Stuff You Should Know - The Tale of the Bloody Benders
Episode Date: October 25, 2022Long before we knew what serial killers were, a family in remote Kansas was disposing of victims at their family farm. Listen in to the Tale of the Bloody Benders if you dare!See omnystudio.com/listen...er for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too,
so this is Stuff You Should Know, the murder family edition.
Yeah, Halloween right around the corner. I've always liked to think of you, me, and Jerry as a
kind of murder family. Uh, as in you and I and Jerry, right? We always have to correct that because
people think you're talking about you, me, your wife. That's right, okay. Yes. You, me, comma,
you, comma, me, comma. No, no, I mean me, my wife, you, me, and Jerry. I've always thought of us as
a, you know, I'm kidding. I miss what you said though. You thought of us as what, a murder family?
A murder family, yeah. Sure, in the kindest possible way. Exactly, exactly. No, we're
now a murder family and after everybody learns about the bloody benders, they'll be like, yeah,
Josh and Chuck and Jerry are no murder family. And we wouldn't want to be either because it
turns out murder families are not so great, Chuck. Right, and can we shout out a listener
who submitted this topic? Oh yeah, definitely. That's, I feel like that's happening more and
more lately. A lot, yeah. As our world gets smaller, our listeners are reminding us that it is quite
large. Uh, and we got this one from a Kansan. Oh, that's very appropriate. Is that how you say it?
Kansan? I think it's Kanzinianite. Okay, Kanzinianite, uh, named Star White and apparently Star was
traveling, uh, with the family through Kansas and saw signs in Montgomery County for the benders,
the bloody benders and things commemorating this and said, I'm a Kansan, a Kanzinianite
and I had no idea that this was a thing. Uh, I got to learn more about this. So we're doing one,
you know, we like to keep it spooky in October where we can. Sure, for sure. And there's nothing
spookier than a serial killing family. Interestingly too, um, this past, I think March, um, what I'm
taking to be as a, one of the definitive books on the benders came out. Uh, it's called Hell's
Half Acre. Uh, and it is by an author named. Named a drum roll. Named, uh, Susan Joe Nussis.
That's how I'm going with her last name, but it came out on March. It's called Hell's Half Acre,
and, um, it does look pretty awesome. So I figured that had to do with this, but no, it's just
completely off the cuff from a listener from Kansas, huh? Just driving through. Great name too,
by the way, Star Wipe. What a great name. It's almost like Star Wipe. No one do you like it.
It's your favorite transition. That's right. Uh, I do know a bender actually, but this is,
I don't think there's any, uh, relation. Yeah, because it's not entirely clear that that was
even their names too. So we should talk about it. We're talking about a family that lived in
Kansas in the 1870s at a time when Kansas was like the frontier, maybe even, maybe even beyond
the frontier. Um, the trail of tears had happened by this time. So the Osage, uh, people who had
lived there previously have been forced off their land and moved further west to Oklahoma.
And the federal government said, come anybody, all you criminals, you unsavory characters,
people escaping your past, come and settle here in Kansas. It's like Australia, but in the center
of the United States. That's right. Did you do bad things back east? Right. Just pick up your
bags and head west. That's precisely right. And so a lot of them stopped in Kansas. Again,
this was the frontier, but people were still going west too. So, um, as we'll find out this,
this family, the bender family kind of put up a claim or set down a claim. They did something
with the claim. I'm not, not quite up on my like, um, old prospector terminology.
They claimed something. Yeah. On this road that kind of kept leading west and they set up a tavern
and inn for people to stop in, which is neither here nor there quite yet, but I just kind of wanted
to foreshadow that there's going to be a tavern coming in the future. That's right. And that's
probably a generous term for what they set up. Yeah. Uh, it was a pretty remote, I guess, you know,
not to make too many Kansas jokes, but, uh, it was a pretty remote part of Kansas in, uh,
southeastern Kansas in 1870. Uh, it was not Cherryvale yet, but it would eventually become
Cherryvale. Right. And at first the two, uh, gentlemen arrived, John Bender Sr. He was around
60 years old. Uh, people called him Pa. He didn't talk a lot. Uh, when he did talk, it was mostly
in German. Uh, and then he was with a younger guy in his twenties and, you know, we're going to say
things like identified as his son or, you know, may or may not have been the daughter. Like, this
is because of a lot of things, uh, partially just, you know, a lot of record keeping back then wasn't
super solid, uh, especially when it turns out you may be using aliases and you may be faking that
you're a family or you may actually be a family. Like no one really knows for sure, uh, the facts
of this, but, uh, John Bender Jr. was with him, uh, and he also occasionally went by an alias,
uh, put a pen in this one named, uh, John Gebhardt. Chris Gebhardt.
