After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal - New York Morgue's Dark Secrets
Episode Date: August 1, 2024The unclaimed dead of New York City's streets and rivers were once brought to the notorious New York Morgue. It's a history that has never been studied before, full of dark stories and buried sec...rets.Maddy Pelling and Anthony Delaney are joined by Cat Byers who is a writer and historian based in Paris currently finishing a PhD on the Paris Morgue and the never-before-studied New York Morgue.Edited and produced by Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Enjoy unlimited access to award-winning original documentaries that are released weekly and AD-FREE podcasts. Sign here for up to 50% for 3 months using code AFTERDARK.You can take part in our listener survey here.After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal is a History Hit podcast
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In an archive in Brooklyn, a box gathers dust.
Each day, sunlight rises through the window, passes over the box,
and then disappears, leaving it in darkness once again.
Inside it are photographs, photographs of the faces of the unclaimed dead of New York from the late 19th century.
It was a time when the city's population was exploding, fuelled by waves of immigrants washing ashore in search
of a new life. With that tide, some were buoyed, rising to success and riches, others found
themselves desperate and drowning. Some found themselves dead, their bodies left anonymous
amid a sea of people, no one knowing who they were or where they'd come from.
Corpses like these, the unnamed dead, were taken to a dingy building on a pier at the foot of 26th Street.
There they were laid out and they were photographed.
At first the photos were displayed to the public. Some were poured over by anxious
families searching for their missing loved ones. Others were overlooked, their subjects as alone
in death as they had been in life. After a period the images would be taken down. Eventually, they are put into a box and forgotten.
But for those curious enough to lift the lid,
these eerie works survive, handed down to us
as the only witnesses we have of a changing
populace and the institution that served them,
one that no longer exists. Its records have been either
locked away or consigned to the murky depths of the Hudson River. This is the story of the New York Morgue.
Hello and welcome to After Dark. My name's Anthony.
And I'm Maddie. And as you can hear, we're both incredibly gravelly today.
And today we are on the edge of death because we are suffering with hay fever. And that's
absolutely fine. But, but, and I'm so, I'm so genuinely glad about this. We have one
of our favorite returning guests, not all of our guests
are favorites, but this is one of our particular favorite returning guests because this is one of
my favorite episodes. And we are of course talking about Kat Byers who's talked to us before about
the Paris Morgue. And as Maddy has just said, this time we're going to be talking about the New York
Morgue. So Kat, welcome back to After Dark. Thank you. I'm so glad to be back. Another day, another morgue. You know, that's my motto.
Another day, another morgue. Kat, give us a little bit of a, because obviously we're in a whole
different place here than we were when we spoke to you last about Paris, but give us a little bit
of the context of the time and the place, late 19th century America. What's the backdrop to the introduction
of this morgue?
Yeah, so this morgue. When we previously spoke about Paris, Paris opened in 1804, right at
the beginning of the century. We're now 50 years later, we're across the pond, we're
in New York. They first decided to open a morgue in New York in around 1865. They needed
one for a long time, like Maddy said at the beginning.
You've got this huge population growth. All the facilities that they had for managing the dead have
become really, really insufficient. There's all these reports of the previous version of the morgue,
which was basically just a shed. In the summer, it was grim. There's all these reports of
decomposing matter and coffins half open and really grim. There's also these potter's fields
that are moving around the city because Manhattan's growing and it's going upwards and upwards
and so they keep having to move all the cemeteries further upwards as well. You've really got
a situation where things are getting a bit out of hand and they need a solution.
What we've also got going on is the American Civil War has just finished.
So you've kind of just got a country in chaos, a city that's been in chaos, and you're on
the other side of it and you're in this whole new world and it's a big moment for just change
and for, I guess, experimenting and trying new things and just how do we rebuild a new
city, a new country, a new city, a new
country, a new state, a new society after everything that's just happened.
Then into all this, we have this model of a morgue.
What happened is they took the model directly from Paris.
There's this guy called John Bigelow, who was the US Minister for France.
He literally took the plans, took the model to get straight to New
York and was like, right, let's just build the exact same thing in New York and see what happens.
You say that, you know, this is an America coming out of the Civil War. And I suppose in a lot of
ways, it was an America that was newly familiar with death, with what death looked like with the
smell of death with bodies and being proximate to that and the processes that
maybe surround that. So talk us through what the new morgue looks like. You say it was almost a
direct blueprint transition from France into New York. But just tell us a little bit more about
that building, what it would be like if we were standing in it today, for example.
So it was quite a lot smaller than the one
in Paris. So they took the model and they took all the regulations and that kind of thing, but
you had to adapt it to, again, an existing city, a totally different society, a totally different
urban environment, municipality, all of that. And so they built it at Bellevue Hospital. So it was
also attached to a hospital, which is not what you had in Paris. And so it was
on the end of East 26th Street, right next to the river, because obviously a lot of bodies would
come in from the river. And also that meant that it was easily accessible to then transport the bodies
to the mass graves on the island, people that were unclaimed, where they would be buried. So there
was a kind of a whole system there. And it was quite a low building. It went through various
different versions.
So every sort of 10 or 15 years or so, it would fall into absolute corruption
and disrepair and they'd try and fix it up.
But the first version was quite small.
It was slightly lower than ground level.
So you would go down into it.
And all the reports say it had obviously this quite overwhelming
smell of damp from the river.
And then the summer, supposedly the smell was a little bit more
than damp. I think one description said the overwhelming stench of death. So not particularly
like a nice place to be.
Sarah- Not something you put on the the tourist posters for New York?
