HomeMy WebLinkAbout2016 Issue 2 - A Fiendish Deed, Part 2.pdfFrozen In Time
currently on exhibit
at RHM.
President’s Report
by Stefanie McIrvin,
Board President.
Real-Life History,
story of Jan Van
Laar.
Museum Report
by Elizabeth P.
Stewart, Director.
The May 29, 1906 murder of Elsie Millhuff rocked Renton to
its core. No Renton papers survive (that we have found) from
1906. This story was pieced together using Seattle and other
newspapers, Renton City Council minutes, census records, city
directories, and oral histories. The following is the second of a
two-part account of the mystery of Elsie’s murder. At the end of
the first part, paperboy Thomas Nelligan had been released from
police custody and Elsie was buried in Mt. Olivet Cemetery.
A special thank you to Reed Millhuff, Jr. for assisting
me in research and sharing his family history and photographs.
With their only suspect released, authorities scrambled
for other leads. Locally, Marshall Jake Mazey was in
charge. He had ended his term as Renton Marshall on
May 2nd, a mere 27 days before Elsie’s murder; Joseph Edwards
replaced him as of May 15th.1 There is little mention of Edwards
in the newspaper coverage of the case, however, perhaps the
more experienced Mazey seemed a better choice to handle
the case. The minutes of the June 5th City Council meeting do
not mention the murder but show the Council approved that
“Ex-Marshall Mazey be paid for services to date.”2 Perhaps
Also In This Issue...
RENTON HISTORICALSOCIETY & MUSEUM
Summer
June 2016
Volume 47
Number 2
Continued on page 5
2 4 83
QUARTERLY
A FIENDISH DEED: PART II by Sarah Samson
2 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
FROZEN IN TIME
After nine years of research, the Renton History Museum is finally able to exhibit its
collection of 49 rare glass plate negatives with 70 images of the city’s businesses and
residences identified through dogged historical detective work. In 1909 an unknown
photographer went door to door to capture the city’s aspirations, perhaps for exhibit at Seattle's
Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. The negatives were developed in 2009, a project made possible
by a grant from 4Culture. Enjoy this glimpse of our city in its youth along with the maps and
other sources that reveal it.
From
MAY
31
to
OCTOBER
29
WELCOME OUR NEW
OFFICE AIDE NICHOLE!
Next time you stop by the
Museum, please welcome
our new Museum Office
Aide, Nichole Jones.
Nichole is a new Renton
transplant from Port
Angeles, where she was a
Board member, volunteer
coordinator, and historian
for Story People of Clallam
County and a tour guide
for Port Angeles Heritage
Tours. Nichole has an M.A.
in History from Eastern
Illinois University. She will
be your first stop for help
with donations, membership
renewals, and all other
MUSEUM NAMED BEST
NONPROFIT IN RENTON
The Renton History Museum
recently had the distinction of
being named “Best Nonprofit
2016” in the Renton
Reporter’s Best of Renton
2016 competition. Winners
were selected through an
online nomination and voting
process that reached out to
readers of Renton’s local
newspaper. Past winners
have included the Salvation
Army, BECU, and YWCA
South King County. We
are very excited to have
been recognized by Renton
residents for the excellence
of our community service.
office-related help. She’s
already a quick study of
Renton history and is eager
to learn more about her new
home. We’re thrilled to have
her as part of our team!
We believe the award is also
a vote for the importance of
heritage preservation and
education in our community,
and we’ll continue to strive
to live up to Rentonites’
expectations.
INFrozen
Time
SUMMER QUARTERLY, 2016 | 3
MUSEUM REPORT
QUARTERLY
Summer 2016
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Director
O ne of the most moving experiences I’ve had as a
museum professional was attending the Wall of
Honor Celebration at Renton High School recently.
