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Not What You Meant?  There are 14 definitions for Starkweather.  Also try: Clara Ward or Carol King.

Charles Starkweather

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Charles Starkweather Summary

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Charles Starkweather
Born: November 24, 1938
Lincoln, Nebraska
Died: June 25 1959 (aged 20)
Cause of death: Electric chair
Penalty: Death
Killings
Number of victims: 11
Span of killings: December 1, 1957 through January 29, 1958
Country: U.S.
State(s): Nebraska and Wyoming

Charles Raymond Starkweather (November 24, 1938June 25, 1959) was a spree killer who murdered 11 victims in Nebraska and Wyoming during a road trip with his underage girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate. He became a national fascination in the USA, eventually inspiring the films The Sadist, Badlands, Natural Born Killers, Starkweather, Murder in the Heartland and the Bruce Springsteen song "Nebraska".

Contents

Early years

Charles Starkweather was born in Lincoln, Nebraska. His parents were Guy and Helen Starkweather. The third of eight children, Starkweather never recalled any bad memories of his home life. Despite being born at the tail-end of the Great Depression, Charles would later recall that the family never went without food or shelter; nor was he ever abused as a child. The Lincoln community considered the Starkweathers to be a strong family with well-behaved children. Guy, the father, was by all accounts a mild-mannered man; a carpenter, he suffered frequent periods of unemployment due to crippling arthritis in his hands and a weak spine. During these periods Charles' mother Helen supplemented the family income by working as a waitress. In contrast to his pleasant memories of his home life, Starkweather possessed no kind remembrances of his time in public school. Starkweather was born with a mild birth defect, Genu varum, that caused his legs to be misshapen, and he also suffered from a mild speech impediment, which caused him to be teased, picked upon, and beaten up from an early age. He was considered a slow learner and was accused of never applying himself, although in his teens it was discovered that he suffered from severe myopia which had drastically affected his vision for most of his life. The only aspect of school in which Starkweather excelled was gym, wherein he found a physical outlet for his growing anger at the world around him. Starkweather used his newfound physicality to begin bullying those who had bullied him, and soon his anger stretched beyond those who had been cruel to him to anyone whom he happened to dislike. Starkweather quickly went from being considered one of the most well-behaved children in the community to one of the most troubled. His high school friend Bob Von Busch would later recall:

He could be the kindest person you've ever seen. He'd do anything for you if he liked you. He was a hell of a lot of fun to be around, too. Everything was just one big joke to him. But he had this other side. He could be mean as hell, cruel. If he saw some poor guy on the street who was bigger than he was, better looking, or better dressed, he'd try to take the poor bastard down to his size.

Along with Von Busch, Charles developed an obsession with James Dean, and began to groom and dress himself to look like Dean. Charles sympathized with Dean's rebellion, believing that he had found a kindred spirit of sorts, someone who had suffered ostracism similar to his own, whom he could look up to. Starkweather developed a severe inferiority complex and became self-loathing and nihilistic, believing that he was unable to do anything correctly, and that his own inherent failures would doom him to a life of poverty and misery.

Caril Ann Fugate

Around 1957 nineteen-year-old Starkweather was introduced to fourteen-year-old Caril Ann Fugate. Charles quit school shortly after he met Caril and took a job at a warehouse near her school so he could see her every day. Starkweather was considered a poor worker. His boss later recalled, "Sometimes you'd have to tell him something two or three times. Of all the employees in the warehouse, he was the dumbest man we had." Charles taught Caril to drive, and one day she used his hotrod and crashed it into another car. Charles' father, as the legal owner of the vehicle, was forced to pay the damages. This caused a physical argument between Charles and his father. Guy Starkweather, having finally reached his breaking point with his son's behavior, kicked Charles out of the house. Charles quit his job and went to work as a garbage collector for minimum wage. Charles slipped back into his nihilistic views on society and life, believing that his current situation was the final determining factor in how he would live the rest of his life. He used the garbage route to begin plotting bank robberies, and finally found his own personal philosophy by which to live out the remainder of his life: "Dead people are all on the same level."

First murder

On November 30, 1957, Starkweather went to a Lincoln gas station where he tried to buy a stuffed toy dog for Caril on credit. The attendant, Robert Colvert, refused, and Charles left, furious. At three in the morning on December 1, 1957, Charles returned to the station with a 12 gauge shotgun. Initially, he left the gun in the car, went into the station, and bought cigarettes from Colvert, who was working alone. Starkweather left, drove down the road, turned around, and returned to the station, again leaving the gun in the car. This time he purchased a pack of gum, then once again left and drove away. He parked a distance away from the gas station, put on a bandanna and hat, then walked to the station with the shotgun and a canvas bag. He held Colvert at gun point and got $100 from the cash drawer before forcing Colvert to march back to his car. Charles drove Colvert to an abandoned area and made him get out of the car, at which point Colvert attacked Charles and attempted to get hold of the shotgun. The shotgun fired in the scuffle, knocking Colvert to his knees; Starkweather then executed the stunned Colvert with a shotgun blast to the head. Starkweather would later claim that in the aftermath of the murder he believed that he had transcended his former self to reach a new plane of existence in which he was above and outside the law. He confessed the robbery to Caril immediately, but claimed someone else had killed Colvert, which Caril did not believe.