Uh, he's a comedian. He's great. I know. But apparently John Gebhardt or John Bender Jr.
was a bit of a comedian himself, but from some reports, he was his own audience and no one
else was. So to put it another way, he apparently laughed at stuff like inappropriately like Dr.
Hibbert. Um, and also at times when, exactly, that was a great John Bender Jr. impression by the
way. But, um, at times where people were like, this, this guy ain't quite right. And he also
talked a lot. So he was kind of an odd fixture as well, as we'll find out the whole family was.
Yeah. He had a German accent, but did speak fluent English. Uh, and some people think
he may have been intellectually disabled. Um, looking at kind of some of the things that
happened, it seems like, uh, I don't know about clear, but, you know, at a time in 1870,
they wouldn't have been categorizing people as such anyway, you know.
No, for sure. But from the, the articles of the time, that's what I'm going with from now on,
um, they, they, they, nobody said anything even remotely like that. I saw it on one,
I think that crime reads article and that was about it. I just got the, the impression that
was really kind of weird and almost like a, a Jethro clamp it type. That's who he reminds me of.
Okay. Uh, so what they built, uh, on their 160 acres was, uh, you call it a tavern. I call it
just a big room, kind of like a bunk, a bunkhouse maybe they called it or Olivia who helped us with
this called it a foot house. Uh, but it was 16 feet wide, 24 feet long. So what they eventually
did was they would, uh, put up a canvas sheet, kind of splitting it into, they lived in the back
and then they called, you know, they called it an in, uh, you call it a tavern. It was really
just a room with some canned goods and supplies and I think a couple of beds, uh, sort of like
a bunkhouse. It was not fancy at all. No, but I'm guessing like as you were passing through
Kansas back then and maybe even today, it was pretty appealing. You think? Well, I mean,
it was better than sleeping out on the open prairie with the bedroll, right? You know,
there was a hot meal, you know, they probably had tobacco and yeah, I mean, it was better than
nothing. And I think I get the impression also, one of the things that made it better than nothing
was, um, the daughter who I say we meet right now, her name was Kate and she showed up after this,
this tavern, this house had been built. That's right. Uh, the two ladies were sent for after
everything was done and it was Ma Bender, uh, who everyone just sort of assumed was the wife and the,
uh, the matriarch of the family. Uh, she went by Elvira sometimes. Uh, she was maybe in her 50s
and let on like she didn't speak any if, uh, very little, if any English at all,
but I had like a terrible temper. She was widely reputed about from anybody that matter that she
was just a terrible cuss of a person from when I gather. Yeah. In fact, I think she may have been
the one sort of leading this whole charge that we'll get to. I've seen both. I've seen her or
I've seen Kate and Kate, Kate was the daughter. She was, um, in her 20s, but I think more than
anything, um, she, uh, kind of attracted passersby with flyers, um, advertising her mediumship.
Like she was into spiritualism and free love apparently too.
And who knows what that means in 1870s, Kansas. She's shown a little ankle. I don't know. Like
I have no idea what free love means in that context, but it was unusual at least and got
attention. Um, some people thought she may have been the daughter. Other people thought that
they presented, uh, she and John Jr. as, um, a couple. So it was just sort of one of those things.
It's, it's, it's loose out there in 1870s, Kansas. Right. So one other thing I read, Chuck, that
Livy didn't quite hit on, um, was that this family, they, they weren't like exactly, you know,
fading into the woodwork or the prairie. Like they were well known in their little community,
mainly because they were only like eight or 10 other settlements around them at the time,
but also because I think they were the only ones running a tavern and they had an orchard
that will factor in later, but apparently their cherries and apples and peaches were like really
prized out there at the time. So they were part of the community, but they were known to be
weird and maw in particular, which you just kind of avoided her as best as you could.
Right. So they have this thing set up. Uh, it's on the edge of the great Osage trail,
which is, uh, like you mentioned earlier, where a lot of people continued westward.
And it was a good place to have a little bunkhouse that, that, you know, sold a few things. Uh,
what's the word I'm looking for? Uh, general store. No. Um, uh, Ollie's bargain house.
Rations. Oh, okay. Yeah. Selling rations and things like that.
They sell rations at Ollie's. What is Ollie's? It's like, um, a deep discount liquidary. Like
if you stole a, a truck, you just drive it over there and they'll buy everything and then turn
around and sell it. I don't think they actually do that, but it's the appearance of that kind of
thing. Uh, yeah, we should be clear. I've never heard of Ollie, so I'm, uh, I'm innocent of this.
You should go wander around one. You'd be like, uh, okay, I gotcha. Here's an Oriental rug.
Here's, um, some off brand bleach on the next aisle. Like it's just, just that. Really? Yes.
Oh yeah. It's like that. Where are these places? All over the place in every strip mall, in every city,
in every, in every country in the world. It may be one of those things that's so ubiquitous.