Organized over many months by Friends of Renton Schools,
this event singles out distinguished Renton High alums
for honor, based on their accomplishments in high school,
but mostly in life. Honorees have included Mayors (Don
Custer, Frank Ailment, Charles Delaurenti), a Presidential
Cabinet member (Sally Jewell), the co-founder of the Harlem
Dance Company (Karel Shook), a Hollywood filmmaker
and stuntman (Gary Kent), a Vietnam-era POW (Charles
Southwick), restaurateurs, CEOs of businesses, doctors,
lawyers, scientists, educators, public servants, and athletes.
Induction into the Wall of Honor gives these high achievers
accolades, but more importantly, the Wall of Honor calls
attention to the number of examples available to high school
age students. Renton High—and Renton—has produced
accomplished strivers in so many different areas of life, it’s
hard not to imagine these people as role models for youth
looking to an uncertain future.
Collection Manager Sarah Samson and I have
served as back-up researchers for three rounds of Wall of
Honor nominees now, since 2011. We fact-check incomplete
nomination forms, track down information in old newspapers
and other sources, and generally look for missing information
on these people’s lives, to help the committee get a complete
picture of who they are and what they’ve done. It’s easy to
get caught up in the drama of piecing together the lives of
Rentonites who never expected honors, and thus never went
out of their way to seek attention for their work. Sometimes
the story is frustratingly thin, and some nominees have been
set aside for more research and future honors. The committee
members themselves—mentioning no names—have in some
cases become crack researchers.
Research for projects like the Wall of Honor,
genealogies, student projects, historic preservation grants
and landmark nominations, and for people who are curious is
one of the services the Museum staff provide. We often assist
City staff by answering obscure questions like, “who were
the architects on the 200 Mill Building?” or “when did the car
dealers move out of Downtown Renton?” If the Museum’s
collections can be used to help people feel more knowledgable
about their community or—in the case of the Wall of Honor—
help youth understand the possibilities that life holds, then we
have done important work.
by Elizabeth P. Stewart,
Museum Director
Wall of Honor award for Ethel
Telban (Class of 1932), long-
time Renton Historical Society
President.
RENTON HISTORICAL
QUARTERLY
Sarah Samson
Graphic Design & Layout
Karl Hurst
City of Renton Print &
Mail Services
RENTON HISTORICAL
SOCIETY BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
Stefanie McIrvin, President
Kim Sweet, Vice President
Laura Clawson, Treasurer
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Alice Stenstrom, 2016
Lisa Wivag, 2016
Vicki Jo Utterstrom, 2017
Antoin Johnson, 2018
Betsy Prather, 2018
Vinod Waghamare, 2018
Jordann McKay, 2018
MUSEUM STAFF
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Museum Director
Sarah Samson
Collection Manager
Mark Mulder
Public Engagement
Coordinator
Nichole Jones
Office Aide
RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
235 MILL AVENUE S
RENTON, WA 98057
P (425) 255-2330
F (425) 255-1570
HOURS:
Tuesday - Saturday
10:00am - 4:00pm
Assistant Superintendent
Damien Pattenaude (Class of
1995) speaking after receiving
his place on the Wall of Honor.
4 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
PRESIDENT’S
MESSAGE
A s we plan for our annual membership meeting on
June 8, I am reminded that this will be my last
newsletter article as President of the Renton
Historical Society. The conclusion of my term as President is
sentimental; I am thankful for the opportunity to have served
the Museum in a leadership role and I am looking forward to
supporting the good work of the next President.
While I wish we had accomplished all of the goals I
had set out for the Board when I took office two years ago, I
can say that I am pleased with what we achieved in the short
timeframe I was President. First and foremost, my ultimate
goal was to increase awareness of the Museum throughout
the community and encourage trustees to network within it.
We accomplished this in many ways, the most impressive
being our new membership and fundraising event last fall at
The Red House. The event opened new pathways for civic
involvement for the Board and the Museum, and we were able
to create lasting partnerships with the downtown business
community. I am proud to have led that effort and I hope to
see it continued in the future.
