Tag Archives: Human Monsters

Tortoise-like Prodigy Born, 1850

Sandusky, Ohio, The Daily Sanduskian28 March 1850

What Next


The Montreal Gazette translates from L'Avenir, a Canadian paper, the following extraordinary story, with the remark that the editors have since heard the thing is dead.

HUMAN MONSTER. We learn that a female in the parish of St. Timothy, has just given birth to an extraordinary child, which, in grotesque horror, exceeds all that humanity has yet produced in the way of infant phenomena. The new born child has nothing human about it but the head and arms; the rest is ... [More »]

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Young girl overcome with bloodlust, 1866

Cumberland, Maryland, Allegiant18 July 1866

Cannibalism in France


A most singular case of anthropophagy has lately come before the tribunals of Paris. A young girl of eleven years of age attempted successively the life of her mother and sister for the sole purpose of drinking their blood. The child has been examined by competent physicians, and proved to be attacked by the strange ... [More »]

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The Barber Fiend of Fleet Street, 1875

Judy, or the London Serio-Comic Journal07 July 1875

NICE LITTLE RHYMES BY GRANDFATHER GRIMES


No. 1.--The Nice Little Story of Sweeney Todd, the Barber Fiend of Fleet Street

Little boy Bobby, come sit on my lap, I’ll tell you a nice little story, young chap I hear that for Bogies you entertain dread, So I’ll tell you a tale ere you toddle to bed.

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The Barber and the Baker, 1866

The Brooklyn Eagle02 July 1866

A Horrible Story


A Paris correspondent of the London Star gives the following: In the days of Francis L. flourished a barber and a pastry cook, who were near neighbors. The pies sold by the latter were admirable – Soyer would not have disowned them. Their flavor had a delicacy that was peculiar, but delicious. The barber, too, ... [More »]

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Boy Eats Animals Alive

Daily Alta California, San Francisco07 September 1873

An Abnormal Appetite


The following story of an abnormal appetite is vouched for by a Paris correspondent. M. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, the well-known Director of the Jardin d’Acclimation, noticed that the small birds were rapidly and mysteriously disappearing. After some days’ watch, it was found that a boy who took care of the camels was the culprit….

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