Other murders

On January 21, 1958, Starkweather went to visit Caril at her dilapidated house. Finding her not home, he argued with and shot to death Caril Ann's mother and stepfather, as well as fatally clubbing Caril Ann's two-year-old sister, Betty Jean. He hid the bodies at various places behind the house before Caril came home from school. The two stayed in the house for six more days, turning people away with a note taped to the door, written by Caril, that read: "Stay a Way Every Body is sick with the Flue.[sic]" Caril Ann's grandmother became suspicious and called the police. When they arrived on January 27, Charles and Caril had already gone. Charles and Caril drove to the Bennet, Nebraska farm home of August Meyer, 70, a Starkweather family friend, whom Charles shot in the head. Shortly thereafter, Starkweather and Fugate got stuck in the mud and abandoned their car. When Robert Jensen and Carol King, two local teenagers, stopped to give them a ride, Charles forced them to drive back to an abandoned storm cellar, where both were shot and killed. Starkweather admitted shooting Jensen but later claimed Fugate shot King. Starkweather and Fugate took Jensen's car. The two drove back to Lincoln to the wealthier section of town, where they entered the home of C. Lauer and Clara Ward, a wealthy local industrialist and his wife. Both Clara Ward and Lillian Fencl, the Wards' maid, were fatally stabbed. Starkweather admitted throwing a knife at Mrs. Ward but denied inflicting the multiple stab wounds that were found in her body. He also denied he fatally stabbed Fencl, whose body also showed multiple stab wounds. When Ward came home that evening Starkweather shot him. Starkweather and Fugate filled Lauer's black Packard with loot from the house and drove it into Wyoming. Needing a new car due to the high profile of Lauer's Packard, they found traveling salesman Merle Collison sleeping in his Buick along the highway near Douglas, Wyoming. Waking Collison up, Charles shot him, although Starkweather later claimed Fugate finished Collison off after his (Starkweather's) gun jammed. Starkweather claimed Fugate was the "most trigger happy person" he had ever seen. A deputy sheriff happened upon the scene as Starkweather was trying to start Collison's car. Fugate ran to him, yelling something to the effect of, "It's Starkweather! He's going to kill me!" Starkweather tried to evade the police, exceeding speeds of 100 miles per hour. After suffering a minor bullet wound in the ear, Starkweather stopped abruptly. Sheriff Earl Heflin said, "He thought he was bleeding to death. That's why he stopped. That's the kind of yellow sonofabitch he is." Both Starkweather and Fugate were jailed in Douglas. Starkweather first claimed Caril had nothing to do with the murders, but changed his story several times, finally testifying at her trial that she was a willing participant. Caril has always maintained he was holding her hostage by threatening to kill her family (she maintained she did not know they were already dead.) Charles Starkweather was executed in the electric chair at the Nebraska State Penitentiary on June 25, 1959. Caril Ann was sentenced to life in prison but was paroled in 1976. Starkweather is buried in Wyuka Cemetery in Lincoln, Nebraska, along with five of his victims: the Bartlett family and the Ward couple.

Impact on culture

  • Starkweather is the inspiration and subject of the song "Nebraska" by Bruce Springsteen, which Springsteen originally considered calling "Starkweather".
  • "Starkweather Homicide" is mentioned in the 1989 Billy Joel song "We Didn't Start the Fire."
  • Stephen King was strongly influenced by reading about the murders when he was a youth—down to keeping a scrapbook about them [1] and has since incorporated Starkweather in many variations in his work (Starkweather is said to have been a schoolmate of Randall Flagg in The Stand—this being only one character amongst myriad others that are named for or are variations of the personality of Starkweather).

Victims

  1. Robert Colvert (21), gas station attendant
  2. Marion Bartlett, Caril Ann's stepfather
  3. Velda Bartlett, Caril Ann's mother
  4. Betty Jean Bartlett (2), Marion and Velda's daughter
  5. August Meyer (70), Starkweather's family friend
  6. Robert Jensen (17)
  7. Carol King (16), Robert's girlfriend
  8. C. Lauer Ward (47), wealthy industrialist
  9. Clara Ward, C. Lauer Ward's wife
  10. Lillian Fencl (51), Clara Ward's maid
  11. Merle Collison, traveling salesman

See also

References

  • Newton, Michael. Waste Land: The Savage Odyssey of Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate. 1988, Pocket, 384 pages. ISBN 0671001981.
  • Del Harding, reporter for the Lincoln, Nebr., Star, who covered the murders, the Starkweather and Fugate trials, and Starkweather's execution.

External links

Persondata
NAME Starkweather, Charles
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION spree killer
DATE OF BIRTH November 24, 1938
PLACE OF BIRTH Lincoln, Nebraska, United States
DATE OF DEATH June 25, 1959
PLACE OF DEATH Lincoln, Nebraska, United States

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    Charles Starkweather
    Charles Starkweather was born on November 24, 1938 in Lincoln, Nebraska. Starkweather, although poor, grew up in a loving home. But at school, Starkweather had problems. Teased by his classmates, he developed his physical strength through gymnastics. The... more


     
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    Charles Starkweather from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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