I am also proud to have led the Board through
a productive retreat this year. We focused on strategic
fundraising and how to understand and leverage our
individual strengths, and while applying simple yet effective
strategies for positive change. While change can be difficult,
the Board came out of the retreat feeling invigorated and
excited to take on new ideas.
During my time as President I also learned about what
it means to be a good leader. It means listening and including
everyone at the table during discussions. It means ensuring that
all feel as though they are able to voice their opinions, even
when you may disagree. And it means saying thank you to
everyone who works hard to accomplish your goals.
To that end: Thank you to the incredible Museum staff who
have supported me throughout my time as President. Your
words of encouragement and professionalism are second-to-
none. Thank you to the Board of Trustees for your care of the
Museum and the Historical Society, and for your innovative
ideas. Thank you to our members for your diligent financial
support and volunteerism the last two years. I am excited to
see where you all go from here and I know you are in good
hands with the next President.
by Stefanie McIrvin, President
UPCOMING
EVENTS
Then-VP Meris Mullaley and
President McIrvin at the 2015
Annual Meeting.
President McIrivin with her
family, Councilmember Ryan
McIrivin and their daughter, at the
2015 fundraiser at the Red House.
Stefanie McIrvin
President
TOO HIGH AND TOO
STEEP: RESHAPING
SEATTLE'S TOPOGRAPHY:
AUTHOR'S TALK WITH
DAVID B. WILLIAMS
June 14
7:00-8:30 pm
Author David B. Williams
explores the dramatic human
intervention that remade the
landscape of Seattle and Renton,
too, in the cities’ first century.
CURATOR'S TALK:
SARAH SAMSON ON
FROZEN IN TIME
July 14
6:00-7:30 pm
In conjunction with our Frozen
In Time exhibit, Collection
Manager Sarah Samson
discusses the extensive research
done on the Museum’s collection
of 1909 glass plate negatives.
PHOTOGRAPHIC POP-UP
EXHIBIT AND WORKSHOP
June 18
12:00-2:00 pm
RHM staff will give a short
presentation and answer questions
about photographic storage and
conservation. Focus will be on
photos from the 50s, 60s, and 70s,
but all are welcome to bring photos!
SUMMER QUARTERLY, 2016 | 5
responding to the panic the town was in, the Council also
appointed Jack Stewart to the position of Night Watchman.3
Almost immediately after Tom Nelligan’s release
from police custody, his father sent him into hiding in Seattle.
“Rumors that Tom might be dealt with harshly reached us
through women who had heard some men talking on the
street,” said Thomas Nelligan, Sr. “I don’t believe anyone
would harm Tom but we cannot afford to run chances
considering the feeling that too much liquor might work up in
irresponsible citizens.”4
Residents grew restless and frustrated at the lack of
a viable suspect, so much so that the Welsh miners in town
reportedly “resolved to torture and lynch the murderer if he
can be caught and his guilt proven.”5 A town hall meeting
was hastily organized. Agitated Rentonites argued for the
raising of a reward for “capture and conviction of the fiendish
murderer”; by the end of the evening nearly $2,250 was
pledged, $1000 from the county, $500 from Renton’s City
Council, and $744 from the people of Renton.6 Adjusted for
inflation, the $2,250 raised that night would be worth around
$60,000 in today’s dollars.
Continued from page 1 Cover photo:
Elsie's gravesite in Mt.
Olivet Cemetery in Renton.
Renton Marshall Jake Mazey, ca. 1902.
(RHM# 1991.013.3270)
A FIENDISH DEED:
PART II
Night Watchman Jack Stewart, 1894.
