HOWARD UNRUH
First, let it be understood that this page is in no way an attempt to glorify Howard Unruh or the terrible things he did on September 7, 1949. If anything however, this page stands as evidence for each of us that "there but for the grace of God go I."
Howard Unruh has been, and unfortunately will continue to be, called America's first mass shooter. This is COMPLETELY UNTRUE. There were several other similar incidents, including one in Chester, Pennsylvania in November of 1948..... less than 24 miles away and only 10 months before, where a sniper killed seven people before taking his own life. Click here for more information on this incident.
Howard Unruh has been described as "an odd, withdrawn 'mama's boy' in his neighborhood". He grew up in East Camden, attending Cramer Junior High School and graduating from Woodrow Wilson High School in January of 1939.
Unruh served in the United States Army in Europe, and saw considerable combat. After returning home he became increasingly withdrawn. On September 6, 1949 the schizophrenia that had been manifesting itself unknown to his own family and his neighbors overtook him, and he killed 13 people in a shooting rampage that has been inaccurately described as "America's First Mass Murder".
Howard Unruh was never brought to trial, his mental condition being apparent to those who apprehended him. Sent to Trenton State Prison shortly after his arrest, he has been confined to a maximum security hospital for the criminally insane, and will remain confined for the rest of his life. This may well be considered one of the few times that the criminal justice system in New Jersey worked by its very un-involvement in the proceedings.
If there is any possible "silver lining" that can be found in this sad affair, is that the Unruh affair may have spurred the federal government to put additional resources into mental health care for the veterans that came home from World War II. Howard Unruh's rampage was arguably the culmination of a chain of events that had been taking place since the middle of World War II, evidenced by a series of suicides and suicide attempts by soldiers home on leave and discharged veterans.
Of the many on-line articles about Howard Unruh, some are pure garbage. Unfortunately, 60-plus years after the event, people with WORSE intentions than Howard Unruh's have sought to exploit the murders to further their own selfish political and social agendas. Beginning in 2009, articles began to appear claiming Howard Unruh was a homosexual. While it is beyond doubt that was teased, as many shy and reclusive boys were and are, there is ZERO evidence of him being gay. ZERO. If anything, there is more evidence to indicate the contrary, specifically, his time in the Army and his words and deeds after his arrest. To exploit the tragedy of Howard Unruh, one of thousands of combat veterans who came home during and after WWII with serious mental illness and found little help, is to spit in the face of every veteran who has come home from war damaged.
In 1945, Gen Omar N. Bradley was appointed as the head of the Veterans Administration. Bradley hired Paul Hawley, the chief surgeon of the European Theater of Operations, to direct the Division of Medicine. Hawley hired more than 4000 physicians and initiated an extensive hospital-building program. New Veterans Administration hospitals were established in affiliation with medical schools, guaranteeing that the best medical services would be provided to veterans. The Veterans Administration system also encouraged clinical psychologists to become psychotherapists and provided a large number of training positions. It took several years to hire the doctors and build the hospitals. My father, Dr. Leon B. Cohen, a clinical psychologuist, was one of these doctors.. he began his service with the V.A. in 1951... two years after Unruh's murders.
The most informative, accurate, and objective one, is by Katherine Ramsland.
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Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1949 |
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Howard
Unruh - Walt Carley -
Jake Weiner - Stanley Bobiak - William
Deery Russ Maurer - Charles Hance - Everett Joslin - Cecil Picou - Thomas Carr William Moll - Martin "Sid"Sid Nelson - Harry J. "Barney" Tracey - William Kelly Sr. Marshall Thompson - Vince Conley - Leonard Andruzza William Rogers - John Ferry |
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Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 Bernard Dubin |
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Camden
Courier-Post
September 7, 1974
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Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 |
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John Ferry - Howard Unruh |
Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 |
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William E. Kelly on the roof. |
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Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 Frank Engel - Engel's Cafe |
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Camden Courier-Post * September 7, 1974 |
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William
Joyce - Roxy DeMarco Harry "Barney" Tracy - Howard Unruh |
Camden Courier-Post * September 7, 1974 |
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John
Ferry - Howard
Unruh - James
Milligan - Mitchell Cohen "Pop" Lawyer - Frank Engel - Robert Wonsetler |
Camden Courier-Post * September 7, 1974 | |
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Howard
Unruh Philip W. Buxton William E. Kelly Sr. Martin "Sid" Nelson |
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Camden Courier-Post * September 7, 1974 |
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Camden Courier-Post - September 7, 1974 |
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Mitchell Cohen - Howard Unruh |
Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 |
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Camden
Courier-Post September 7, 1974 |
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Philadelphia Inquirer * September 6, 2009 |