Elina- No, not quite. Come and smell the stench of death this July. So similar to Paris, they
had a display room. So you went in and there was kind of like a, I guess, sort of like a walkway part of the room. And then there was a wall that had
big glass windows and you could look through them. And then through the windows, there
were just four slabs laid out. And so these would have bodies on them. And the same with
Paris, you'd have hooks behind the bodies to hang clothes on. And then also in the room
where the public came, there was a wall. And this was
called the Wall of the Unknown Dead. And so this is where these photographs would all be positioned
once photography started, which was just two years after the morgue opened, they started taking
photographs of the bodies. So these would all be on the wall there.
And this is the real difference, I suppose, isn't it between the New York morgue and the Paris
morgue. And for anyone who hasn't listened to the episode yet, pause it right now. We will wait for you to catch up. Go and listen to it. We'll just give you a second. Okay, good. Hopefully back with us. So we've looked at death photography in the 19th century on this show before Cat. And that was very much photographers coming into people's homes or the dead being taken to photography studios. And there was a sort of
stillness to that and a, but also an intimacy. And it's quite emotionally coded. And I just wonder if
that's the same thing that's going on in the morgue or if this is a more sort of clinical process,
what is the function of those photographs?
It is absolutely a much more clinical focus. And I remember your post Martin photography episode, I
really enjoyed that one.
In this case, obviously the function is to try and identify the dead. So it's kind of actually
the inverse if we think of post-mortem photography, which is trying to remember people that you knew
in life. Here is the absolute opposite is trying to discover who they are. And the person taking
the photograph and the people looking at them have no idea who this person is. So it really is the
direct opposite of it.
And the photographer was a man named Oscar G. Mason, and he had actually been and was the
hospital photographer. So in this period as well, we've got this absolute growth of medical
photography and the US really kind of led the way in that in a lot of ways, partly because of the
civil war and because of all these army hospitals and the photography that was happening there.
And so Mason was then brought in to photograph the bodies at the morgue because they thought,
this is great if we take pictures of people who are not too far decomposed, who are still
recognizable, put them on the wall. This gives us a much better chance of being able to identify
people, especially because they had much more limited facilities for display.
Display was also never popular in New York in the way it was in Paris. It never became this big, popular, great tourist place to go. It was always seen as just a
ghastly place that you don't really want to hang out in.
And so yeah, they started taking these photographs. And they're also really interesting because
in some ways they're sort of medical photographs because obviously Mason's a medical photographer
and there's that kind of clinical detachment to them.
But then they also really remind us of criminal mugshots. And there's that feeling as well there.
And what's also in New York, there's a kind of a pre-existing idea of having photographs like this
on display because 10 years before the morgue, the police had started this kind of rogues gallery
mugshot place where basically people could go and see these
photographs of, you know, this is a petty criminal, this is a shoplifter, this is so
and so. And so people could kind of know who the local criminals in the neighborhood were
and all this kind of idea. So there's already a prerequisite for doing that. So that kind
of comes into it as well. So they do they kind of combine medical slash criminal, but
also postmortem because these are photographs of the dead. And the photographer himself was really
aware of that. And he writes about the photographs and these annual reports. And he's really
sensitive to it. And he's very much aware of like, we're trying to find, you know, their kin, we're
trying to find out who these people are, whereas other people maybe weren't so so sensitive about
it.
whereas other people maybe weren't so sensitive about it. I suppose as well the photographs halt the decomposition process and so you can identify
a body for a lot longer. It can go off display and you still have that record of them.
Just before, we're going to talk about some of these photos, but I just wanted to ask
really quickly while it's in my mind, you mentioned there that whereas the Paris Morgue
is very much a tourist attraction and part of a sort of pantheon of activities you could do in the city, in New York you say it's considered a ghastly
place and somewhere that people don't want to go to. I wonder if that is a cultural difference?
Is it a difference between the beginning and the end of the 19th century? Is it this association
that's starting to slip in, in terms of criminality, and that the
photographs are making that link between criminality and the bodies in the morgue? Is it all of
that? Is it none of that? What's going on? Why is there that difference?
You know, that's a great question, because we don't know. And I think that the thing
is about this morgue, especially because it's never been studied before now, is that a lot
of these aspects, especially things like figuring out why wasn't the display popular there? It could
be and probably was, partly because of all the reasons you've just listed. I think there
was a cultural element, there was a social element. You've got a kind of a different
religious sensibility in the US as compared to France. You've also got, like you say,
this is now mid-century. We've again just come out of
the civil war. Is there a sense of being like, I don't really want to go and see dead bodies
on display. That's not perhaps interesting to me or entertaining in a way it might have
been before. But then at the same time, the Paris Mare kind of emerged out of the French
Revolution. So maybe it's also, yeah, maybe it's more having a kind of puritanical background
culturally. Also, it was a smaller
space. It was not as centrally located in the way that Paris was. There's so many different
possibilities. And also what's odd in New York is that the photography becomes much more the thing
to go and see. In Paris, that was like sort of secondary to the bodies. You wanted to go see the
bodies for real. You weren't that bothered about the photos. But in New York, you'll find in the newspapers, they're often talking about photographs
and calling, yeah, this ghastly display, this wall of the unknown dead, who's in the photos
this week. So there is much more interest in the photos and who's up there. And they also
kept photographs for a really long time. By the end of the period, there were 600 photos up there.
So the display would get bigger and bigger and they would keep images up for quite a long time, by the end of the period, there were 600 photos up there. So the display
would get bigger and bigger and they would keep images up for quite a long time, depending
on how much space they had. So that was a bit more of a draw.