(RHM# 41.0212)
6 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
OTHER SUSPECTS
Though they chased down any lead they could find, after
Nelligan the police had no real suspects. Abe Offield, described
alternately as “epileptic” and “insane,” lived with his parents
close to the murder scene. He was questioned but his parents
provided his alibi: he was locked in his room alone the night
Elsie was killed.7 Another man, William Duncan, was also
arrested the day after the murder after he was found drunk in
Seattle covered in red stains. The stains proved to be red paint,
but they charged him with vagrancy anyway and sent him to
the chain gang for thirty days.8 Someone mutilated three horses
in Redmond a few days after Elsie’s murder, and police briefly
considered whether that “knife wielder” was the man they
were looking for.9 The lack of progress on the investigation
prompted the public to come forth with all sorts of inventive
ideas. The Seattle Daily Times reported that “[s]piritualists,
persons believing in hypnotism, and other voodoo proceedings
have all contributed suggestions” to the police.10
Again frustrated by the lack of progress on the
case, Renton’s citizens met in mid-June. With rumors and
suspicions unchecked and several law enforcement agencies
involved, residents decided to create a committee to act as the
voice of the town and to assist where they could. This five-
man committee included Marshall Joseph Edwards, Night
Watchman Jack Stewart, Police Judge Robert Thorburn, and
coal miners Thomas F. O’Brien and James Oughton.11 Between
them these five men had twenty children under the age of
seventeen living in Renton.
A BREAK IN THE CASE
In December Elsie’s case was splashed across newspapers
again. This time police had a viable suspect. Louis Hemeter,
a forty-one-year-old German immigrant and traveling watch
repairer, was in jail in Pierce County for assaulting little girls
in Sumner. Hemeter reportedly spoke of Elsie’s murder while
in custody, and police later believed that he was in fact in
Renton on the day of her murder.12
Hemeter was not a sympathetic figure. Pierce
County Judge William H. Snell declared Hemeter “the most
pronounced pervert” he’d ever confronted.13 “Hemeter is a
freakish fellow,” said King County Sheriff L. C. Smith. “He
thinks that he is in possession of a capacity to understand
people without words, feeling them out, so to speak.”14 At his
trial for the Pierce County assaults, Hemeter accosted one
of his young accusers in the courtroom. He jumped at her,
kissed, and hugged her before authorities managed to wrangle
him back under control.15
After Hemeter was convicted of the Sumner assaults,
Deputy Sheriff Thomas Maxey of Kittitas County traveled
to Pierce County to take Hemeter’s prints. He was an early
adopter of the new fingerprinting technology. Self-taught
in the ways of criminology, Maxey had worked his way up
from janitor at the county courthouse all the way to Deputy
Sheriff in just two years. He kept bloodhounds for tracking
suspects and also had a laboratory for the study of the new
Bertillon system of criminal measurement.16 Fingerprinting
was Maxey’s latest study. A week after Elsie’s murder, Maxey
San Francisco Call, 23 Feb 1908, p.6.
SUMMER QUARTERLY, 2016 | 7
had traveled to Renton to collect evidence; he found two
bloody fingerprints on her clothing.17 Now that Hemeter was
in custody, Maxey had a suspect’s prints to compare against
the clothing.
Maxey sent Hemeter’s prints and pieces of Elsie’s
clothing to Ft. Leavenworth for analysis; before the
formation of the FBI in 1908, the U.S. Army was briefly on
the cutting edge of fingerprint analysis.18 The prints were
deemed a match and by mid-February 1907 Maxey was
planning to testify against Hemeter in order to bring charges
against him for Elsie’s murder.19 This would have been the
first use of fingerprinting evidence in a criminal trial in
Washington State.20
Around the same time Maxey determined the prints
were a match, Judge Snell declared Hemeter criminally
insane.21 He was shipped to the Eastern State Hospital for the
Insane in Medical Lake, WA.22 As far as we can find, Hemeter
was not charged nor tried for Elsie’s murder. An article printed
near the ten-year anniversary of her death makes no mention of
Hemeter and declares the crime unsolved.23 Hemeter remained
an inmate at the hospital until he hung himself in 1938.24
THE AFTERMATH: THE NELLIGAN FAMILY
Suspect Nelligan’s family was irreparably harmed by the
events following Elsie’s murder. Young Tom fled to Seattle
and went into hiding.25 Renton residents since 1881, Tom’s
father, mother, and three sisters tried to remain in town, but by
June 8th the Seattle Star reported that their home was for sale.26
They appear to have moved to Seattle, though their presence in
censuses and directories was very spotty once they left Renton.