Sixty years ago today, a Camden gunman killed 13 By Barbara Boyer Charles Cohen slipped into a closet after hearing his mother yell, "Hide, Charles! Hide!" Sixty years later, he remembered vividly what he had heard next: gunfire. Howard Unruh, a deranged World War II veteran, was spraying bullets around the Cohens' apartment in the Cramer Hill section of Camden. He was on an infamous 20-minute rampage that killed 13 people and wounded three others. In the media, it became known as the walk of death. As 12-year-old Charles huddled in a closet, Unruh killed the boy's father, Maurice, 40, then his mother, 39-year-old Rose. Unruh then killed the boy's grandmother Minnie Cohen, 67, as she desperately tried to call police. Last week, Cohen said a prayer and lit a candle in a synagogue to observe Yahrzeit, the Hebrew anniversary of the deaths, which occurred Sept. 6, 1949. "You get through it, but you never get over it," Cohen said. "I think about my parents every day." He was disappointed to hear from a reporter that Unruh, although in poor health, was still alive. Cohen was waiting for the call that the man who killed his parents had died. He never got that call. On Friday, Cohen died at 72, three days after giving his final interview about that terrible day 60 years ago. Many witnesses gone Unruh has outlived a lot of people who could offer memories of the shootings and their aftermath. The judge is gone. The medical examiner, the psychiatrist, and nearly all the investigators are gone, too. One of those still around Camden is Ron Dale, a retired ironworker and Navy veteran who was 8 and waiting to get his hair cut on that September morning. The line for the barber in the 3200 block of River Road was long as youngsters got ready for the first day of school. The shoemaker in the next shop had comics, so Dale waited there. That was when Unruh arrived, gun in hand, and shot the shoemaker, John Pilarchik, 27, a World War II veteran from Pennsauken. "I heard this bam! He turned around and looked at me," Dale said last week. "He left and went to the barber's." J. Clark Hoover, 45, was cutting the hair of 6-year-old Orris M. Smith as the boy sat on a hobbyhorse. The two were shot dead in front of the boy's mother. Dale ran home, pale with fear, his mother later told him. She closed and locked the windows, pulled the blinds, and locked the door, which the family rarely had done before the slayings but regularly did afterward. Pandemonium ensued. Police flooded the neighborhood. As they searched for the gunman, they used loudspeakers to warn residents to stay inside. Mothers grabbed their babies and ran. Others slid beneath their beds. Dale was among those who scattered for safety. At Engel's, the nearby saloon, the owner later told Dale that he had grabbed his gun and waited for Unruh as customers took cover behind the jukebox and bar. But Unruh targeted mostly neighbors and business owners on the other side of River Road, or killed those who got in his way or just caught his eye. The chronology of the shootings is unclear. At some point, Unruh spotted movement in the first-floor window of a rowhouse next to the shoemaker's. He fired and killed 2-year-old Tommy Hamilton, who was playing with the curtain next to his playpen. Unruh lived in a second-story apartment at River Road and 32d Street, above the pharmacy where Maurice Cohen worked. Unruh wanted the Cohens dead because of a squabble about Unruh's leaving a gate open. He also killed a mother, her son, and a grandmother stopped in traffic; a tailor's wife of one month; a TV repairman stopped in traffic; and an insurance agent who failed to get out of his way as he stood at the door of the pharmacy. Dale thinks Unruh also was looking for neighborhood teens. "The older kids in the neighborhood used to harass him. They thought he was gay and used to make fun of him," Dale said, describing Unruh as a loner. James Klein, Unruh's public defender for 33 years, was 7 at the time. "I remember playing outside and my mother saying, 'Come inside. There's a madman on the loose.' " In a recent interview, one historian said the event foreshadowed the decline of Camden, an industrial city that had experienced little more than petty crimes. It pierced a trusting community where neighbors took care of one another, he said. "It's something you never really forget. . . . You take extra precautions to protect your family and your property," said Paul Schopp, a former director of the Camden County Historical Society. "He didn't just rob them of their lives. He robbed them of their essence." Schopp, who took an interest in the case as a historian, said his father had been on the No. 9 bus from Philadelphia, heading home to Palmyra, when it passed through Camden during the rampage. Police stopped traffic on River Road. "He was very much aware that something horrific had happened," Schopp said. "By the time his bus had reached the carnage, they were putting sheets over the bodies." If he'd had more ammunition, Unruh told police, he would have kept shooting. In the end, he surrendered when police descended on his apartment and opened fire on the building. Years later, as Unruh's attorney, Klein would become one of the few people to visit him regularly in Trenton Psychiatric Hospital, where doctors diagnosed paranoid schizophrenia and he remained in a ward for the criminally insane. Klein said Unruh had never been right after he returned from World War II combat, having served in Italy and France, keeping a diary of the Germans he killed. After the war ended and he returned from the service, Unruh tried college but could not make it, Klein said. Unruh collected weapons and created a shooting range in the basement of his building. He often walked the neighborhood in Army boots, carrying a Bible. Police later learned that Unruh had kept a list of those he wanted dead. Over the years, Unruh never was found competent to stand trial; the legal system has treated him as someone found guilty by reason of insanity. He unsuccessfully sought parole and transfers to less restrictive facilities, with the relatives of his victims fighting each possible move. Cohen was among those who attended court proceedings and kept track of Unruh. In the 1980s, he became a strong advocate for victims' rights and hoped for changes in the criminal-justice system to prevent such slayings, his family said. It seemed, however, that the number of mass murders increased; each time, Cohen relived his own horror, they said. He and his wife of 52 years, Marian, had three grown daughters and seven grandchildren, some of whom never were told of the tragedy. Two years ago, he and his wife left Cherry Hill and moved out of the area. His wife said services for her husband would be private. There are no more hearings - or, as Marian Cohen called them, "dog and pony shows" - where Unruh is taken to court. Every year, a judge signs a new order to keep him confined. On River Road, most of the buildings still stand, occupied by new businesses. Engel's Saloon is now the Rumbarenque Night Club, closed this year after a 25-year-old man was fatally shot outside. Martin's barbershop stands where the shoemaker was killed, and weeds grow in a lot where the old barbershop was torn down. The apartments where the Cohens and Unruh lived are vacant. A newer stucco facade hides the bullet holes that had, for decades, scarred the building. The pharmacy is a shoe store, where Maritza Guzman, the owner of Gomez Shoes, learned of the rampage a week after she moved her business there two years ago. Guzman said she was sorry for the tragedy, "but life has to continue." Still in custody Today, Unruh is the oldest person incarcerated in the state. When not hospitalized for medical reasons, he is confined at Trenton Psychiatric Hospital. Klein questions whether the mass murderer will survive to see his 89th birthday in January. "He's really declined a lot," said Klein.