And I mean, there still obviously were people who went to go and see it because it was somewhere
you could go and see dead bodies. I mean, there's occasion descriptions of kids hanging
outside and that kind of thing. And there were some people who wrote about the fact
that people would go there as a ghoulish tourist attraction, but it was
never a big international hotspot in the way that Paris was.
Well, we have one of those photographs which Kat has provided for us. And I'm going to
try and give you a sense of it. And then Kat, if you can share the details that you know,
because I know you've done some research
on this. It is a black and white photograph of a man who for all intents and purposes, if I didn't
know what I was looking at, seems to me to be alive. There's a liveliness about him. Despite the
fact that his eyes are closed, he seems to be, and obviously this is just human inference here, he
seems to be a very kindly man, something very light about him. What I would ask you to imagine
is a version of Charles Dickens almost. It's very Dickensian in how he looks.
He does look like Charles Dickens. He does.
I think it's the goatee.
Yes, yeah. I think it's the facial hair and then the receding hairline at the same time.
He's dressed relatively well, although his clothes seem to be quite smudged, a little bit tattered now. But it's, you know, he's wearing a three piece suit. He's dressed relatively well, although his clothes seem to be quite smudged a little bit
tattered now. But it's, you know, he's wearing a three piece suit. He's wearing a tie, which
they've obviously put him back into for the purposes of this photograph. And yeah, he seems
like a kindly older man, although not that old. This is a fascinating photo. And you can see,
I'm always really reticent to cast judgment. You know, the way we spoke about about this in Paris, where people are just like, well, I'd never go and see
and I'd never. And when you look at an image like this, you can see why it would intrigue
people and why it would fascinate people. But tell us about this image, this man, do
we know anything about him?
Yeah. So this photograph is one of hundreds of photographs that I found in that box in
the Brooklyn archive.
Yeah, it's incredible. He does look really lifelike. This is something that we see in
quite a lot of the photographs is that they look like they're asleep. You assume that
photographs of dead people, they're all going to look a specific way, but actually there's
a huge range in how people look. In this case, the photographs in this box that I found,
they have notes on the back and they have notes saying where the body was found, if they were identified or not, you know,
signature of the coroner at the time. And in this case, this man was identified and
we know that he was 45 years old. He was five for eight.
He's only 45!
Yeah, but hard living in New York is going to age you.
We'll share this picture on socials just so that you can
you can see why we're reacting like that. I mean, I thought he was maybe in his 60s.
No, he's only 45. Wow. And there's a description of what he's wearing, you know, his waistcoat and
his jacket and his linen undershirt and his boots. And he was found at the foot of Spring Street,
which is in Lower Manhattan. He was brought to the
morgue and I think it was February 1870. Again, pretty early on in the morgue's history. Then
he was identified in July of that year. The photograph must have been up for a while.
Obviously, by that time, he was long gone. He was buried. His name was Peter van Guthren.
There was a name for the person that identified him. We can only assume that they were a friend
or a family member. Yes, we know exactly who he was in that image. And I think with
these with all these images, obviously, a lot of them weren't identified, but other ones were. And
it's incredible, because you just get this tiny snippet of somebody, and you only have their death.
We don't have anything about their life, we don't know anything about them. And you know,
this is just this one moment, this last moment.
And that's all we have of them.
It's fascinating, isn't it how we can guess elements of his life based on the clothing that
he's wearing, or indeed his facial hair. And there are little ways that you could read, you know,
maybe what social class he was from, or potentially the kind of job he might have done,
or something like that. But ultimately, we will never be able to colour in that whole picture. And that's that's so fascinating. Kat, I'm wondering, while you're talking there, I was just thinking, does it matter when these people are identified? You say that in the case of Peter here, that he was already buried, that his photograph had been up for a really long time before anyone came forward and said who he was.
So what would happen if someone was already buried and then they were identified? Would there be a headstone, for example, given to their grave, they marked in a marked grave and then that's it,
no one ever visits when they're buried or speaks about them again? What was the purpose of identifying
them? Who was it for? I suppose it matters to the people that knew him. So I think in a case of something like this, there isn't any
suggestion that there was foul play or suspicion around the death. If there had been then it would be okay, and
then we can try and figure out who killed him, what happened, what the crime was. In this case, it was a
drowning, you know, maybe it was a tragic accident. We don't know exactly what caused the drowning
to happen, but there wasn't any inference that somebody else was involved. And so in
that sense, it would matter to the people that knew him and who were missing him, who
didn't know what happened to him. And so perhaps the body also mattered to them. We don't know.
The body at that point would be in a mass grave. They're probably not keeping great
records of where, which exact plot.
Even these days, they struggle sometimes to keep... I mean, it's gotten a lot better,
but even yet, late into the 20th century, they were struggling to figure out who was
where in the city cemetery. So the likelihood of you being able to get that body back, I
also, on a practical level, I don't know if you'd want that body back. It's been five
months. So I think it is. It's probably much more just about knowing who he was and what happened to him and knowing where
he ended up and not having, I guess, that kind of just empty space or that hole or that question
still in your mind if he was somebody that was in your life of where did he go and what happened to
him. What's fascinating, Kat, I think about your research specifically, and then how we on this
podcast and then people who are listening discuss this, is so much can be said then how we on this podcast, and then people who are listening, discuss this,
is so much can be said about how we live in relation to how we treat our dead, I think.
And that occurs to me, I'm always really fascinated and struck and sometimes, sometimes,
I'll be honest, sometimes appalled about the way the dead are treated in Britain in terms
of the length of time that can pass between a death and then the formalization of the
burial or, you know, it's, it's often weeks.