Tom attempted to get a job as a switchman for the
Northern Pacific Railway, but was rejected for failing the
eyesight test.27 The last record of Tom is his WWI draft
registration card that lists him as a steam-fitter helper for a
Seattle shipbuilder in 1918. Ellen Nelligan, Tom’s mother,
died in Seattle in 1917. Tom’s eldest sister Catherine lived and
worked as a tailoress in Seattle until 1903, when she drops out
of the historical record.28 Thomas Nelligan, Sr. died in 1921;
he was living in Sacramento with his daughters Henrietta and
Flora.29 Tom Jr.’s reputation in Renton never recovered and
people still mistakenly remembered him as Elsie’s killer more
than 70 years after the fact.30
THE AFTERMATH: THE MILLHUFF FAMILY
The Millhuff family experienced more than its share of tragedy.
Prior to Elsie’s murder they had lost two babies; the infant
mortality rate was sadly high in the early 1900s. After Elsie
joined the babies in the cemetery, the Millhuffs had to figure
out how to live again. Like young Tom Nelligan, Elsie’s two
little brothers, George W. and Reed M. Millhuff, were Renton
paperboys. Just a month or two after Elsie died, her mother,
Bertha, found herself pregnant with her sixth and final child,
a girl who would be named Savilla.31 By 1910 the family had
moved off Renton Hill down into North Renton on Meadow
Avenue.32 Elsie’s father William quit his mining job and by
Continued on page 10
Renton's paperboys for the
Seattle Star, ca. 1906. Reed
Millhuff is seated 4th from
right, 1st row. George Millhuff
is 2nd from right, 2nd row.
(RHM# 41.0835)
8 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
T hroughout American history, so many young single
men came to the U.S. and became the backbone
of the workforce in many places, yet theirs are the
most difficult stories to investigate. Jan Van Laar (1878-
1951) was one of these men. In February his relative,
Marian Steenbeek, contacted us from the Netherlands
with questions about his life in the Pacific Northwest. She
knew he lived at Rural Route 3, Renton in 1942 and that
he had emigrated from Holland in 1908. Could we tell her
anything else about his life? she wondered.
As we researched, Marian filled in the details
about Jan’s early years. His father Gijsbert was a tenant
farmer in De Bilt, Holland. His parents were in their 40s
when Jan was born, and his father Gijsbert was a tenant
farmer. Gijsbert was not in the best of health and died
when Jan was twelve years old. Their father’s death left
older brothers Kees (aged 22) and Hendrik (16) to run the
farm. When the brothers started making moves toward
establishing their own lives in the late 1800s, Jan began
looking toward the U.S.
Jan made several trips back and forth between
De Bilt and the Pacific Northwest, making his early years
here a bit confusing. (The many different spellings of his
name—Van Larr, Van Lear, John or Jan—also complicated
the research.) He visited Seattle for 18 months in 1906 –
1907, staying with a friend from De Bilt, Willem De Bree,
who had emigrated earlier. In early summer 1908 he sailed
on the Nieuw Amsterdam, arriving at Ellis Island on June
29, 1908. This time his aim was to settle.
One of the earliest records we found was a 1909
Declaration of Intention to Naturalize for a “John Van
Laar,” who was working as a logger in Taylor, WA. His
distinctive name, his birthdate, and his hometown—De
REAL-LIFE
HISTORY
Bilt, Utrecht, Holland—all indicated this was indeed
Marian’s ancestor. A Petition for Naturalization told us that
by 1913 he was a laborer in Hobart, WA. On October 3,
1913 John Van Larr became a naturalized U.S. citizen. His
Americanized name—with a more recognizable double R
instead of a double A—was evidence of his desire to fit in.