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Philadelphia Inquirer * October 19, 2009 |
Notorius Camden Killer Unruh Dies at 88 By Joseph A. Giambardello & Barbara Boyer Howard Unruh, the World War II Army veteran who became the modern face of mass murder when he shot and killed 13 people in East Camden in 1949, died today. He was 88. Unruh was never found competent to stand trial after the killing spree, and spent the rest of his life at Trenton State Hospital, diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic. Unruh's 20-minute rampage in the 3200 block of River Road of Cramer Hill unfolded on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 1949. At the time, it was known as the "walk of death." The 13 victims included three children. Eventually, officers used tear gas to smoke him out of his apartment. "I'm no psycho," the combat veteran told police. "I have a good mind." Experts have offered many explanations for Unruh's actions, all fitting what has become the textbook profile of a spree killer. Introverted. Narcissistic. Oedipal. Remorseless. He had a fascination with guns, which apparently developed during the war. He served with the 342d Armored Field Artillery in Italy, Austria, Belgium, France and Germany. His Army commanders told reporters at the time that Unruh was a good soldier who kept to himself. Among recognitions, Unruh held a Good Conduct Medal and two bronze stars on his European medal for his battle participation. He didn't drink, smoke or chase women, and took orders well, the commanders said. Unruh's younger brother, James, told reporters he thought the war caused him to snap. "Since he came home from the service, he didn't seem to be the same. He was nervous. He never acted like his old self," James Unruh had said. Experts at the time said Unruh more likely had been suffering from mental illness before the war. He was born Jan. 20, 1921 in Haddonfield. His parents separated and the children lived with their mother, Freda, in Camden. An average student, he graduated from Woodrow Wilson Senior High School and then worked for Curtis Publishing Co. In 1942, he worked briefly as a sheet metal worker for the Philadelphia Naval Base until he enlisted in the Army. He served with a self-propelled field artillery unit and sometimes served as a tank gunner. In 1945, he was honorably discharged. He returned to live with his mother in Camden, where the two regularly attended Sunday services at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Howard, born-again, participated in Bible study Monday nights as well. He took college classes briefly and never held a job. At home, Unruh listened to somber music, Brahms and Wagner, and constructed a range in the basement where he practiced shooting with a cache of guns he collected. Tall and lanky, he was considered weird by teens who teased him. Although Unruh, known as Junior, dressed nicely, he often wore his Army boots and clutched a Bible as he walked the neighborhood. To get home, Unruh often cut through a rear yard owned by Maurice and Rose Cohen at 32nd Street and River Road where they ran the local pharmacy. He often had run-ins with the Cohens and other shop owners. Secretly he plotted to kill them over two years. After Unruh squabbled with Cohens about a backyard gate, he constructed his own gate that was wrecked by neighborhood boys on September 5. Unruh told police he planned his killing spree as he sat overnight in Philadelphia through three showings of a double feature - The Lady Gambles and I Cheated the Law. In the morning, he had a dazed look, his mother later recalled. He threatened her with a wrench and she ran for help. Her son left next, with a 9mm pistol he bought in Philadelphia for $37.50. Unruh only stopped killing when he ran out of ammunition and retreated to his apartment. In the state hospital, Unruh spent his time reading, including the Bible; watching television, listening to music and playing cards. He was still regarded a loner. He had visitors, over the years, including a fellow World War II veteran who died in 2001. Since then, his health steadily declined and before his death, officials said, he was no longer lucid. Unruh has no known survivors. |
Of
the many on-line articles about Howard Unruh,
the most informative, accurate, and objective one, is
by Katherine
Ramsland.
It is not on-line at the moment (November 20, 2018).
If you would like it, e-mail me and I
will send you a copy.