And I know in Ireland, we have a much, much quicker system.
And I always feel that it's, it helps in the grieving process to do that much more quickly.
And obviously these people are missing out on that grieving
process because as you say the body has gone. But what do you think it tells us about, what
do you think the dead can tell us about the living in that sense, rather than trying to
piece together the clues about what these people were like in life, how do attitudes
pinpoint us towards the attitudes of the living at this point? How does it reflect that?
Yeah, I mean I think that, like you say, is so central to this. It's not about trying pinpoint us towards the attitudes of the living at this point. How does it reflect that?
Yeah, I mean, I think that like you say is so central to this. It's not about trying to track
down who all these individual people are. It's like, what does this say about society, about the
living, about who you prioritize, about who you marginalize, who gets to matter and who doesn't?
And I totally agree. I think that even today, death is still so... It's not really democratic,
is it, in so many ways, because I think that it's expensive. The burial process is expensive,
the death process is expensive, all of that stuff. And I think a lot of people are still
really marginalized by that. And in the period, especially, this is when you've got this growing
interest and kind of funeral pomp and all the money in it and how you
die and how your death is memorialized is a massive reflection of who you were in life.
And that's this big societal and cultural idea. So you're reinforcing that you didn't matter in
life because not only can you not afford a nice a pump, you are quite literally in a mass grave on an island and nobody knows who you are. And so that really reinforces that. And
the island that they ended up on, Heart Island, at the time also had a reputation for just
being awful. And there was all these news reports of dogs getting into the graves and
just really awful, disrespectful, dehumanizing stuff. And so it very much was this idea of,
this is all you're worth. This is all you're worth. You weren't worth much in life and
you're definitely not worth much now and you're going to end up in this mass grave and you're
going to be disrespected. And I think this is this idea that, you know, if you were marginalized
or you were impoverished or you were perhaps, you know, had any association with any criminality,
that's what you deserved. You didn't contribute
socially in the way that you were supposed to, or maybe you sort of quote, took handouts,
they're not handouts, but you had state assistance in some way, or you were in an institution,
a penitentiary, a workhouse or anything. So you don't get more than this. You actually owe the
state, so don't expect to get anything back. And Like, you know, you actually owe the state. So don't
expect to get anything back. And there's this real sense of that in the kind of cultural, moral and
social ideology of the time.
Let's talk a little bit more about the institution itself then, and the treatment of the dead.
Because there aren't that many records that survive relating to the New York walk. We do have some photographs and I'm going to describe this photo that I'm looking at and
then maybe we can talk about why those records are a little bit patchy. So the photograph
that is in front of me is I believe from 1879 and it sort of looks a little bit like a school gym
and on the floor which almost looks like it's
wet. Maybe that's the damp, maybe it's just been washed, which I suppose would be a constant thing
that would need to happen in the morgue. On the floor level, or raised slightly up in what looked
like little sort of stands are many, many, many wooden coffins, organized in rows. But what's really confusing me is that at the back
of this scene, almost like a stage in a school, again a school hall, a school gymnasium, there
seemed to be what looked like, and Cat you're gonna have to clarify this for me, the skeletons,
the reassembled skeletons of different possibly exotic animals.
There's a what looks like an elk possibly, or at least a deer. There's some kind of bird with a
very long neck that could be an ostrich. What on earth is going on?
Well, actually, it was the animals that helped me find this photograph, which is a weird way to
start it. But basically
this is a photograph of the dead house of the morgue, which is basically the storage
room where all the coffins are. And I had been looking for this photograph for a really
long time. As you say, not a lot of stuff remains of the New York morgue and there's
all these complications with archives. And everything I use is stuff that basically just
kind of escaped and disappeared off into other places and papers and architectural plans and photographs and all these different things. It's a real like
cobbling it together. So often I will go off down an absolute rabbit hole for a very long time
trying to find something. In this case, there was a man named Jacob Rees. He was quite a famous
social reformer effectively at the end of the 19th century. He wrote this book called How the
Other Half Live. And he was one of the first people in that period to go into tenement housing and slums and photograph things and
kind of just sort of reveal what was going on. I'd read somewhere that he'd also taken
photographs of the morgue and that he'd done this presentation once called How the Other
Half Die, and they'd been these morgue photographs. I'd been trying to figure out where this
photograph had gone for a really long time, And I just assumed it was gone forever. I was never going to find it. And
when I was in New York, it was about a year ago, I'd just been in the archive reading
about an anatomy museum that they built above the morgue. So quite early on, they decided
to take the space above the morgue and the top two floors, they turned into, yeah, this
is comparative anatomy museum, which were all quite popular at the time when they were take the space above the morgue and the top two floors, they turned into, yeah, this comparative
anatomy museum, which were all quite popular at the time when they were seen as these educational
sites. Well, you had the sort of the public facing ones, which were a bit more like sort
of these crazy spectacles. And then you had this sort of more serious medical ones. So
it was for doctors in the hospital to come and study the specimens. And they had both
animals and human remains. And I'd just been reading about that.
And then I was flicking through this book in a shop about Jacob Rees. And then I saw
this photograph and I was like, hang on, that room looks really familiar. And then I realized
I'd seen a drawing of it in an illustration of the morgue. And then I saw the animals
at the back and I looked at the date and I was like, oh, oh my God, it's because they're
installing new animals in the anatomy room above. So then I contacted the Library of Congress, which is where the photograph was kept. And I was like, weird
question, guys. So you got any photographs of this morgue? Because I found this picture, and I'm
convinced it's the morgue. I don't know if it is. Like, do you have any record of this picture? Do
you have any others from the series? And it turned out that this photograph had been kind of misfiled
somewhere else. And it had been labeled as a storage room because if you don't think about it, you would
not assume that those are all coffins and you wouldn't assume that this is a morgue.