In less than ten years, John had saved enough to
purchase his own farm. Censuses and his WWI draft card
show him operating a dairy farm in Hobart from 1918
until at least 1942. He never married, but in about 1935
he was joined on the farm by George Paavola and his wife
Ida. George was the son of nearby farmer Mikko “Mike”
Paavola, and he and his wife were probably helpful to John
as he approached his sixties.
One last mystery: We knew from his death record
that John died in Bellingham in 1951, but what motivated
him to move from the Hobart area, where he had spent
all of his American life? His obituary (uncovered by Jeff
Jewell, Researcher at the Whatcom Museum) revealed the
reason. It cited his lifelong friendship with Willem—now
William—DeBree, who lived in Lynden, WA. Once Jan
decided to retire from farming, he renewed his old ties with
his hometown friend in a community where many other
Dutch lived.
So much can be uncovered from a few bits of
biographical information! Marian pronounced herself
“happy to know he didn’t live and die as a desolate man.”
Thanks to the dedicated efforts of JoAnne Matsumura, Jeff
Jewell, David Abernathy, and Jack O’Donnell for helping
piece together Jan’s story. If you know more about Jan/
John Van Laar/Larr, please contact Director Elizabeth P.
Stewart at the Museum.
This Metzger map shows the location of Van Laar's dairy farm near
Hobart, 1926. His name is misspelled once again.
Jan Van Laar, 1907. (Photo courtesy of Marian Steenbeek)
SUMMER QUARTERLY, 2016 | 9
MEMORIAL
DONATIONS
February 16, 2016 - May 10, 2016
Lindy Aliment
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Audrey Diane Baker
Connie Baker
Bill Belmondo
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Glennis Hurtgen Cooke
Wendell & Cleo Forgaard
Richard Lucotch
Mildred Cooper
Lee & Marilyn Ford
Florence Murray
Mario & Victor Tonda
Alex Cugini Jr.
Louie & Pam Barei
John & Eleanor Bertagni
Donald & Carmel Camerini
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Earl & Laureen Ross
Higginbotham
Elizabeth P. Stewart
Don Custer
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Gary Kawachi
Shirley Denzer
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Helen Iddings
Betty Sipila
Elizabeth Islai
Hazelle DuBois
Flora Katzer
Louie & Pam Barei
Tom A. Kerr
Connie Baker
Irv Leifer
Al & Shirley Armstrong
Veronica (Norman) Maxon
Wendell & Cleo Forgaard
Carl K. Nielsen
Wendell & Cleo Forgaard
Roger R. Petersen
Wendell & Cleo Forgaard
Anne Rossman
Mary M. Sutter
Ralph Snowden
Wendell & Cleo Forgaard
Robert & Gilda Youngquist
Jack Sparrow
Larry & Jeannie Crook
Josephine Wixom
Al & Shirley Armstrong
MEMORIAL
DONATIONS OF
$100 OR MORE
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Bill Belmondo
Olga Azzola
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Inez Edlich
Nancy Fairman
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James D. Williams
Shirley Phinney
The Williams Family
GENERAL
DONATIONS
Jeffrey Conner
Dorothy Finley
Janet R. Graham
Rosalee Lander
Donovan Lynch
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GENERAL
DONATIONS OF
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Employees of Kenworth
AYD Club
GENERAL
DONATIONS OF
$500 OR MORE
Mayor Denis Law
MATCHING GIFT
DONATIONS
Bill Collins
Boeing Matching Gift Program
Amazon Smile
IN-KIND
DONATIONS
Sandra Meyer
Betsy Prather
On Saturday, May 7, the Museum hosted a First Saturday
meet-up of about 17 avid players of an internet game called
Ingress. Trustee Antoin Johnson organized the event, which
gave players the opportunity to vie for control of portals
strategically placed around Downtown Renton, the library,
and the museum. Most had never visited the Museum before,
but they’ll be back!