I've just never noticed it. Yeah, I think so. Right under my nose. It's possible.
All right. So they set up an Ollie's right there on the Grado Sage trail,
and maybe this is a good place to take our first break. Oh, I wasn't expecting that. Let me see.
Okay. That sounds good.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing
can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me.
Yep. We know that, Michael. And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you
through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen
to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going
to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell
me to stop running and pay attention because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing
to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird.
It got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, Chuck. So one of the things that made the benders, made us call the benders of murder
families, that they started murdering people pretty shortly after they set up this homestead
along the Osage Trail. And one of the things about Kansas at the time was it was really,
really violent. Not just in the wars against the Native Americans there. There were also
pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions that committed atrocities against one another.
The Civil War, I bred, kind of broke out thanks to Kansas. I'm struggling which kind of state it
was going to be. So it was a really violent place. And it was with that kind of violent backdrop
that a family could just kill a bunch of travelers without anyone really taking notice.
Because it was also just the kind of place where people just went missing. It just happened. It was
a really dangerous place to travel. So when it happened, it didn't exactly set off the media
and search parties didn't usually come out for people. Yeah, absolutely. However, when they
start turning up in regular order around town, then you've got a problem and that's what happened.
Yeah. In May of 1871, the body of a man was found in local Drum Creek.
This is southeast of the Bender's house. And this is very key here. He had his,
he'd been brained. He had his skull bashed in and had his throat cut, which as you will see
becomes the recurring MO of this family. Yep. Two more men were found shortly after,
I think a few months later, a few months after that, another body was found all in the creek.
And apparently they all had that same kind of mortal wound or that combination of injuries.
And one of the bodies was identified as a man named William Jones. And he had been carrying,
known to have been carrying about $250, which at the time was like a lot of money today.
So it's six grand close to it. Okay. And he was going to pay off his mortgage for his homestead,
which is something people did at that time too. It's another thing that made it dangerous.
A lot of people were walking around with a lot of cash because they were going to buy land,
pay off mortgages, do God knows what. And there weren't banks, so they were traveling with cash.
And this guy was exactly that. And there was a farmer whose land he was found on
that was initially accused, but they were like, I don't think it was him. So he got off. But
I'm sure he was like, wait, what? What? No, it wasn't me.
Yeah. And the way he got off too was kind of frustrating as a,
like a crime enthusiast reader because they investigated it and they found that the wagon
that dropped him had a very distinctive track that one of the back wheels was off center.
And I kept waiting for that to come back as like, remember that wagon? That's what eventually
led to the killers, but spoiler alert, that does not happen. So don't put a pin in it. Take the
pin out of that. Yeah. Just throw that pin away, break it in two. So the thing about,
I think one of the reasons why people started getting hot under the collar about these murders
too is that this area got a really bad reputation really fast. Like it was like,
you avoid the spot as best you can, like maybe go out of your way to avoid this area on the Osage
Trail because people just wind up missing there. And that kind of got people aware of like the whole
the whole problem that the area was facing, but they didn't know who it was. And they certainly
hadn't centered on the benders. The benders just had a reputation as being odd and possibly a little,
maybe violently unusual, but not murderers by any stretch. They just weren't suspected for a
really long time. Violently unusual. Yeah. What a reputation. Yeah, that's pretty serious.
Here's another story too that you do need to get that pin out, put it back together that you,
Josh told you to break it in half. I'm sorry, everybody. And put a pin in this story because
this was chronologically speaking, February 1873, a woman who didn't really have any money apparently
stopped at the home, asked to rest, asked for some food, fell asleep on a bed in the back.
And then when she woke up, there was Ma Bender and she pointed to a table covered in pistols and
knives and said, there your supper's ready. So this lady somehow apparently manages to stay
composed and not react with alarm after waking up. Fiddle sticks. Yeah, exactly. And said,
I just need to step outside for a minute to do something. Just apparently made a private excuse
is what the Kansas City Times said. Yeah. And ran and took off running barefoot, basically,
you know, enter sleeping clothes, ran for a couple of miles to find help. And it's hard to
parse together what the sentence from the Times even means, but I'm taking it to mean that it
didn't really, it still didn't set off alarm bells for this family. No, it didn't. And that, by the
way, is a classic example of being violently unusual. Right. Okay. You know, there's just
the, if you're violently unusual, you have the kind of house that people run two miles away from
in their bare feet. Yeah, where guns and knives are presented as supper. Exactly, right? So this
is just kind of going along the benders are humming along doing their murdering thing. People
don't really suspect them, but the area's got a bad reputation. But there was a series of murders,
actually a combo, one two punch of murders that finally led to their discovery as a murder family.
