Archive

1941



PM Daily, August 31, 1941

“Holiday Accidents took their toll as motorists started on their Labor Day week end. Early yesterday Joseph Morris and his brother’s wife, Charlotte were killed when this car overturned in Bronx Park. The driver, Anthony Morris, Navy purchasing agent, was injured. Three other auto deaths had been listed last night; the Motor Vehicle Bureau says about 40 will die before Tuesday in New York State.

Weegee, PM Daily, August 31, 1941

Neighbors See Removal of Mass Murder Victims.

At 6:20 yesterday morning, William Morey, of 311 20th Street, Brooklyn, yelled for help. Inside the Morey apartment, police found the bodies of three Morey children, hacked to death by their mother, Mrs. Mary Morey. She lay dead on a cot; she had cut her own throat. William Morey, and his oldest child were wounded. Her farewell note read: “We all have syphilis disease. This is the best wayout.” Police said she was deluded. The police department fired Morey in 1938 for drinking, he hasn’t kept a job since then.

Morey went out Tuesday evening and came home to… about 1:30 a.m. Stuned by a crack on the head, he came to in time to see his wife cut her throat.

PM Daily, August 28, 1941

From the Cairns Post, April 27, 1942:

TRAGEDY OF DELUSION

MOTHER’S ACT.

The first-floor flat at 311 Twentieth street, Brooklyn, New York, shaken at frequent intervals by screams, wails, curses and crashing furniture was silent for the first time since the Moreys moved in.

Mrs. William Morey (34), and three children, Marcella (7), Claire (4), and Paul (3), had been stabbed to death shortly after dawn.

A fourth child, William, Jr. (11), was in the Methodist Hospital, Brooklyn, suffering from lacerations of the throat and severe head injuries. His father. William Morey, sen., a former patrolman dismissed five years ago for drunkenness, had been released from the hospital and was being questioned at the Fifth Avenue police station. There were slight lacerations on his forehead and right hand.

The police and the office of the King’s County District Attorney closed the case quickly. They said it was a plain case of suicide and that Mrs. Morey killed the children and herself with an axe and a kitchen knife.

EXPLANATION IN NOTE.

In support of this theory, the “Herald, Tribune” states, Assistant District Attorney Edward A. Heffernan said a bloodstained note found in the flat in- dicated that Mrs. Morey was obsessed by the fear that she and her children were afflicted by an infectious disease. The note said in part: “This is the best way out. Don’t touch anything. 1 am suffering from some disease. There was no signature, but Mr. Heffernan believed the note was written by Mrs. Morey.

The Moreys had been living in hopeless poverty. Expelled from his 3000 dollar-a-year patrolman’s job, Morey drifted from one occupation to another. The family moved to a poorer neighbourhood, and two years ago they took a flat at 311 Twentieth-street, a three storied frame house covered with faded asbestos shingles.

A week before the tragedy. Mrs. Morey took two of her children to a hospital for a blood test. She returned to the hospital for the results, and, in accord with the general practice, was told to have her family physician call for the answer. Apparently this terrified her further. Police found that her fears were baseless and that she apparently was suffering from nothing more than a delusion.


PM Daily, July 28, 1941


PM Daily, July 30, 1941


PM Daily, July 31, 1941

1941 was Weegee’s most productive year… Weegee was on fire, and unfortunately so was parts of lower Manhattan… Weegee had almost a dozen amazing photos published on three nights in July 1941…

to be continued…

Photography Handbook 1955 and Universal Photo Almanac 1940 and 1941

It’s 1940 and you want to be a photographer… You could learn from the experts at the New York Institute of Photography, 10 West 33 St., NYC, (established in 1910!)… If you want to “Make good money for work that’s fun!” you could write to Universal Photographers, also, coincidentally, located at 10 West 33 St., NYC… If you don’t want to wait 60 years for the ubiquity of MFA programs you could “take the first step towards combining your photographic ability with that most enjoyable and profitable occupation – writing for publication!” Perhaps the Newspaper Institute of America can help get you started… “Hundreds of photographers have found that pictures sell faster, bring more money, when stories or articles are written around them! WHY DON’T YOU WRITE? It’s simpler than you think! You don’t have to be a genius!” Photo Almanac 1940 and 1941