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7 Aralık 2017 Perşembe

Murderous Mary, The Elephant hanged for Murder, 1916

Mary hanging from a 100-ton derrick in Erwin, Tennessee.

On September 13, 1916, the town of Erwin, Tennessee, hung 'Murderous Mary' the elephant after she mauled one of her keepers to death the day before.

Mary was a five-ton Asian elephant, also known as Murderous Mary, who performed in the Sparks World Famous Shows circus. After killing a trainer in Kingsport, Tennessee, she was hanged in 1916. Her death is sometimes interpreted as a cautionary tale of circus animal abuse during the early 20th century.

Mary’s talents included picking out 25 tunes on musical horns, which she tooted with her trunk. She was also the champion pitcher on the circus’s baseball team.
But on that tragic day, she had been stripped of her red-and-gold saddle and head-dress of artificial blue feathers and stood tethered in disgrace outside the tent.

On September 12, 1916, a hobo named Walter Eldridge, nicknamed Red because of his rusty-colored hair, was hired as an assistant elephant trainer by the Sparks World Famous Shows circus. A drifter who had been with the circus only a day, he had no experience of handling elephants, but the only qualification required was the ability to wield an ‘elephant stick’ — a rod with a sharp spear at one end. Eldridge led the elephant parade riding on the top of Mary’s back; Mary was the star of the show, riding at the front. There have been several accounts of his death. One, recounted by W.H. Coleman who claimed to be a witness, is that he prodded her behind the ear with a hook after she reached down to nibble on a watermelon rind. She went into a rage, snatched Eldridge with her trunk, threw him against a drink stand and stepped on his head, crushing it.

As the terrified spectators screamed and fled, a local blacksmith shot Mary with a pistol, unloading five rounds of ammunition into her thick hide to little effect. She stood still, suddenly calm again and seemingly oblivious both to the bullets and the commotion as the townsfolk encircled her with chants of “Kill the elephant, kill the elephant!”.

The circus owner, Charlie Sparks, reluctantly decided that the only way to quickly resolve the potentially ruinous situation was to kill the elephant in public. It was decided to hang the elephant by the neck from a railcar-mounted industrial crane. On the following day, a foggy and rainy September 13, 1916, Mary was transported by rail to Unicoi County, Tennessee, where a crowd of over 2,500 people (including most of the town’s children) assembled in the Clinchfield Railroad yard.

Between 1882 and 1930, there were 214 victims of lynchings in Tennessee. Most were black men, summarily found guilty of such crimes as ‘fighting a white man’ and having ‘bad character’.
But soon their tragic ranks would be joined by Mary, surely the only elephant in history ever to have been hanged.

And it seems particularly pertinent to remember her in the week that Prince Charles hosted a much-heralded international conference to address the illegal trade in wildlife parts.

On the following day, a foggy and rainy September 13, 1916, Mary was transported by rail to Unicoi County, Tennessee, where a crowd of over 2,500 people (including most of the town’s children) assembled in the Clinchfield Railroad yard.

Elephants were among the species highlighted as most at risk, but the supposedly enlightened Western world has not always been so concerned about the welfare of these majestic creatures, as we are reminded by the barbarity of Mary’s death.

6 Nisan 2017 Perşembe

Marina Ginestà on top of the Hotel Colón in Barcelona

Marina Ginesta 1936


Marina Ginestà (January 29, 1919 - January 6, 2014) is a militia of the symbols of the Spanish Civil War, photographed by Juan Guzmán in 1936 at the top of the Hotel Colon in Barcelona in 1936.

 The gun she is carrying is M1916 Spanish Mauser, produced at Oviedo factory in Spain for Spanish Army.

Marina did not knew about the photo until 2006, although the iconic image was printed and circulated everywhere, serving as cover for the book “Thirteen Red Roses” by Carlos Fonseca

During the Republican administration in Barcelona (1934-1936) he actively worked in the Catalan United Socialist Party. Shortly after the internal war he started working as a journalist and interpreter, She was transformed into a symbol on the roof of a hotel in Barcelona, with a militia garment and a rifle on her shoulder.

Marina Ginesta and her brother

Ginestà was born in Toulouse on January 29, 1919, into a labor and left-wing family immigrated from Spain to France. Her family was a tailor. He moved to Barcelona with his family when he was 11 years old. Ginestà later joined the United Socialist Party of Catalonia. When the war broke out, Soviet newspaper Pravda's correspondent Mikhail Koltsov served as a correspondent and translator. Before the end of the war, Ginesta was wounded and evacuated to Montpellier. When France was occupied by the Nazis, she run away to the Dominican Republic and married there. In 1946, the dictator Rafael Trujillo had to leave the country because of the persecution he did. In 1952 she married a Belgian diplomat and returned to Barcelona. She moved to Paris in the early 1970s.

Marina Ginestà died in Paris in January 2014 at the age of 94.