And the first thing started with the guy named George Newton Longcore, who left Independence,
Kansas, which was just to the west of Cherryvale along the Osage Trail. And he was on his way to
Iowa, so he would have passed through Cherryvale along with his 18 month old daughter, Mary Ann.
And he never made it to Iowa. And that caught the attention of another man, a physician named
William York, who was his neighbor and was concerned enough that he started traveling around,
inquiring about him to see if he could figure out what happened to George and his daughter, Mary Ann.
Yeah, good neighbor. Yeah, really good neighbor. Like to do such a thing, to take this trip.
So starts investigating, finds out that the horse and wagon team was abandoned near Fort Scott,
Kansas. And in the spring, I mean, I think that's what led him to go out there. So he's out there
in the spring. He gets to Fort Scott. All that stuff is still there. Basically, all other stuff
had been abandoned. They were nowhere to be found. So he's like, something is going on. I need to
go back to Independence. And then he disappears. Yeah. And that really caught the attention of
people because it turned out Dr. William York. And if I said, Edward, the first time, please
forgive me, his name was William. And he was a doctor. And he was a York. And there were two
other Yorks. He had a brother named Edward, who was neither here nor there. But he had a really
important brother named Alexander York, who was a colonel from the Civil War and also a Kansas
senator. So they had murdered the brother of a Kansas senator who was known to be out looking
around the area of Cherryvale for somebody else who had gone missing. And that really got people's
antenna up. Yeah, big time. Enough to where they got a search party, Colonel Alexander. I think
that about 75 men set off. And they were scouring around. They basically kind of figured out at
one point that they definitely went by the Bender's house. So let's go by and talk to these people,
see what's going on. When they do this, Ma Bender claims to not speak English, which seems like
her main jam. Her big joke, besides, here's your supper of guns and knives, was I also don't speak
English. Kate, young Kate says, I don't know anything about this guy. And then John Jr. said,
hey, listen, I was shot at when I was out there at Drum Creek, where all these bodies have been
found. And I can take you out there and maybe the people that shot at me killed your friends as well.
Yeah. And again, just imagine Jethro Clampett saying this and taking people out to look at a
place where he claims to have been shot at, right? I just, I love that bit. So, but he's also just
kooky, you know? Did you watch the Beverly Hill Billies? I did. Like a lot? Yeah, yeah, I watched
it a lot. So do you remember the time or the period, I guess it was a phase where Jethro
ended up becoming like a movie producer in Hollywood? Yeah. Yeah, that was a little weird
later in that show. It really did get weird. So it's not clear whether this is that Hollywood
producer of Jethro or the original Mountaineer son of Jethro. Either way, it works pretty good.
But he takes Alexander and the search party out there. And I guess he gave enough of an explanation
and was, you know, pointing out different spots well enough that they're like, either they believed
him or they just didn't really care. And they kind of headed on, basically. Yeah. I mean,
he showed bullet holes in a tree or not holes, but bullet markings, which, you know,
Kansas in the 1870s, about half the tree said bullets in them. So that doesn't prove anything.
But like you said, it was enough at least to sniff them slightly off the case,
at least temporarily. But they came back a few days later, said, listen, we heard about this lady
over the past few days who came here. And I don't want to really start anything. But she said that
you said, here's your supper and it was guns and knives. There's something about a pistol supper
or something like that. And that's, that's weird. She ran away barefoot for two miles and no one
made a big deal out of it. But now we kind of want to know this is where Ma Bender all of a sudden
starts speaking English. Apparently the quote is she flew into a violent passion and went off saying,
you know, that that lady was a witch and she has, you know, cursed Kate's coffee
and that she was going to drink. And if she ever comes back here, I'm going to kill her.
We got her out of here. She was a witch. Yeah. She converted Kate's coffee into that
mushroom coffee and now Kate refuses to drink it.
What's mushroom coffee? It's exactly what it sounds like,
except it doesn't actually have coffee. No. Oh, it's made out of mushrooms.
Yeah. Yeah. You should try it sometime just to say you tried it.
Yeah. That's what on those survival shows, they get like roots and twigs and boil that stuff down.
They're like, here's my morning coffee. All right. Have fun with that.
So, so they, so again, still like they were kind of like, okay, this family's really weird, but
we don't really have anything on them. But it was enough that Alexander York kind of stuck around
town and they held a meeting with basically the whole town that Pa and John Jr. even attended.
And they said, hey, this place has a bad reputation. Something's going on.
These two people at the very least have been, have turned up missing.
We need to just search everyone's homestead. And apparently very brassily,
at least one neighbor said, I've got nothing to hide. Search my homestead.
And Pa said the same thing. He said, I don't either. You guys search my homestead.
And so I guess they kind of did a slow motion search because it was at least a week I saw,
if not a couple of weeks before they finally made it out to search the bender's place.