INGRESS FIRST SATURDAY
First Financial NW Foundation
NEW MEMBERS
Mike Blodgett
Antoin Johnson
Linda Monson
PATRON
MEMBERS
Jim & Char Baker
King Parker
CORPORATE
MEMBERS
Garland Jewelers
GRANTS
10 | RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
1914 was the proprietor of the Renton comfort station, a
triangular island of a building located in the intersection of
Third, Main, and Walla Walla (now Houser). The station sold
cigars, newspapers, and other goods to travelers on the Seattle,
Renton, & Southern Railway.33
The years passed but May continued to be a rough
month for the family. On May 13, 1924 55-year-old Bertha
Millhuff passed away. Two short years later on May 10,
1926 William Millhuff joined her. He was 67 years old. After
William’s death his youngest son Reed took over the operation
of the comfort station. By 1930 Reed’s family had moved north
to Kennydale. Almost 25 years had passed but people of a
certain age still mentioned Elsie’s murder whenever they heard
the name “Millhuff.”
Elsie’s eldest brother George joined the Navy and
traveled the U. S. and the world during his thirty-year career.
George married but never had children. Savilla, the little sister
born less than a year after Elsie died, married Eben Munson
when she was just seventeen, seven months after her mother
died.34 They had three boys and ran a resort near Snoqualmie
Pass. They also maintained a Renton home for many years.
EPILOGUE
Elsie’s murder still ranks with the most horrific crimes to ever
happen in Renton. While the murder itself was shocking, it
was the lack of a viable suspect that truly threw the town into
panic. The fear that the perpetrator was still lurking paralyzed
Renton’s residents. But they banded together, raised reward
money, helped the Millhuff family, and aided the police every
way they could; the incident was devastating to the Millhuff
and Nelligan families, however. The historical record leaves
many holes in the story. Perhaps someday we will find copies
of the 1906 Renton newspapers or other sources, and we can
learn more about this tragedy from the people who lived it.
Continued from page 7
ENDNOTES
1 City of Renton City Officials 1901-1978, p.82.
2 Renton City Council minutes, 5 Jun 1906. Mazey was paid $75.83.
3 Renton City Council minutes, 5 Jun 1906.
4 “Increase Reward For Child’s Slayer,” Seattle Daily Times, 3 Jun 1906, p.1.
5 “Youth Is Held On Suspicion,” Salt Lake Herald, 1 Jun 1906, p.1.
6 “Increase Reward For Child’s Slayer,” Seattle Daily Times, 3 Jun 1906, p.1.
7 “Tom Nelligan Held As Suspect In The Elsie Millhoff [sic] Murder Case,”
Seattle Star, 31 May 1906, p.1; “Increase Reward For Child’s Slayer,”
Seattle Daily Times, 3 Jun 1906, p.1.
8 “Stains Caused By Paint, Not Blood,” Seattle Daily Times, 1 Jun 1906, p.10.
9 “Posse At Redmond Seeking Suspect,” Seattle Star, 7 Jun 1906, p.1.
10 “Still No Clue To Murderer,” Seattle Daily Times, 7 Jun 1906, p.9.
11 “Renton Citizens Plan Concerted Action,” Seattle Daily Times, 15 Jun 1906, p.1.
12 “Elsie’s Milhuff’s [sic] Slayer May Be In Jail,” Seattle Daily Times, 4 Dec
1906, p.1.
13 “Elsie’s Milhuff’s [sic] Slayer May Be In Jail,” Seattle Daily Times, 4 Dec
1906, p.4.
14 “Takes Finger Marks,” The Ellensburg Dawn, 28 Dec 1906, p.1.
15 “Brute Quickly Convicted,” Salt Lake Herald, 4 Dec 1906, p.3.
