the entire Turner family, which incidentally happened to be Scot/Irish and cut an embryo from the murdered woman, whose body provided him with jerky. He was caught and admitted the killings, but said the heads he had accumulated were trophies from his grave robbing, not murders. Although it was reported in the media that he was shot while trying to escape, I believe the actual story is that he was de-celled and hanged while the town looked on, perhaps shot in the shoulder as he hung, and this was witnessed by an audience of angry, outraged individuals.

I suppose Thomas Harris may have given this murdering drifter a medical/ psychiatric degree, had him love fine things, and listen to opera while he drank rare wines and dined on the finer cuts of corpse meat. I don’t know Thomas personally, but it may have been Robinson and not Ed Gein he modeled Dr. Lechter’s cannibalism on. It was very likely Mr. Gein that inspired the body-skin wearing tailor, Jame “Buffalo Bill” Gumb, in Silence of the Lambs.

There were also three boys killed in nearby Rosedale, MS, whose killer and mutilator was never caught. That happened before I moved there, but was something parents had in the backs of their minds when we guys wanted to go camping. Even small towns have these stories of mayhem and murder, and retribution and justice dealt by private citizens outside courtrooms. When Mrs. Ringold killed her doctor husband with a shotgun one night after he’d beaten her, he was acquitted because the lawyer told the all male jury that it had been an accidental shooting. When the prosecutor brought up the fact that she had shot him more than once using a pump shotgun, Mrs. Ringold’s attorney (who later became Governor) argued that as a woman she was unfamiliar with the workings of shotguns and in her confusion and fright and horror she had reflexively pumped the shotgun three times, hitting him all three times. Released, she moved away, but a lot of people sympathized with her.

When I was very young we lived in the Methodist parsonage in Starkville, Mississippi and it was located across the street from a funeral home and the hospital was located within a hundred yards of us. The mortician had two sons I made friends with, and their father also had the town’s ambulance for emergencies. When he would take the ambulance out, he would either bring a corpse or two back to the funeral home or to the emergency room for repairs. We would wait for the siren, if there were survivors, we’d rush to the hospital’s loading dock to see what he had on a gurney, and if there was no siren, we’d be waiting at the funeral home for the delivery there. I can’t tell you how many maimed and dead people I saw, or how many times we laid ourselves in the grass outside the basement windows of the embalming theater and watch through the window, a young and impressionable audience, as Mr. Barry did his work. More than once I had known the corpses he worked on. I don’t know if he saw us, but if he did he never ran us off. He also had a notorious drinking problem, and lost his business when he was driving intoxicated and wrecked the ambulance depositing a battered casket and its corpse in the middle of the highway outside Jackson.

All of these stories and things I witnessed helped forge my imagination and introduced me to violence, death, justice, tragedy, and the heartbreak associated with them. I wouldn’t change a thing about my formative years, because it all contributed to bending me into the writer I am. I also learned about human nature and the complexities of the social structure and how good people can participate in bad things, and do surprising things for complex reasons. I grew up in the Civil Rights era, but that is a different blog for another time, although it is related when it comes to witnessing human complexities and contradictions.

We become who we are based on our experiences and we bring ourselves into everything we write, and how we see everything. I write about evil and the battle when good brings right to the table. In my stories good always wins over evil, not matter the odds. But life is not always so cut and dried, and evil often triumphs, and evil people often win the day in real life, if rarely in fiction. Our readers don’t want to see evil win, but to see good people facing seemingly insurmountable odds and both triumphant, whole, and happy at the end of their trial or quest. Our readers don’t need to know what the experiences were that made us become storytellers who seem to know violence and evil. They just want us to use our imaginations and experiences to make this battle between sides seem real, and to leave them feeling hopeful that they too can surmount the odds against them and prevail. As long as I can do so, I’ll do my best to accomplish that and leave the readers entertained, satisfied and hopeful.

5 thoughts on “Mayhem, Murder Through Little Eyes and Big Ears

  1. Well said, John. If the original storytellers were indeed “suspense” tellers using story for “fear management” in the community (and I think that’s a great theory), that means the kind of fiction you describe provides the same thing today. In an increasingly dark world, stories of justice prevailing increase in power.