And so yeah, then they showed me some other photographs from a different angle. And then
I also sent them an etching I had that proved it was the same room because it was a drawing
that had the same ceiling, all of that. That is how we tracked down the photo. One of the
few photographs of the New York morgue.
I adore research stories like that so much. But I think as well, it's so much about the equation, I
suppose, of some human remains with the animal remains. And there's questions about sort of the
ethics of storage and the ethics of display. And the morgue as an exhibition space like the museum above it as
well. There are some other things that I want to bring up from the stories that come out of the
morgue. One of them is a headline from the New York World which was published on the 25th of May
1894 and I'm just going to read this and then I'm going to let you explain the story cap because
this is quite remarkable. The headline says used corpses for targets. Ghastly experiments made by
Dr. Phelps Morgue unclaimed bodies won't be fired at again to benefit sciences. It's a nice
reassurance that it's okay they won't be fired at again. So people are firing presumably guns at
bodies? Yeah, I mean, you know, it must have been a slow day in the morgue that day,
gotta keep busy somehow. So basically the morgue in the same way that happened in Paris, but very
much in New York was also a place for a lot of kind of medical and scientific experimentation,
because you've had all these bodies that a lot of people weren't going to claim that people didn't
effectively really care about.
And they were just perfect in the eyes of the time material to test things out of.
So this was a case where, yeah, they were basically just propping up bodies in the store
room and shooting at them so that then they could analyze gunshot wounds and the impact
of bullets. So there was quite a lot of examples of this,
not all as extreme as quite literally shooting bodies in the store room, but there's a lot
of medical developments that came onto the morgue. The first ever skin graft from a dead
person to a living person in the US happened with a body from the morgue that is also just
a footnote in a medical journal. The doctors being like, I've done this amazing thing. I've made this skin graft. It's worked. I
found a random guy in the morgue that no one's claimed. So I've just took some of his skin
and I put it on this kid and look, it's worked. Wow. Okay. So yeah, there's a lot of, and
they're also in medical journals and things like that, people talking about how great
the morgue was because there were so many cases that they could analyze. And there were
so many different types of bodies that would also come in from the hospital, different pathologies and also violent deaths,
suspicious deaths, autopsies. So you have an awful lot going on then,
it's really clear that a lot is going on there. So I just want to tie two pieces of that information
together. All of this happening and then now we have a relative sparsity of documentation that
lead us back to that. Is that an administrative thing? Were these deliberately destroyed? What's
the gap between what was happening then and what we have access to now?
It's a couple of different factors, depending on how suspicious you want to be, basically.
Let's say very.
Let's say very. Okay, let's go with the deep conspiracy theory. So one of the problems
I have is that the hospital where the morgue was located, Bellevue Hospital, is still around today,
has a notorious history. Quite a lot of bad and dark things happened there. It had a very notorious
psychiatric division. Sometimes I would come across clippings in the newspaper about nurses murdering a patient.
You know, there was lots of bad stuff happening at Bellevue. And they technically have an archive,
but if you ask them, they will say that they do not. And I had somebody once give me a list of
stuff that had been in a catalogue at the archive that they now also are like, no, no, no,
I don't know what you're talking about. We don't have that. And then there's also the
fact of Hurricane Sandy and stuff did probably get destroyed during
Hurricane Sandy. So that can also be something where you're like, oh no, everything's gone.
Sorry. Don't look at us. So that's a factor. And then there's also a factor of things just gradually
getting destroyed for normal reasons, history, time, storage, things get lost. It's been hundreds
of years. Most people don't think of keeping morgue registers as a priority. I obviously
would, but I think a lot of stuff disappears for reasons that aren't nefarious.
And then there's also the police side of stuff. So anything that's linked to police in New
York, quite a lot of stuff did just get thrown in the river. So there was a bit of a thing
where after a case was finished, apparently they sometimes just used to throw all the
files in the river. That would happen. There was also just an incredible amount of corruption
in every part of the morgue and the municipality and politics and everything in New York in
this period. So I think people were also just destroying their own records too. So yeah,
it's a complex web of
reasons why a lot of stuff is missing, which means when I do find stuff like finding the photographs,
that was incredible. I mean, they also had been at the back of a warehouse for a really long time
and it took the archive a year to track them down for me. Not because they'd gone missing,
but just because they have so much stuff. Yeah, so the complex journey, I would say, to researching this work.
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Go to Fido.ca or a Fido store near you and save all semester long. Fido, at your side. One of the things that strikes me with a bit of 18th century knowledge about death, dying,
and the business of death is that this will open up inevitably an opportunity for some, let's say, illegal or immoral at
the very least practices to unfold and I think Maddie is going to lead us into one of those
examples and then when we come back we'll discuss with Kat in a little bit more detail.
Here's an arithmetic problem for you.
Pencils and paper at the ready please.
Albert N. White held the solemn office of the keeper of the New York morgue for 25 years.
Then, one night, he died of a heart attack. White had helped usher more than 50,000 corpses through the morgue, for which he'd received a modest stipend of
$700 per annum. Reports often found him asleep in his chair while the bodies came in, but
on his death it was discovered that his estate was worth around $100,000. Clearly the dead
had been enriching White beyond all lawful measure.
One doctor admitted buying corpses from White.
