As our team is planning to visit Plainfield, Wisconsin, thought it - TopicsExpress



          

As our team is planning to visit Plainfield, Wisconsin, thought it would be interesting to post a bit of why ... :) Article in the atlasobscura GRAVE OF ED GEIN While not technically a serial killer, the terror Ed Gein wrought throughout the Plainfield, Wisconsin, area has been fodder for American nightmares ever since. Upon his capture by authorities for the murder of two women, Gein admitted to a whole slew of unimaginable practices commited after digging up the graves of recently deceased middle-aged women whom he thought bore a resemblance to his beloved dead mother. Found in his shed were keepsakes and personal ornamentation Gein had fashioned from the bodies of his victims, including death masks, lampshades of stretched human skin, salted genitalia in a box, a “woman suit” which Gain donned when pretending to be female, and an “arm chair” constructed out of actual human arms. Given the aforementioned horrors, it’s easy to see how this one real man could have influenced some of cinema’s most recognizable mad men. Norman Bates (Psycho) inherited Gein’s mommy-complex, Leatherface (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) eponymously references Gein’s death mask obsession, whereas the cannibalistic Buffalo Bill appears among the serial killers portrayed in Oscar-winning The Silence of the Lambs. After his arrest, he was immediately deemed mentally insane to a degree that prevented his trial for decades. When he finally did face a jury, it took them only one week to convict him, ensuring his incarceration in various state mental institutions until his death in 1984. Gein’s body was laid to rest in the Gein family plot only a few meters from the original burial sites of some of the corpses he’d previously exhumed. Visitors had taken to chipping off pieces of his headstone until the entire slab was stolen in 2000. A year later, the tombstone was found thousands of miles away in Seattle, and returned to Wisconsin, though it presently resides in a Waupaca museum for safekeeping. His burial is currently marked by flowers, flanked on either side by the graves of his mother and brother. For the morbidly fanatical, the Gein family land can still be located in Plainfeild, though none of the buildings remain after an act of arson -- occasionally attributed to Plainfield’s authorities -- leveled “the place of evil,” effectively preventing the farm from becoming another morally dubious tourist attraction.
Posted on: Tue, 26 Aug 2014 10:14:30 +0000

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