Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Elsie
NOLLEN
Characteristics:
Backed the family car up to a window and piped deadly monoxide gas
into a room
Date of murder:
Victims profile:
Her children,
Location: Dennison,
Crawford County, Iowa, USA
The children raged in age from two years to 11
years. The husband, Albert Nollen, and two friends, found the
bodies.
Ends On Life With Them by Running Auto
Gas Into Farm Bedroom
The Milkwaukee Journal
August 30, 1937
Kenwood, Iowa - (U.P) - Mrs. Elsie Nollen, a
comely farm wife of 30, left in a "suicide" letter Sunday her
explanation of why she piped deadly fumes from a car exhaust into
her bedroom and killed herself and her six children.
"I'm doing this because I see the family is not
going to be raised up right," the letter said.
Albert Nollen found the bodies when he returned
to his home Sunday morning after a quarrel with his wife and an
all-night "spree". He found her letter in the mailbox.
Held Child in Arms
Mrs. Nollen died with her youngest child,
Viola, 2, in her arms. At her feet was Orvin, 11. Death caught the
other four, Wilber, 10; Pauline, 7; Earl, 6, and Leona, 4, as they
left their upstairs bedrooms and staggered through the
parolor toward their mother's room.
Nollen later sat on the running board of the
automobile wich manufactured the killing gas and told Sheriff A.
C. Greene that he and his wife had quarreled Saturday night
bitterly. His wife followed, got into the car, demanded to know
where he was going. He told her it was "none of her business."
"I'm Getting Tired"
Nollen drove with her to Dennison, and entered
the post office. When he emerged the car was gone. He went to
visit some friends, and they took him home.
He found his car backed up under the window of
his wife's room. A hose was placed over the exhaust pipe of the
car, and run through the window. The automobile engine was
running.
Mrs. Nollen note said, in part: "He has beat me
up lots of times and I always forgot about that just because I
loved him and wanted to live with him... I've always said if I
coldn't live with him I didn't want to live, because there isn't
any other beside Albert... But I getting tired. I hope Albert will
be happier when he is rid of us."
Mrs. Nollen's Love of Family Told
DENISON, IA- Approximately 3,000 persons - curious and
sympathetic- stood attendtively for almost two hours in the
scorching sun here Tuesday to hear the eulogy of Mrs. Albert
Nollen and her six children.
The large assembly heard the Rev. L. M. Grigsby pay tribute to
a mother's love.
Saturday night Mrs. Nollen turned her farm home into a death
chamber by piping deadly monoxide gas from the family car into the
house killing herself and six children.
In a six page note Mrs. Nollen explained the action by saying,
"I am doing this because I can see that this family si not going
to be raised up right..." Mrs. Nollen also wrote that her husband
drank excessively.
Inside the funeral home stood seven caskets in a row. Seated
among the relatives, who crowded all available space sat the
husband and father of the victims, Albert Nollen. Throughout the
ceremony he maintained a stoic expression. Only once did he wince
visibly, then when the Rev. Mr. Grigsby generalized on the evil of
drink.
After the servicees the crowd surged around the doorway leading
into chapel and passed in single file by the coffins. Many of the
women came out of the exit weeping profusely. During the forenoon,
about 2000 persons visited the chapel to view the bodies.
Five hearses were needed to bear the bodies from the funeral
home to Lutheran cemetery for burial. As the 30 pallbearers came
out of the chapel bearing the caskets, officials had to open a
lane through the crowd.
When Nollen appeared, the lane narrowed considerably as people
surged forward to see the husband. He stood a moment then walked
unassisted through the crowd to his car.