    Related reflection in this article.

  2. John, your small town, Mississippi background was obviously a great feeding ground for your future works of suspense. Not everyone has that opportunity to grow up or live in a place that can nurture such vivid life-stories. It’s clear that your talent as a great writer was there as a seed ready to grow. You’re lucky to have those images filed away. One of the best tools a writer has is to dig into the past and pull out the real spice for seasoning. Nice post.

  3. John, your post brings back memories of my own youth in small-town South Carolina. The Mrs. Ringold story sounds like someone I knew well who was involved in an extramarital affair. This couple fought like cats and dogs, and the “other woman” shot the guy in the leg–twice. I remember the patriarch of the family took the guy aside and said, “Look, this woman’s aim is getting higher. You better end this relationship and stick with your wife.” However, the guy left his wife and married the other woman who’d shot him TWICE. As a writer, it’s helpful to be able to draw on such great southern gothic memories.

  4. You know, Miller, it’s interesting how our childhoods from the good old days were really the same as childhoods today, but without the awareness. My 8th grade gym teachwer, Mr. Irwin, used to make us parade naked and wet through his office so he could check us off for having taken a shower. He also used to check under our gym shorts to verify that we were wearing our athletic supporters. We never thought of it as copping a feel, we just thought Mr. Irwin was weird. Today, he’d be in jail.

    To this day, the murderer of Colonel Fitzmorris runs free. The murderer just knocked on the door, and when Fitzmorris opened it, he got hit with two barrels of 12 gauge buckshot. To this day, I’m on edge when I open the door to a stranger.

    Colonel Dooley next door to us used to beat his six kids with a closed fist. I watched him kick 12-year-old Matthew in the nuts because he hadn’t done his chores properly. We wrote it off to Col. Dooley being a mean man.

    When I was a kid, every boy broke a bone somewhere in his body. You’d get it set and then be in school the next day. Nobody died, though. Except for Gina Marine, who lived across the street from me. She died because the Army physicians in charge of her stomach flu let her drown in vomit. I remember seeing her dad return from the hospital on the day she passed away. I wasn’t yet ten years old, but I recognized raw grief when I saw it. I planted pansies in Gina’s memory, but I don’t think the family ever knew.

    By my recollection, that’s when my mom started drinking. She never stopped.

    I often wonder how people without artistic outlets deal with troubled childhoods.

    http://www.johngilstrap.com

  5. When I read John’s account my first reaction was to think, ‘Man, I’m glad I didn’t grow up in the south. Seems like a harsh place.’ I grew up between Alaska & Ohio in the 70’s & 80’s.

    Then I got to thinking, especially after considering Gilstrap’s comments. I never did have the gym teacher thing, two of our gym teachers were retired Marines. If someone on staff had done that there would’ve been bodies to identify. But the other stuff,
    yeah. I began to realize that the good old days weren’t quite as good as I remembered.

    The disciplines I endured as a kid, would certainly have been grounds for abuse charges today. The creep down the street who touched my sister and nearly got himself killed by our step father. The meth lab in the woods. The neighbor’s wife who walked like she was scared and never made eye contact with anyone. The day I went for a walk, a four hour fifteen mile walk, without telling my folks. After I got home my step father pulled up in his big Buick. He had his old .45 in his hand and tears in his eyes. I didn’t understand. I was thirteen and had my dog with me, we always played alone in the woods. Mom said something about a nearby barn where detectives found bloody pentagrams and disembowelled animals…and some kids shoes.
    It didn’t click then, it didn’t seem real.

    The fist fights, sneaking around in the dark, imagining death and war. Taking out rage on a heavy bag I built in the basement out of encylopaedias, pillows and an army duffle bag.

    I sat back and thought about my own writing. A lot of bad guys seem to die very hard deaths. And the good guys seldom walk away without scars…some don’t walk away.

    If it weren’t for the outlet of art, I wonder how much blood would be on my own hands.

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