He said they were delivered on express wagons packed in wicker baskets lined with zinc.
He said he paid White $6 per corpse.
Another doctor said he paid $3,000 to White for a bulk deal at an average price of $10 per corpse.
Six dollars a body here, ten dollars there, 25 years on the job and tens of thousands of dead souls to plunder.
Just how many bodies did Morgue Keeper White sell to the voracious anatomists of New York City?
Well.
Can I just say, as someone who is numerically very challenged, that I've come out in a
cold sweat having to read that narrative.
But I followed your instruction. I did write some of those numbers down.
Oh wow.
Don't get excited, Catherine. I haven't pushed anything
out. Just all I have is the numbers she said that we're going to recount over again just
to make sure that they're right. So it was 25 years. He would have seen through 50,000
bodies. His actual salary was $700 per year. But when he died, his estate was worth a hundred thousand dollars.
And then after his death, some doctors came out and said he was selling corpses to them
for somewhere between six to ten dollars per corpse, and that he was bulk selling for three
thousand dollars.
I know, that's the bit that tipped me over the edge, the bulk buy. It's shocking, but it's not
surprising. We've looked a lot at body snatchers and, as you say, Anthony, the business of
death, the money that was to be made in the 18th and in the 19th centuries in dealing
with anonymized bodies, people who'd slipped from the public record in some way,
the marginalized, the people who were maybe living on the street, who died in ways that
meant nobody would miss them. And this is often what happened. And also, especially
in terms of the 18th century, of course, once you were buried in the ground, whether you
were a duchess or a pauper, you might be snatched. So there was a sort of, I suppose, a social democracy happening
there, a sort of an evening out, I suppose, of hierarchy. But this is obviously happening
on a slightly more institutionalised, organised scale at this point in the New York Morgue. So
Kat, what's going on?
Wait, wait, Kat, don't answer just yet because exciting developments unfolding as we speak.
I did the maths. I did the maths. I'm so impressed.
It is my estimation based on his estate being worth $100,000 that you're looking at him having sold,
I averaged the price of about $8 per corpse that he will have sold somewhere around the
12 to 12 and a half thousand bodies in order to.
So that's probably like what?
A quarter?
A quarter of the bodies that have passed through them all.
Cat's nodding because I feel like you probably have done some of this.
Listeners, can I just say Cat looks so unsurprised by this.
Yeah, she's like, yeah, that sounds about right.
Sounds right.
Sorry.
I'm just, it's actually startling.
It's incredible.
Yeah, because also, I mean, if we're really going to get into the accounting here, he's
got expenses, you know, he's got expenses of the wagon, transporting.
He's also not the only person involved in this.
So you know, he's probably sold even more because if we think about it, you know, he's got some overheads. He's also not the only person involved in this. So, you know, he's probably
sold even more because if we think about it, you know, he's got some overheads, he's got
other people to pay off. There's a lot of other people that are also in this business.
This is not a one man, one man show, although obviously when he goes to trial, they are
very much trying to pretend that it's a one man show, which is why he never does go to
prison because there's too many other people involved. But yeah, like you say, I think, you know, body snatching, bodies are valuable in this period for medical
study and people will go to whatever lengths to get them. And if there are people who are vulnerable
or marginalized, or who it's much easier to just take their bodies and do what you want with them,
people are going to absolutely take advantage of that. In this case, they certainly did and way better to operate this than literally
out of the morgue. If you're the keeper, you can manage this. There was some newspaper accounts
about how he had the official register and then he had his own personal register of where the bodies
were supposed to go and then where they actually went.
That's interesting that he was keeping his own records.
Oh yeah. I mean, he did it for 25 years. He was good at it. You know, I don't think you
could run what is essentially a commercial enterprise for that long without, you know,
really having some good business skills there. And I think he definitely did. And there was
absolutely quite a lot of other people involved. And they also, people knew about it. It's
interesting is that the trial happened in the 1890s right at the end, but there was
this mentions of these dodgy dealings in the morgue in like the 1870s. There's this whole
Senate document, which actually is about other messed up stuff happening at the morgue to
do with necrophilia and theft and embezzlement and corruption and you name it that happened
at the morgue. And there's kind of a bit of a subtext there where you're like, oh yeah, there's a hint
that people know that he's taking a tip, but he's maybe good at what he does in other ways,
they're overseeing it and they're overlooking it as a bit of a like, okay, that's the price
of it, like a little bit of a gratuity.
And I think what happens with the trial is more that the hires up are pissed off that
he's the one that's making loads of money off it.
Because he's just a lowly morgue keeper.
It's not fair that he's getting rich.
If you think about the class element of this and the social element, it's fine for the
doctors and everybody to get rich off this.
It's fine for people who are perhaps of a higher class or higher status than Albert
Napoleon White to be getting rich.
But for this guy to get rich in their eyes, that's not really appropriate. And he also has the most crazy life story I've been trying to track him down and
he's just like...
CHARLEYY Yeah, I was gonna ask apart from like side note Napoleon fantastic middle name without
giving him too much airtime because he sounds like a pretty dreadful person. But how does one become
keeper of the New York Morgue? What was his story?
NARESH I have he became the Morgue keeper, I have no idea. And I really do want to, when I have
more time, fully dig into that. But as far as I do know about him, he was born in Canada.
And then he moved, he changed his name, moved to the US, joined the Civil War. And then
after the Civil War, somehow ended up in a job in the morgue. I don't think it was particularly
hard to get a job at the morgue. I'm also going to say that.
There weren't many candidates.