And when they showed up, they realized very quickly that the benders weren't there
and probably hadn't been there since the night of that meeting.
Yeah. When they realized they told people to come search their house.
You said what? My favorite part about Kate's jam is that they asked her to do the séance to
like give some more information. Like, well, if you're so good at that. And she said, no,
it's like, it's, it's daytime. There's too many people around. Like, have you ever seen a séance?
She was like, why don't you come back tomorrow night, just the two of you and we'll do one.
And they were like, no, thank you. I think I'll take the zero in that one.
Yeah. That's what I'm saying. Dr. Colonel, no, Colonel Alexander York was a sharp dude, basically.
Yeah. But the townspeople weren't sharp enough to go. I don't know if they were searching other
places. I know there was a weather issue. But like you said, by the time they got there,
they were gonzos. They left there. They took a train because they found their horse and wagon
and even their dog just on a public street near the train station. And they, they got the heck out
of dodge. Well, not out of dodge. Out of what would become Cherryville. Very close. Very close.
So the volunteers were like, well, I guess since they left, we can just go ahead and go on in.
And apparently they found very quickly that there was a trap door in the floor. And when they
opened the trap door, I guess a lot of them gagged because it smelled like decaying human remains.
And even though they looked in there and there weren't actual bodies, there was so much blood and
gore in this cellar rotting that it was enough to make a person gag even without a full body
decomposing there. I think it's a great place for our second break. Oh, okay. Great. The height of
suspense. Let's do it. We'll be back and talk about what was making that smell right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing
can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the
road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help. This I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yeah,
we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you
through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen
to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to
podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if
you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But
just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the I Heart Radio
app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. So they have a stone cellar under the house covered in blood and stinks like dead
bodies, even though there's no dead bodies. And we said we were going to get to the bottom of the
smell. The bottom of it is there were dead bodies in there previously. Yeah. So they have this
pretty easy. They had the trap set up, the trap door set up. So it led to a hole in the cellar.
And then there was a way out, or I guess a way in from the foundation. And they would kill people,
put them in the trap door, through the trap door to the cellar, and then retrieve them at night
when there weren't prion eyes around. Yeah. Pretty good system they had going.
They started searching around. They did eventually find bodies.
They found William York's body buried in the orchard. They found Longhurst's body
buried along with young Mary Ann, who the two gentlemen had the head wounds and the throat
wounds. Mary Ann, I've seen, variously was either suffocated or suffocated from being buried alive.
Man. But not brained and throat slit at least. Tragic either way, of course. Sure, sure.
Sure, sure. But very, very sad case. Eventually they would go on to find about a dozen bodies
and were eventually implicated in as many as 21 murders.
Yeah. They found it, yeah. I saw 11, I think, including Mary Ann. A bunch of them were in the
orchard. They looked around the property and realized that there were a bunch of depressions
in the orchard. And they're like, I wonder if those are graves. And they turned up
people in the graves. They found somebody in the well. And then yeah, when you add them together
with all the people dumped in Drum Creek, I guess it comes to about 21. And they developed this
theory of what had happened in part based on some people who had narrowly escaped with their lives
and hadn't realized it until after the benders became national news. But that curtain that they
had dividing the tavern, the Ollie's bargain bin from the rest of the house was right behind the
seat where they would have travelers and guests sit when they were eating a meal, right?
Yeah. And they would have them sit there and from the other side, they would be silhouetted
by the candlelight so they could see clearly where they were. And then Pa or John Jr. would
either use like the butt of an axe or a hammer to brain them. They would put them in the cellar
and rob them and then slit their throat. And that's how it was sort of a, I don't know.
The fact like, all right, let's go ahead and tell the stories about the other guys. Because
after this came out, people started coming forward, like you said, a guy named Mr. Wetzel said,
hey, wait a minute, they tried to get me to sit right by that curtain. And I wouldn't sit by
the curtain. And Ma Bender got really mad about that. And so we got the heck out of there.
And then another guy named William Pickering said, yeah, I didn't want to sit by that curtain
because it was dirty and gross. And I took a different seat and they got in a big fight and
Kate came at me with a knife. So I don't know why they just didn't come up behind the membrane
though. Like the, maybe they felt the curtain offered some sort of cover. It just seems very
like stubborn. Oh, like they had to follow procedure or else the person allowed to do it.
Yeah, like you have to sit there. I'm like, well, you can't murder a guy in another chair?
Well, I don't, yeah, I don't think it would have been as easy to come up behind them from the,
from the curtain. You know what I'm saying? Maybe it sounds a little,
I mean, I guess they got away with it for a little while. So, but I don't know, it sounds a
little amateurish. Sure. Or they were such professionals, they just stuck to the script.