16 “The Bertillian [sic] System,” The Ellensburg Dawn, 24 Mar 1904, p.1.
Created by Alphonse Bertillon in France, the system used precise
measurements of the head and face to identify criminals. Police kept these
measurements on file in order to identify repeat offenders and to tell criminals
apart. As time went on, photographs were added to the files; these became
known as mugshots.
17 “Marks of Bloody Fingers,” The Sunday Oregonian, 16 Dec 1906, p.15.
18 “Digit Marks May Send Hemeter To Gallows,” Seattle Daily Times, 29 Jan
1907, p.1.
19 “Fingerprints Tell Story,” The Evening Statesman, 11 Feb 1907, p.6.
20 “Marks of Bloody Fingers,” The Sunday Oregonian, 16 Dec 1906, p.15.
21 “You Did It! –Cried the Criminal’s Thumb,” San Francisco Call, 23 Feb
1907, p.6.
22 “City News In Brief,” The Evening Statesman, 15 Feb 1907, p.5.
23 “Mysterious Murder Of Little Elsie Millhuff In 1906 Never Solved,” Seattle
Star, 21 Apr 1916, p.8.
24 Report of Movement of Population, Eastern State Hospital, Aug 1938, p.473.
25 “Increase Reward For Child’s Slayer,” Seattle Daily Times, 3 Jun 1906, p.1.
26 “Another Suspect In Everett Jail,” Seattle Star, 8 June 1906, p.1.
27 Northern Pacific Railway Company Personnel Files 1890-1963, 17 Sep 1913.
28 1900 Seattle City Directory; 1903 Seattle City Directory.
29 1920 Federal Census; California Death Index, 1905-1939
30 Phil Marlotty and Frank Storey oral history, recorded in 1978 (RHM#
1978.036.004).
31 The name “Savilla” is of French origin, meaning “town of [weeping]
willows.” It was William Millhuff’s mother’s name.
32 1910 Federal Census.
33 1914 Renton City Directory, p.277.
34 King County Marriage Records, 1855-1990.
Reed Millhuff inside the Comfort Station, ca. 1930.
(Photo courtesy of Reed Millhuff, Jr.)
William Millhuff in front of the Comfort Station, ca. 1924.
(RHM# 1987.026.2243)
SUMMER QUARTERLY, 2016 | 11
J oin your history-minded friends and family for the 49th Renton Historical Society Annual
Meeting. It’s your opportunity to hear what what’s happening at the Museum and to
meet the winner(s) of this year’s George and Annie Lewis Custer Award for Heritage
Stewardship and our Volunteer Awards. After a brief business meeting, you’ll have the chance
to MAKE your own personal map of Renton, SHARE your questions about the Black and
Cedar Rivers, and GIVE us feedback on 50 years of the Renton Historical Society. Heavy hors
d'oeuvres. Please RSVP by June 3 (425.255.2330 or njones@rentonwa.gov).
On
JUNE
8
at
5:30 PM
RHS ANNUAL MEETING
meeting
Annual
MEMBERSHIP FORM
Please select a membership level:
Individual $30
Student/Senior $20
Family $40
Benefactor $75
Patron $150
Business/Corporate $175
Life membership $750
Basic memberships
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Name:
Address:
Phone:
Payment information
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Exp. date:
Signature:
Please make checks payable to the Renton Historical Society.
Please consider making a tax-deductible
donation! Your donations help us provide
new exhibits and exciting programs.
Donation: $
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Renton History Museum
235 Mill Avenue South
Renton, WA 98057
Phone: 425.255.2330
Fax: 425.255.1570
rentonhistory.org
RENTON HISTORY MUSEUM
235 Mill Ave. S
Renton, WA 98057
The Pacific Coast Coal administration building at 18825 Maple Valley Highway was demolished in January-February 2016. Built in
1927, the building was the office and shop for New Black Diamond Mine until it closed in 1941. (RHM# 1986.041.2241)
IN HINDSIGHT...