Prepared by Dyani Scheuerman and Rhonda Rinehart, June 2003-January 2004
1 record storage box, 2 oversize boxes, 3 cubic feet, 11th floor
Historical Note
On May 20, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh became a famous figure in American history
when he made the first solo trans-Atlantic flight from New York to Paris. Five
years later, on March 1, 1932, he again became the object of much media attention
when his 20-month-old son, Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. was kidnapped from his nursery.
The events that followed the kidnapping, including the search for the young Lindbergh
boy, negotiations with the kidnappers, discovery of the child's decomposed body,
and the trial of the kidnap and murder suspect Richard Bruno Hauptmann, culminated
into a complex and puzzling case involving numerous people. The case's popularity
led to the "Lindbergh Law," which defined the crime of kidnapping to be a federal
offense punishable by death. The case itself was unanimously considered an open
and shut one, which led to Hauptmann's execution for the kidnapping and murder
of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. on April 3, 1936. However, nearly 80 years later,
many questions surround this case and "the trial of the century," including Hauptmann's
guilt.
Scope and Content
This collection, donated by Albert and Helen Borowitz, contains photographs,
clippings, posters, and other documents related to the Lindbergh kidnapping
and subsequent trial of Richard Bruno Hauptmann. A large portion of this collection
includes press photographs and newspaper clippings, which give a telling glimpse
into the ethos and pathos of 1930s media, and its direct influences on events
surrounding the Lindbergh case. Many of these photographs, complete with detailed
captions, were used in various newspaper publications during the years of the
kidnap and trial. Five distinct time periods are well-represented by this collection,
and include the Lindbergh family before the kidnapping took place, the kidnapping
itself, the time frame during the search for the child, the investigation, and
the courtroom trial of Hauptmann. The complete FBI file report about the case
is also present in this collection as well as "Reward" and "Wanted"
posters circulated during the case. In addition, a pamphlet satirizing a fictional
kidnapping paralleling the Lindbergh case and mailed to the Hauptmann jury prior
to the trial, is an important item in the collection. Evidential and press photographs
taken during the investigation are present in a separately-acquired collection,
entitled Lindbergh Kidnapping Photographs, 1931-1932. Special Collections and
Archives also holds several books about the Lindbergh case which are cataloged
in KentLINK.
Kent State University does not own copyright to the photographs in this collection. Permission must be obtained from copyright holder(s) for duplication.
Box 1: Photographs, Clippings, and Other Materials
Folder -- Contents
Press Photographs
John H. Curtis, one of the five intermediaries in kidnapping case,
April 1, 1932
Ernest Joseph Brinkert, possible suspect identified by Violet Sharpe [Lindbergh
household maid], June 11, 1932
John Hughes Curtis, one of the five intermediaries in kidnapping case,
June 27, 1932
Charles Boettcher, Jr., friend of Lindbergh family, February 14, 1933
Mrs. Gaston B. Means, wife of Gaston Means, whose husband was one
of the five kidnap intermediaries, May 8, 1933
View in West Farms court of Hauptmann trial, September 21, 1934
Isador Fisch and Henry Uhlig, September 23, 1934
Isador Fisch, passport photograph, September 24, 1934
Isador Fisch, from whom Hauptmann claimed he received ransom money,
September 27, 1934
Isador Fisch, unidentified friend, and Henry Uhlig, September 27,
1934
Anita Lutzenberg, Hauptmann friend, September 27, 1934
John Bowman, alias John O'Day, held for questioning in Lindbergh case,
September 30, 1934
James M. Fawcett, attorney for Bruno Hauptmann, October 11, 1934
Joseph M. Furcht, Hauptmann employer, October 17, 1934
Hunterdon County Courthouse, January 8, 1935
Greta Henkel, Hauptmann acquaintance, January 26, 1935
Elvert Carlstron, Hauptmann trial defense witness, January 30, 1935
Elvert Carlstron, Hauptmann trial defense witness, January 31, 1935
Elvert Carlstron, Hauptmann trial defense witness, January 31, 1935
Philip Hockenbury, Charles Walton, and Liscom C. Case; three jurors
in Hauptmann trial, January 31, 1935
Elvert Carlstron, Hauptmann trial defense witness, February 2, 1935
Sam Streppone, Hauptmann trial defense witness, February 5, 1935
Witnesses for Hauptmann's defense, February 6, 1935
Carl Henkel, Greta Henkel, Hentry Uhlig, acquaintances testifying
on Hauptmann's behalf, February 9, 1935
Philip Hockenbury, juror, February 14, 1935
Rev. Michael J. Kallok, Catholic priest who testified against Bruno
Hauptmann, April 9, 1935
Neil Burkinshaw and Nugent Dodds, pled for a stay of execution for
Bruno Hauptmann, January 16, 1936
Attorney General David Wilentz with his wife, February 24, 1936
Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh, October 7, 1953
Charles Lindbergh entering courtroom, [no date]
Bruno Hauptmann and Charles Lindbergh, [no date]
Attorney General David Wilentz showing ransom letter, [no date]
Artist's rendering of Bruno Hauptmann entering the execution chamber,
[no date]
Newspaper clippings about Lindbergh family and kidnapping case (most date
from 1930s)
Lindbergh early flights
