Thursday, February 4, 2016

Anthony Rud and the Tango Dancer Murder-Part Two

On the afternoon of September 26, 1913, Mildred Allison Rexroat, dressed in a dark blue suit, wearing a new hat and white gloves, adorning herself with several hundred dollars worth of jewelry, and carrying a white handbag and a rattan suitcase, left her Chicago rooming house for an appointment with a man she named only as "Mr. Spencer." Mrs. Rexroat was a tango dancer and dance instructor. Inside her suitcase was a pink dancing outfit. She was going to meet with Mr. Spencer to talk about tango dance lessons. Neither her roommate, nor her three children, nor her husband, nor her ex-husband ever saw her again.

That evening, at about 8:23 p.m., a freight train running on the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railroad struck a dark object on the tracks as it was approaching the village of Wayne, located in DuPage County, west of Chicago. The crew operating the train stopped and went back to see what they had hit. The object, the body of a woman, severed at the waist, was identified the next day as that of Mildred Rexroat. Her death was not an accident. She had in fact been murdered.

At about midday on October 3, Joseph Delahanty and Lee Durkin, two Wayne residents, were searching the murder scene when they discovered, about 100 feet away from where Mrs. Rexroat's body was found, a three-pound hammer wrapped in a towel, which was in turn wrapped in a copy of the Chicago Tribune. One of the men told a reporter:
     Right near the place, we found two cards and a salesman's slip. On the cards was the name, "Anthony Melville Rud." The paper slip indicated that a salesman at Marengo, Ill., had been negotiating with the firm of Luhring & Schedd.
     We were just going to call up Sheriff Kuhn and turn the stuff over to him to see what it was worth, when two men came up the track. They said they were Pinkerton detectives, and would have to take the clews [sic] right to headquarters. They gave each of us $2. Later I learned they were reporters. (1)
Following one of those leads, Marengo city marshal M.L. St. John interviewed personnel at Luhring & Schedd by long-distance telephone. They were not able to offer any information pertinent to the case.

On Sunday night, October 5, chief of detectives Capt. Halpin and two police officers arrested a man named Henry C. Spencer at his flat on Rhodes Avenue in Chicago in connection with the murder. Awhile later, at a Chicago police station, Spencer, fully informed of his rights, confessed to killing Mildred Allison Rexroat. "I killed Mrs. Rexroat because she was trying to make a sucker out of me," Spencer admitted. "She thought she was working me the same way she worked the farmers. She thought I was a farmer like her husband and that she could work me the same way." (2) Spencer described the murder:
When we got out at the station, it was nearly 8 o'clock. We turned around and walked the track until we got where it was dark. I took her right arm, pulled out my gun and shot her through the head. Then I laid her on the railroad track so she would get tore up. (3)
The hammer later found at the scene of the crime was placed there by Spencer before the murder. His plan was that if he failed to kill Mrs. Rexroat with his revolver, he would use the hammer to beat her to death.

In all, Henry C. Spencer confessed to about two dozen murders, but it was for killing Mildred Allison Rexroat, the Chicago tango dancer, that he swung on July 31, 1914, in DuPage County, Illinois.

After that article of October 4, 1913, in which two men described finding cards with the name Anthony Melville Rud, there was no more mention in newspapers of that name in connection with the case, at least that I can find. I suspect that an interview with Rud, coupled with the fact that his parents were prominent and respected physicians, eliminated the young man from any suspicion. Rud would go on to write about murder in his career as a pulp author.

To be concluded . . .

Notes
(1) Quoted in "Unearth Hammer from Murder Scene," Chicago Tribune, October 4, 1913, p. 3.
(2) Quoted in "Wholesale Murderer," Deseret News, October 6, 1913, p. 1.
(3) Ditto.

Henry C. "Harry" Spencer (center), born Jindred Shortna in 1877, is shown here leaving an interrogation session, escorted by detectives Trant and John O'Keefe. The date is sometime in October 1913. This photograph was published in the Chicago Daily News and is now in the negatives collection of the Chicago Historical Society. As far as I can tell, there aren't any images of Spencer's victim, Mildred Semrow Allison Rexroat (Jan. 1876-Sept. 26, 1913), on the Internet. I wonder if there are any at all.

Update (Apr. 1, 2021): Mrs. Mildred Allison Rexroat, a photograph reprinted in the Saint Joseph, Michigan, Herald-Press, October 8, 1913, page 2.

Text copyright 2016, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

4 comments:

  1. Hi there. Could you tell me where you found his birth name? I've worn out Ancestry and there's no such man. Thanks!

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    1. Dear Indiana,

      If you search for "Anthony Melville Rud" on Ancestry.com, you should come up with numerous records, including, for example, his World War I draft card. Good luck in your renewed search.

      TH

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  2. Terence, thanks so much for your research.

    You mentioned a picture, so I'm providing you a link to one of Mrs. Rexroat
    https://tinyurl.com/35pu4fjh

    I also wanted to let you know that this story did not end here. Three months later in December of 1913, Mrs. Rexroat's friend and dance student would be murdered by a jealous lover. Frances "Fanny" Lohr Leland nee Treulich was shot in her Chicago home. Otto C Huey allegedly stated that Fannie had "taken up the tango to acquire admirers" and that, "If I can't have her then one can." But given the amount of Yellow Journalism during this time, who knows what was said without sworn testimony.

    Both women lived near one another. Other accounts state they had sons who were close in age to one another and were "chums".


    Also similar to Spencer, Huey's father was a rich industrialist from South Bend who undoubtedly assisted with his son's legal defense. Huey avoided death and was sentenced to Joliet, serving less than 20 years. He next appears in a VA Hospital for care as a married veteran of the Spanish-American War.

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    Replies
    1. Hi, Unknown,

      Thanks for the addition to the story. I'm starting to get the feeling that there was some kind of anti-tango hysteria or moral crusade at that time. It would make for an interesting article.

      Your mention of a photograph of Mrs. Rexroat has led me to find another image. It's the same photo as the one in your link, but it's clearer. I have added it as an update to my original article.

      Thanks for your appreciation and for reading and writing.

      TH

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