And if the script deviated, they didn't take chances. And there's actually a good suggestion
of why they didn't take chances because there were later discovered in the house bullet holes
in the walls and in the door frames. And that was taken to be from people who had tried to
fight back when they realized what was going on. But I guess they had ultimately been unsuccessful
because nobody escaped that house saying they had shot at everyone because they tried to bring
them, you know? Or maybe it's just supper. I guess so, pistol, pistol supper, you're right.
Who knows? So the story gets out, becomes a, you know, for the 1870s, becomes a pretty big media
storm, whatever that looked like back then. And people, you know, it became like a,
a bit of a tourist stop. Like people, it sounds like people essentially showed up there and kind
of looted the place over time. We're just kind of, you know, breaking up pieces of the cellar and
breaking up the bed frame and kind of just taking whatever they wanted with them.
Yeah. And one of the reasons it became such a media frenzy is they were the first serial killers
in America that America ever produced, at least as far as the media could tell.
A decade later, Austin would have what's frequently referred to as the first serial
killer in America with the Servant Girl Annihilator, which is pretty cool. I don't even know if I want
to do a podcast on that. No, I don't, no, that name alone. It's like, nah, that's all right.
That stopped me cold. I mean, this was 10 years before Jack the Ripper even.
Right, exactly. And H.H. Holmes, who's also often referred to as America's first serial killer,
he wasn't until the 1830s or 1890s. So he was like a good 20 years on. So it was a big deal.
So not only did we have America's first serial killer, we had America's first dark tourists
show up at their house and take everything they possibly could as a memento. But one of the
things that happened about this being such a huge media sensation is that like the country
was following this and everyone was basically looking for the benders. Because don't forget,
they'd vanished. No one knew which way they went. All they knew was that somewhere not too far off
they'd ridden their wagon to that train station. And the train ticket person had said, yeah,
those four people definitely bought tickets, but I can't tell you where.
Yeah, exactly. They said, you can tell us. I'm a doctor.
They did arrest 12 men. This sounds a little bit like, hey, we've got to kind of do something.
So they arrest these guys who they alleged maybe were involved as far as receiving stolen goods,
because they never really found a super clear motive. I mean, it seems like a lot of them may
have had like traveling money or like the guy who had the 250 bucks, which was a lot of money at the
time. But it was never like 100% established, like their motive was just to rob people. But they
implicated these 12 guys, these guys who may have helped them move stolen items and money and stuff
like that. And apparently one of the guys was a member of a vigilante committee who tried to get
on to help lead the investigation with Colonel York, but was denied and rejected. And I think
that kind of hurt his feelings. And I think what it came down to was these guys, they were known
as the regulators, these vigilantes, they were throat cutters, they would cut people's throat
instead of like bringing them back to face trial. And then they just sort of tied it to these people
because of the throat cutting. Yeah. And a lot of innocent people died as a result. So these people
were bad dudes. But I saw that it was more than just the throat cutting, that there was a way that
they would particularly leave bodies. Like they would put the right hand against the right breast
and the left hand down, like just by their side. Like a pledge of allegiance? Almost. But you're
like as if you don't know which side of your chest to put your hand and you got it wrong,
kind of like that. And apparently they found a lot of the bodies in the orchard at the
benders place posed like this basically, almost like this was the sign, like this is what this gang
did. So I don't think they were like in the gang, but it's possible that gang of vigilantes were
fencing this stuff for them and that they were at least tangentially related, you know? Sure,
it's possible. Sure. When it comes down to who these people really were, we're not exactly sure.
There's been a lot of modern investigation about who they were and they think that Ma was a woman
named Almira Meek and was from upstate New York near the Adirondack Mountains, so not German at all.
There were some pretty sketchy accounts, not super well researched that said she had been
married before and that her husbands had all met violent deaths from head wounds. So, you know,
I don't know if that's just the internet running with something or if that's true.
Apparently out of all of the four, Ma and Kate seem to have actually been related,
although I don't know how, I didn't see how did you?
Like how they were related? No, no, no. Like they were supposed to be mother and
daughter, but how did that ever get turned up? Like where was that? How was that ever defined?
I think just people doing like modern research on lineage and stuff like that,
because they think they turned up her original name too, that Ma was married to a man named Griffith
and that Kate was really Eliza Griffith. John Sr. apparently was John Flickinger
and was either from Germany or the Netherlands. And then John Jr. apparently his real name
was the alias that he was using that I said to put a pen in, John Gerhardt.
And now you can take that pen out and break it in half and throw it away?
Yeah, so if he was using his real name as an alias, then I'm not sure what was going on with John
Jr. No, no, he was a Jethro type, don't forget. So there were people who were like,
oh, we've seen the benders. We saw the benders here. They went this way. They went that way.
For years and years and years, it was like people would report on their whereabouts.