Yeah, I think if you needed some work, maybe you were quite like a physical guy and you could,
I mean, it was quite a physical job and you were fine with sort of managing dead people all day.
I don't think the interview process was probably that stringent. And so then he joined the morgue
there and then he had quite a few children. And then I found that his wife died of an illegal abortion in the
1880s, which in itself is a whole odd thing to have happened. You know, when we think
about how dangerous abortion was in that period and how it obviously it was very much illegal.
And she was married and already had children. So there's, and they obviously at this point
clearly had a fair amount of money because he's been selling bodies for 15 years already.
So there's an interesting element there of like, okay, what's going on here? How has this happened?
And then he remarries six months later, her 16 year old sister, either it's her sister,
or it's a young woman that was living in their house. She's referred to as the sister, but we
don't know exactly who she is. And then he has some more children. I don't know why I didn't
expect his terrible behavior to extend to his domestic life. But
there we go.
Yeah, Albert Napoleon. And also what's interesting about him, probably no surprise there, but all
the pre trial, there's all these, you know, they interview him now and again in the newspaper, and
he comes up a lot because he's the kind of jolly morgue keeper, and he's a great character. And oh,
he's a great guy. And there's this whole, I don't know, they portray him in the press as this sort of cheerful hearty morgue man.
Cat, before we wrap up, I want to ask first of all, we've talked about a lot of the unclaimed
bodies from the morgue end up in an area called Potter's Field. And I want to ask, is that a place that is still a grave site today? Can people go and visit it? And then I also want to ask, we've spoken a little bit about, was it Peter, I think the man in the photograph who was dead? But are there any other stories that have come out of the New York Morgue that have really stayed with you or that you'd like to mention?
York walk that have really stayed with you or that you'd like to mention. Emma Pettis So in terms of the Potter's Field, it's basically
Potter's Field is the term for a proper graveyard, the city cemetery. And in New York, this is
a place called Heart Island, which is still there today. Over a million New Yorkers are
buried there. And it still operates like that today. There was a big shift a couple of years
ago. So until about two or three years ago,
it was still run by the Department of Corrections. So it was still run quite literally by the prison
department. The bodies were interred by incarcerated people from Rikers Island being paid 50 cents an
hour. The system from 150 years ago had just continued. And then there's been a huge amount
of activism around the island for the last maybe 20 years. There's a great organization called the Hot Island Project who have done so much work
in raising awareness for the island and for the people who were buried there. But it's
still functioning and it got taken over by the Department of Parks again a couple of
years ago. And so the legislation has been shifting all the time, then obviously during
COVID as well. But they're trying to make it more accessible and so that people can go and visit. And I went there a couple of years ago, which was just, yeah, a very kind of an incredible
experience to see what it's actually like. And there's also been quite a lot of work
being done to kind of lift the stigma of ending up in a mass grave on this island and the
fact that it shouldn't be a huge stigma and that a lot of people again can't afford or don't want to pay for
a burial for this kind of traditional individual burial. But yeah, Heart Island is still there,
still there in the Long Island Sound. And there was obviously a lot of attention on the island
during COVID because a lot of bodies were temporarily interred on the island when they
were managing the rising death toll. And that's also when a lot of attention was put on the island when they were managing the rising death toll. That's also when a lot of attention was put on the island and people realized that incarcerated
people from Rikers Island were still being used to bury the bodies.
Then that shifted and so now there are independent outside contractors.
In 2020, they were still using incarcerated labor.
That's an interesting thing with the morgue and this network as well is that historically
that was also part of it it is that the morgue and
the potentially institutions and the workhouses and the asylums and the prisons were all under
the same department. So you would literally have people in the workhouses building coffins,
sewing shrouds, sometimes going to the morgue to help. So there was this whole going to
the morgue to help being sent to the morgue. So yeah, you'd have people effectively building
their own coffins and sewing their own shroudards in that period. And they also use clothing from the unclaimed dead that was in not great
condition, they would shred it and make it into carpets for prisons and asylums and workhouses.
So yeah, it's a real circular economy system going on.
Sarah- Yeah, it's a sort of closed loop circuit, isn't it that you can get stuck in. And it's a
hopeless situation that in the 19th century, at least there was no escape. And it's shocking that
echoes of that system, and the infrastructure are still in place, at least were in 2020. That's it's
really, really remarkable. But even though there are these echoes, the morgue itself is closed
today, isn't it Kat? So when did that happen? When did
that institution close its doors? Yeah, so they went, as I said, that during the kind of the period
from like the 1860s to the 1910s, they would kind of try and reform it every 10 or 15 years, and then
it would just fall into absolute chaos and disrepair again. So it was kind of going over and over again.