Morrow family
Anne Morrow Lindbergh speaking engagements
Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. and family
Lindbergh home and scene of kidnapping
Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. kidnapping and publicity photographs
Crime/kidnap chronologies
Murder/crime scene
Editorial sketches
Kidnapping bulletins
Children mistaken for Lindbergh baby
Principle figures and clues in case
Betty Gow [Lindbergh baby's nurse]
Violet Sharpe [Lindbergh household maid]
Aids in case
Kidnapping case intermediaries
Al Capone's offer of aid
Kidnapping/murder suspects
Ransom notes
Hunterdon County courthouse [scene of Hauptmann trial]
Judge and prosecutors in Hauptmann trial
Hauptmann trial jury
Bruno Hauptmann, family, and acquaintances
Hauptmann defense
Hauptmann trial evidence
Location where ransom money found
Witnesses and testimonies in Hauptmann trial
Charles Lindbergh court appearances and testimony
Stories related to Lindbergh case
Other kidnappings/threats
Special interest stories and photographs related to case
One year anniversary of Lindbergh kidnapping
Jon Lindbergh, second son of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh
Lindbergh later flights
Lindbergh letters and ties to Germany, New York Times, August
2, 2003
Ephemera and articles about Lindbergh case
$25,000 reward poster for information in Lindbergh case,
[no date]
No. 2310 Criminal File: Exposed! Aviator's Baby Was Never Kidnapped
or Murdered [fictional case parallelling Lindbergh kidnapping and
trial; mailed anonymously to jury members prior to trial, no date]
Napkin from the Union Hotel, in Flemington, New Jersey [base of operations
for journalists during Lindbergh case]
Publication about Highfields, former Lindbergh estate and current
correctional facility
The Lone Eagle - Lindbergh [children's book about Lindbergh's
life and trans-Atlantic flight, no date]
Hauptmann, play reviews, 1992
Hauptmann, playbill [Cherry Lane Theater presentation], May
1992
Some Things That Can Go Wrong at 35,000 Ft. [play about the
Charles A. Lindbergh family in 1939, presented by Case Western Reserve
University Department of Theater Arts, June 2-19, 1994]
Trial of the Century, [pamphlet about the Lindbergh trial and
Flemington courthouse, includes short bibliography]
"The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case," by Samuel S. Leibowitz,
TV Guide, [no date]
"Betrayed by Their Own Hand," by Harriet Thorndike, The
Family Circle, [no date]
"Lindbergh and the Press," by Silas Bent, Outlook,
April 1932
"Why I am Defendeing Hauptmann," by Lowell M. Limpus, Real
Detective,February 1935
"Why We Convicted Bruno Hauptmann," by Elmer Smith, juror
number six, American Detective, April 1935
"Who Helped Hauptmann?," by Edward Dean Sullivan, Inside
Detective, May 1935
"Will Lindbergh Save Hauptmann?," by Edward J. Reilly, Liberty,
October 1935
"Jafsie in the Cemetery," by Dr. John F. Condon, Liberty,
February 1, 1936. [Condon acted as one of the five intermediaries during
the Lindbergh kidnapping case, and used the pseudonym 'Jafsie']
" 'Jafsie' and the Ransom Money, "by Dr. John F. Condon, Liberty,
February 15, 1936
"Now Jafsie Tells," by Dr. John F. Condon, Liberty,
March 21, 1936
"Jafsie in Panama Discusses New Evidence," by Fulton Oursler,
Liberty, March 28, 1936
"Jafsie Answers Hauptmann's Death-Cell Accusation," by Rev.
D.G. Werner, Liberty, April 11, 1936
"Strange Stories that Jafsie Told," by Fulton Oursler, Liberty,
April 18, 1936
"What Hauptmann did with the Missing Money," by D. Thomas
Curtin, Liberty, May 1936
"What Will Happen Next in the Lindbergh Case?," by Frederick
L. Collins, Liberty, November 7, 1936
"Gaston B. Means - Master Bad Man," by May Dixon Thacker,
Liberty, April 1937
Sheet Music about Lindbergh Family
America Did It Again, by Ted Koehler and Marty Bloom,
[song dedicated to Evangeline Lodge Lindbergh, 1927]
Lindbergh (The Eagle of the U.S.A), by Howard Johnson and Al
Sherman, 1927
Lucky Lindy!,words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Abel Baer,
1927
Baby Lindy, by Clarence Gaskill and Irving Mills, 1930
Box 2: Oversized Items
Folder -- Contents
Newspaper article about Lindbergh's trans-Atlantic flight, St.
Louis Globe-Democrat, May 23, 1927
Publicized list of currency paid in ransom to Lindbergh kidnappers, 1932,
[2 copies, one is damaged and missing bottom half]
'Wanted' poster for information in Lindbergh kidnapping, March 11, 1932,
[2 copies]
Newspaper article about ransom money, Detroit Sunday Times, April
16, 1932
"Nation Hunts Lindbergh Baby Slayers as Body is Found," The
Cleveland News, May 13, 1932
Newspaper photograph of Lindbergh baby, The Detroit News, May 29,
1932
"New Lindbergh Sensation: 'Jafsie' Condon to be Detained for Questions,"
headline, Sunday Pictorial Newspaper, January 12, 1936
Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. newspaper photograph, [no date]
"Analyzing Lindbergh's Glands to Show Why He is Without Fear,"
newspaper article, [no date]
"Hauptmann,"[play review], New York Times, May
29, 1992
Newspaper photograph montages of Lindbergh case, May 1932
Newspaper headlines about Lindbergh case, May 13, 1932
Complete edition of New York Times, [includes articles about Lindbergh
cse], March 6, 1932
Complete edition newspapers about Lindbergh baby murder, May 1932
Box 3: FBI Summary Report
Contents
FBI Lindbergh Summary Report [photocopy], March 1, 1932 - February
1, 1934.
CD copy of FBI Lindbergh Summary Report, March 1, 1932-February 1, 1934