And it's unclear to this day whether people did or didn't know where they went. I saw there was
one kind of article, I guess, from the time that was basically like, yeah, everybody knows where
they are and there's just nothing anyone can do. They made it to another state and everybody just
kind of leaves everybody else alone out there. Other people have always reported like, no,
they have no idea where they went. They just kind of vanished in a thin air. And then there were
reports that were usually incorrect, that they'd either been captured or that they'd been killed.
Or there was one report that Pah died by suicide in Lake Michigan in 1884.
Right. Another one said John Jr. And Kate went to New Mexico, like sort of Texas,
New Mexico border. And John died of a stroke. Some people said that vigilantes got them and
they burned Kate alive and shot and killed the other ones, buried them in the prairies,
but no one ever claimed the pretty substantial reward, you know, close to 70 grand today.
So, it seems like none of these stories were probably true, or maybe, who knows,
maybe one of them was, there's just no way to know.
So, Laura Ingalls Wilder actually had a family story that I read that her daughter basically
said, hey, you should weave this into our family story. So, it's almost certainly not true that
she and her family on their way to Homestead passed by the Bender's Tavern, but they didn't
have enough money to go in for food or to stay there. But they settled in a close enough area
that after the Bender's were found out, her father, there was a knock on her family's door,
and her father was summoned outside with his gun, and he didn't come back till morning.
But that anytime you ever asked him about the Bender's, he would say they'll never be found again.
Again, this isn't true. And one of the other things that really undermines the vigilante
theories, again, 70,000 in today's dollars was offered as a reward. Somebody from that
group of vigilantes would have stepped up and taken it, or even if they didn't,
how could a group of vigilantes keep that secret for all that time, that it still to this day
never came up? Because that would be something to boast about, that you were among the group of
vigilantes that caught and killed the bloody Bender's, you know? Sure. So, I think the vigilante
thing is... Get a book deal at the very least. For sure. These days, I think it's the kind of thing
where a lot of Kansasinianites know about it. You know, they celebrated Bender days for a while.
They had a replica at Cherryvale at one point of the Bender house. More recently,
in fact, just a couple of years ago, a gentleman named Bob Miller, who is a financial advisor,
from Independence and a historian, and who knows, maybe a bit of a murder junkie, bought the land
and basically said, like, hey, the people that own this land never did anything with it. They
never searched for the location of the murder sites or the house, and I want to do that. I want
to have professional expert investigations done on the property. I don't know if he plans to put
up like a Lizzie Bordenhouse or something, but he wants to get to the bottom of what he can at least.
Right. Yeah. He said he's going to try to get with UK or K-State, I don't remember which one,
to do like ground penetrating surveys, but I don't know what his end game is either, but it's
pretty neat that he bought it. And one of the reasons why he's feeling good about finding something
is the family that he bought it from owned the land for, like, the last 65 previous years,
and they showed zero interest whatsoever in finding the actual site, and they just turned
it all into cropland. So there's a good chance that there's something like the foundation,
maybe even that gas for seller, the well that the one guy was found in, remnants of the orchard,
who knows, there could be plenty of stuff left there. I don't know if they're going to,
I believe they exhumed all of the bodies that they found, but that's not to say that they found
every body, you know? Yeah, absolutely. There was a movie made in 2016 called Bender that does not
look great. Did you see the trailer? I know I didn't. I just saw Livia quoted a user from IMDB
that said it had some of the worst acting I've ever seen. What was the trailer like?
Not, I mean, it didn't look great. I read some other reviews that said it was okay,
but it wasn't like super murdery or super scary. So it kind of fell too much toward
like historical drama. They talked a lot about like raising and harvesting grain.
Maybe, I don't know. But there was a thing that in Red Dead Redemption 2 that is funny,
because I kind of forgot about this. I played that game a couple of years ago, and there's a pig
farm where your character shows up, and there's a creepy old lady and a creepy old man, and they're
like trying to get you to stay for dinner. And apparently it's modeled after this. And you don't
really know when you're in those games, you don't know quite what to do. Like, I feel like I should
leave. It's kind of like real life, but they offer you libations and you need libations. So if you
just... All right, if you want to play this game and you haven't, it's pretty old. Don't listen
to this part. Okay. But if you don't care, like most people, don't drink the drink, because as
soon as you drink the drink, the screen goes woozy, and you wake up the next day, and I'm not sure
that good things happened overnight. Okay, but you're not dead, huh? You're not dead. That's not
very bender-y. No, it's not. I think they were inspired by the benders a little bit, but I don't
know. Supposedly also, I've never read American Gods, the Neil Gaiman book. Have you? Have you
read any of his stuff? Never have. I've read some of his short stories and they're amazing. So I'm
surprised I've never read his novels. But in American Gods, one of the characters is a Slavic god
named Zernbog, that's what I'm going with. And every time the benders killed somebody,
he gained strength from their sacrifice, which is a pretty neat little take on the whole thing,
you know, because we're so like, we have the blinders on here on earth. We don't even realize
this murder family is actually contributing to the well-being of a Slavic god.
