"Rough on Rats" was the brand name.
And that's the Hertford County NC connection (you were beginning to wonder weren't you). Nearly four decades earlier, in 1897, a young girl in Hertford County was equally attracted to "Rough On Rats" when she too decided to murder.
The following article appeared in the News and Observer (Raleigh NC) on May 18, 1897:
PUT "ROUGH ON RATS" IN FOOD
Little Colored Girl Attempts Murder of a Whole Family.
Norfolk, Va., May 17 - A little colored girl living near Union, Hertford County, North Carolina, with the family of Mr. William Horton, attempted to murder the family yesterday by putting "Rough on Rats" in the food. Three of the family were affected and came near dying. Mrs. Horton is still in a precarious condition, but the rest are recovering. The girl has been arrested. She gave her reason for attempting the wholesale murder "that she was tired of living with the family."
Luckily "the little colored girl" was not as skilled with rat poison as Mrs. Creighton. I wonder what happened to that young girl, whose name was not given ? Or to the William Horton family, of "near Union" ?
Does anybody know more details of this story ?
(Look, there was even a song advertising "Rough on Rats")
4 comments:
Love this story ! Thanks for posting ....
From a Jackson County Illinois newspaper (1890).... "Emma STARR is under arrest in Chicago for poisoning the family of George P. NEWLAND, a wealthy retired real estate dealer. The girl, who was a servant, mixed "Rough on Rats" with their food, and then fled, but was recaptured. Mr. NEWLAND and his wife died, but it was thought that the son and daughter would recover. It is believed the girl is insane."
Here are some legal references to ROR poisonings - "the defendant in each instance used a commercial substance known as "[R]ough on [R]ats," an arsenic mixture considered to be a "deadly poison." See Commonwealth v. Kennedy, 170 Mass. 18, 20 (1897) (defendant attempted to combine "Rough on Rats" with victim's afternoon tea); Commonwealth v. Hobbs, 140 Mass. 443, 446 (1886) (defendant mixed "Rough on Rats" with meal used to bake his former landlady's bread)."
hey great blog about ROUGH ON RATS .... Rough on Humans ! thanks for sharing!!! I really enjoyed reading!!
Post a Comment