Earle Nelson

Earle Nelson
Nelson in 1927
Born
Earle Leonard Ferral

May 12, 1897
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Died (aged 30)
Vaughan Street Jail, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Other names
  • The Dark Strangler
  • The Gorilla Man
  • Charles Harrison
  • Adrian Harris
  • Virgil Wilson
Spouse
Mary Martin
(m. 1919; sep. 1920)
Convictions
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
Victims22–29
Span of crimes
February 20, 1926 – June 9, 1927
CountryUnited States and Canada
States
Date apprehended
June 16, 1927

Earle Leonard Nelson ( Ferral; May 12, 1897 – January 13, 1928), also known as the Gorilla Man, the Gorilla Killer, and the Dark Strangler, was an American serial killer, rapist, and necrophile who killed at least twenty women in various U.S. states and two in Canada between 1926 and 1927. He is perhaps the first known serial sex murderer of the twentieth century.

Born and raised in San Francisco, California, by his devoutly Pentecostal grandmother, Nelson exhibited bizarre behavior as a child, which was compounded by head injuries he sustained in a bicycling accident at age 10. After committing various minor offenses in early adulthood, he was institutionalized in Napa several times before his final discharge in 1925.

Nelson began committing numerous rapes and murders in February 1926, primarily in the West Coast cities of San Francisco and Portland, Oregon. In late 1926 he moved east, committing multiple rapes and murders in several Midwestern and East Coast cities before moving north into Canada, raping and killing a teenage girl in Winnipeg, Manitoba. After committing his second murder in Winnipeg, he was arrested by Canadian authorities, convicted of his final murder only‌that of Emily Patterson‌and sentenced to death. Nelson was executed by hanging in Winnipeg in 1928.

In undertaking his crimes, Nelson had a modus operandi: Most of his victims were middle-aged landladies, many of whom he would find through "room for rent" advertisements. Posing as a mild-mannered and charming Christian drifter, Nelson used the pretext of renting a room in the landladies' boarding houses to make contact with them before attacking. Each of his victims were killed via strangulation, and many were raped after death. His penultimate victim, a 14-year-old girl named Lola Cowan, was one of three victims to be significantly mutilated after death.

At the time, Nelson's confirmed victim count of twenty-two was the largest number of murders attributed to one person in United States history. The crimes committed by Nelson were a source of inspiration for Alfred Hitchcock's 1943 film Shadow of a Doubt.