I thought you were going to say, whenever they killed someone, they would yell, Zernberg!
Well, they did that too, but that was never captured in the articles from the time. Chuck,
which by the way, if you're like, I need to know more about the bloody benders and I will not have
it filtered through history. I need the original stuff. There's a website called genealogytrails.com
and if you search that and Bender Family and your favorite search engine, it will bring up the crime
related news articles from the time about the Bender Family. And it's awesome because it has a
bunch of other details, but also it's got like that old timey 19th century, you know, crime reporting
too. Right. It's just worth reading for sure. It's always fun. You got anything else about the benders?
Nothing else. Well, that said, about the benders for now, everybody. And since Chuck said nothing
else, that means it's time for Listener Man. Hey guys, stumbled across you in the summer of 2020
when I was employed as a USPS Rural Carrier Associate. Not a rural juror.
I heard of 510. Wait, wait, no. I need to know. What was that? I can't remember what that's from.
30 Rock. I still can't place it, but I'll think about it and I'll say Eureka later. Okay. Well,
what's funny is after we talked a little bit about 30 Rock on our sitcoms episode,
and Emily went out of town for a week and I barreled through season one of 30 Rock
while she was gone and it was so good. Yeah, it was really good. To do it again. What a show.
God, Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan. Yeah, and don't forget Liz Lemon. She was great, but oh boy,
Baldwin and Tracy Morgan just slayed me on the show. I mean, everyone on that show was really
funny. Yeah, Tracy Morgan's best quote was somebody offered him cashews and he said,
I'm glad you said that because I thought it was a bowl of baby penises. His other good one that I
got was, he's talking about how they go together like peanut butter and he said, we're like chicken
in the chicken container. That's pretty good. So rural juror, though, was the movie that Jane
Krakowski was in and the joke is she goes, rural juror and like no one knows what the title of
the movie is, but it had gone so long they couldn't really ask her what the name of the movie was.
I don't remember. I mean, I'm going to keep watching it. She's so funny too, however. Okay.
All right, back to the email. I have heard a podcast before, but never gave it much thought
until a friend insisted I started to listen to some and I got to the point and stuff you
should know where I'd talk so much about y'all. My husband finally came and said,
who the heck are Josh and Chuck and when you're going to introduce me to your new friends?
But now the show is our go to for family road trips. Awesome. One neat thing I wanted to
write about though was my last dental appointment in February and decided to bring along earbuds
so I could listen to y'all while getting some fillings done. I asked the dentist and the assistant
if it would be okay to listen to the podcast while they work and the dentist said it was okay,
but asked me what I was going to listen to first. I told her it was stuff you should know
and how much I enjoyed it and I was listening to the chow chilla bus kidnapping episode.
My dentist lit up and told me how awesome that episode was. Her assistant had never
heard of the show, but the dentist was happily talking about your show so much that my entire
visit I didn't get to listen to the episode because I was half chatting to my dentist about
stuff you should know. That's awesome. Thank you for saving me while I was delivering people's
mail and for keeping me company during my commutes with love from the land of 10,000 lakes that is
Tanya Vanderpool. From Texas. 10,000 lakes. Texas has like two lakes. What is that uh Minnesota?
Minnesota. Uh yeah right? 10,000 lakes yeah. It's gotta be. Michigan? No. Minnesota? Yeah it's
Minnesota for sure. She really didn't say you're not toying with me. I don't know. I mean I'm saying
I'm not toying with you, but I'm also on the verge of saying so many things that are wrong
about lakes and states that I'm just stopping. That's fine, that's fine, but can you imagine
the audacity of just signing off with the land of 10,000 lakes and not putting in parentheses
what state you're talking about? I mean I saw all my emails chuck of the peach state.
Okay well that is pretty audacious Chuck. It's violently unusual. Um what was the person's name
again? Minnesota. You're in fine form today aren't you? You're being playful. I'm kidding it was
Tanya Vanderpool. Okay thanks a lot Tanya. We appreciate that and we're glad we can keep you
company and that we made your dentist appointment so special. If you want to get in touch with us
like Tanya did and tell us about your dental visits why not? You can send it in an email to
stuffpodcastatihartradio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of iHeart Radio. For more
podcasts my heart radio visit the iHeart Radio app. Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your
favorite shows. Hey I'm Lance Bass host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do you've come to the right place because I'm here to help and
a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life. Tell everybody
ya everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye
bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than
any of us want to believe. You can find it in major league baseball, international banks,
k-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about
to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.