But then in the 1910s, they did this massive
overhaul of the hospital and the famous McKim, Mead and White architects designed this whole new
facility. And they ended up designing a brand new pathology building and the morgue was incorporated
into that. So it was this big six-story fancy new building. They even had an embalming room,
they had all the morgue stuff,
they had all these autopsy spaces, forensics lesson spaces. They even had a floor full
of animals for animal testing. I find the architectural plans as a whole, yeah, really
fancy new building. They put loads of money into it. And so that's when we see this moment
of it shifting away from the morgue and becoming this real sort of medical legal institute that's really medicalised and they're kind of putting all the previous dark
dingy stuff behind them and starting fresh and also coinciding with this period. So previously
you had the coroner system in New York with death management and the coroner system was also
notoriously, again, surprised, incredibly corrupt. And so this is also the period when they end the
coroner system and
they start having a chief medical examiner instead. So they have this whole medical examiner system
that's brought in. And although, you know, the pathology and morgue buildings have gone through
various changes since then, the office of the chief medical examiner is still located at Bellevue in
the exact location that the morgue once was. And this is the, I think,
as far as I know, the largest chief medical examiner's office in the US. Huge. And they
still obviously do a lot of kind of investigations there, a lot of developments there. So this is
any suspicious deaths in New York come through this building and it's a massive, yeah, massive
institution. And it's exactly where the morgue was. And there's this whole, you know, because there's
been so little study in this area, slash none, when people talk about kind of the beginnings
of the chief medical examiner and the first guy that came in and all his advances in forensics
and medical legal stuff, they sort of talk about it as if he just woke up one day and
invented all of it because the previous system just had such a bad reputation that everyone
kind of forgets that any developments happened. But instead he took over an existing system,
like they updated it. But the kind of the New York morgue was really the origins of
all of that stuff and all the advancements they were making. And then when they swept
it away, they were like, right, let's just forget that ever happened. We've got a brand
new building, a brand new guy. Let's start from here.
Well, let's not forget that that just ever happened. So as a parting blow, I'd love you, Kat,
just to recount maybe one story or history or tale or whatever it might be that's attached to the
19th century morgue, just to leave us with that kind of lasting impression of the place and the
institution and the types of people that pass through.
Gosh, there are so many different stories, including some dark but surreal ones. There's
one involving this woman, her husband, her boyfriend, her second boyfriend, a duck,
this is crazy murder case. There's a lot, you know, that's yeah, there's a big one. We can get into
that another time. But I think because we've had so much death and darkness, maybe it's best to end
on one that I think is one of the, it's lighter tales from the morgue, which is a case from,
I think it was 1901 and there was a, it was featured in the newspaper, there was a patrolman
walking around midtown, it was middle of winter, and he came across some boys sort of looking at something in the gutter and he asked them
what they were doing and they'd found a baby. And so, I know this doesn't start like a great
beginning of a lighter story, but-
It's not very promising. Bear with me.
And so he looked at it and it was wrapped in a blanket and he, you know, obviously it
was cold and he thought, oh gosh, the child's frozen. So he took the baby to the morgue and it was placed at this point, there was sort of
refrigeration and everything. And so it was placed, you know, in the, I guess the storage space,
refrigeration space until an autopsy could be done. And then a few days later at the end of his shift,
the sort of the doctor in charge of doing the autopsies, brought the baby out and unwrapped it and discovered that it was made of candy. What? So this was just a candy baby.
We don't really have any more details. A life size candy baby. And when you when you say candy,
And when you when you say candy, Kat, just for British, any any Brits listening, what do you mean by candy? Do you mean a chocolate baby? Or do you mean made of sugar? What?
I'm guessing sugar. We don't have many details. I'm actually imagining a jelly baby. But larger is
kind of how I pictured it and maybe more like life-coloured. Yeah, who knows
how this ended up happening? And apparently in the register it just says like, unidentified candy
baby. So I imagine that the policeman got quite a lot of, uh, yeah, you would not live that down.
But there were also cases of this was one about paper skeleton ones. And sometimes it was people
kind of playing jokes on the Morgan. Other. Yeah, it was actual mistaken stuff, because you'd
also have mistaken identity. Sometimes by accident, sometimes people trying to
commit bigamy. So you know, there was a lot insurance fraud also obviously came
up with that too. But yeah, the candy candy baby was a story with, I suppose,
you want to say a happy ending in the more who made it? How did it end up there?
The most pressing question I want to know, did anyone eat it?
Do you know what? I don't know. I just also don't know if you would want to at that point.
No, I'm not sure how fresh it would be.
Yeah. I love a jelly, like love a jelly. Not jelly babies. Actually,
I really don't like jelly babies at all. Jelly sweets. I do. And I even I in my desperation
wouldn't eat that. I don't think.
That's probably not something. But do you know what I love about that? And this is what I love
about history generally. Somebody, somewhere in the city of New York knew exactly who made that
candy baby, knew exactly why they made it. And they have gone to their grave with them and maybe
one or two other members of their friends or family circle, knowing all the details about that. And we are left with this ridiculously tantalising tale. And
sometimes it's better for us not to know. Sometimes it's just more human for us not to know. So I love
that we can't piece everything together in that case. I think that also happens a lot with the
Morgue, especially with the stuff that I only get from news sources, where I'm like, what? What are you talking about? There was another story about this
couple that fell out over pasta. Again, why these details were in the newspaper? The way
she cooked macaroni and she stormed out. Then he went to the morgue and he looked for her
and they misidentified someone as her. But then there's this weird bit in the newspaper
report about this odd exchange between him and the Morgue Keeper that sounds like fake poetry. Anyway,
and then she comes home a couple days later and he's like, I thought you were dead and
she's like, no, I'm not. And then she's also like, where's my wedding dress? And he's like,
I buried you in it. And she's like, what have you done? And then yeah, that in itself is
just a whole other tabloid story.
And it turns out he'd buried a human made of macaroni.
One can only hope for the second installment if someone turns into a fiction.
I love macaroni too.
Yeah, weird stories.
Well, Kat, we will get you, we'll have to get you back to tell the story of the people with the duck.
We need to know that one.
Yeah.
But thank you so much for coming on After Dark today. And thank you at home for listening. If
you want to leave us a five star review, you can do that wherever you get your podcasts. And you can
even email us at afterdark at historyhit.com. Tell us what you think of the show and suggest future
episodes. We absolutely love to hear from you. That's afterdark at historyhit.com. See you next
time.
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