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Friday 20 March 2026 10:43:56 GMT
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Helen Moyer was murdered on February 11, 1937. That afternoon, Helen finished her last class at Coatesville High School and headed out into the freezing cold toward her home three miles away. When Helen still hadn't returned home an hour after her usual time, her mother Melba became frantic. Helen's father Absalom took some neighbors with him and went looking for his daughter. About a mile down the road, they found her books and torn papers, a hat, and shoes. The tops of the shoes were split. There was also the shattered headlight of a 1935 Ford, pointing to the possibility of a hit-and-run. Hundreds of police, citizens, and even Boy Scouts searched the dense woods near the road, but found nothing. Newspapers began referring to Helen as the “Lost Girl.” Police assumptions about an accidental hit-and-run quickly evaporated; instead, they linked Helen’s disappearance to a terrifying incident a week earlier. A classmate of Helen’s named Jennie Watterson had been walking on the same road after school when an unkempt stranger dragged her into his car. The man hit her with a screwdriver and attempted to rape her. Jennie jumped from the vehicle and tried to run away. “He caught me, and as I turned around, he saw the blood streaming down over my face and hands,” Jennie told a reporter. “He just looked at me and turned and ran.” Authorities felt it was likely that the same man had attacked Helen. A witness reported seeing a green truck making a U-turn back toward the area around the time Helen disappeared. He said the truck brushed against a telephone pole. Investigators found green paint on the pole. Nine days later, the survey of people who owned trucks yielded a suspect: 19-year-old Alexander Meyer. Meyer was the son of a wealthy coal broker. He grew up spoiled, arrogant, and lazy in a world of privilege. When he dropped out of high school, his father tried to keep him out of trouble with a job on his farm. It didn't work. In 1934, Meyer committed a crime that should have put him away forever: the attempted rape and murder of two teenagers. Instead, he was paroled 14 months after his conviction. Five months after his release, Helen vanished. Police picked Meyer up on February 20, 1937. He admitted that he killed Helen with his truck, claiming it was an accident, and then hid the body. Meyer then changed his story, saying he intentionally slammed into Helen, sending her flying over the top of the truck. He put her in the passenger seat unconscious, drove to an abandoned farm, then stripped and raped her before tossing her down a 40-foot well. A day later, Meyer returned to the well and threw dynamite into it to cover up his crime. It took hours of digging through about 1,000 pounds of rocks and rubble to find Helen's mangled body. The dynamite had blown one of her legs off. Her autopsy revealed she was alive when she hit the water at the bottom of the well. Meyer admitted to attacking Jennie Watterson and attempting to abduct other girls. One was just 6 years old. Asked why he picked Helen, Meyer said it was random. “I had no particular girl in mind. Just any girl.” At his trial, Meyer’s attorney tried to argue that although his client was legally sane, he was “insensible to pain, either physical or mental.” The attorney also suggested that the parole board was as much at fault as Meyer, because they had released him after his previous crimes. The judge took no chances that Meyer would ever walk free again and sent him to the electric chair. Meyer was executed on July 11, 1937. Helen was 16 years old. #grave #cemetery #mausoleum #graves #cemeteries #cemeteryexplorer #cemeteryexplorers #famous #famouspeople #famousgraves #famousgrave #graveyard #gravephotographer #gravestone #gravestones #taphophile #taphophilia #celebritygraves #murder #murdervictim #murdervictims #murdervictimsawareness #unsolved #unsolvedcases #unsolvedcasefiles #unsolvedcrime #unsolvedcrimes #truecrimetiktok #truecrime #truecrimecommunity #truecrimetok
Helen Moyer was murdered on February 11, 1937. That afternoon, Helen finished her last class at Coatesville High School and headed out into the freezing cold toward her home three miles away. When Helen still hadn't returned home an hour after her usual time, her mother Melba became frantic. Helen's father Absalom took some neighbors with him and went looking for his daughter. About a mile down the road, they found her books and torn papers, a hat, and shoes. The tops of the shoes were split. There was also the shattered headlight of a 1935 Ford, pointing to the possibility of a hit-and-run. Hundreds of police, citizens, and even Boy Scouts searched the dense woods near the road, but found nothing. Newspapers began referring to Helen as the “Lost Girl.” Police assumptions about an accidental hit-and-run quickly evaporated; instead, they linked Helen’s disappearance to a terrifying incident a week earlier. A classmate of Helen’s named Jennie Watterson had been walking on the same road after school when an unkempt stranger dragged her into his car. The man hit her with a screwdriver and attempted to rape her. Jennie jumped from the vehicle and tried to run away. “He caught me, and as I turned around, he saw the blood streaming down over my face and hands,” Jennie told a reporter. “He just looked at me and turned and ran.” Authorities felt it was likely that the same man had attacked Helen. A witness reported seeing a green truck making a U-turn back toward the area around the time Helen disappeared. He said the truck brushed against a telephone pole. Investigators found green paint on the pole. Nine days later, the survey of people who owned trucks yielded a suspect: 19-year-old Alexander Meyer. Meyer was the son of a wealthy coal broker. He grew up spoiled, arrogant, and lazy in a world of privilege. When he dropped out of high school, his father tried to keep him out of trouble with a job on his farm. It didn't work. In 1934, Meyer committed a crime that should have put him away forever: the attempted rape and murder of two teenagers. Instead, he was paroled 14 months after his conviction. Five months after his release, Helen vanished. Police picked Meyer up on February 20, 1937. He admitted that he killed Helen with his truck, claiming it was an accident, and then hid the body. Meyer then changed his story, saying he intentionally slammed into Helen, sending her flying over the top of the truck. He put her in the passenger seat unconscious, drove to an abandoned farm, then stripped and raped her before tossing her down a 40-foot well. A day later, Meyer returned to the well and threw dynamite into it to cover up his crime. It took hours of digging through about 1,000 pounds of rocks and rubble to find Helen's mangled body. The dynamite had blown one of her legs off. Her autopsy revealed she was alive when she hit the water at the bottom of the well. Meyer admitted to attacking Jennie Watterson and attempting to abduct other girls. One was just 6 years old. Asked why he picked Helen, Meyer said it was random. “I had no particular girl in mind. Just any girl.” At his trial, Meyer’s attorney tried to argue that although his client was legally sane, he was “insensible to pain, either physical or mental.” The attorney also suggested that the parole board was as much at fault as Meyer, because they had released him after his previous crimes. The judge took no chances that Meyer would ever walk free again and sent him to the electric chair. Meyer was executed on July 11, 1937. Helen was 16 years old. #grave #cemetery #mausoleum #graves #cemeteries #cemeteryexplorer #cemeteryexplorers #famous #famouspeople #famousgraves #famousgrave #graveyard #gravephotographer #gravestone #gravestones #taphophile #taphophilia #celebritygraves #murder #murdervictim #murdervictims #murdervictimsawareness #unsolved #unsolvedcases #unsolvedcasefiles #unsolvedcrime #unsolvedcrimes #truecrimetiktok #truecrime #truecrimecommunity #truecrimetok

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