The old man is gone
Death yesterday wrote a sad finis for a man who
seemingly bore a
charmed life through an amazing career that began with the capture of
a horse thief and carried his fame as a man hunter to the far-flung
seven seas.
Ellis Parker was the direct antithesis of the storybook
detective in both his appearance and his crime detection methods, but
his results compiled a record that few, if any, fiction or real-life
sleuths have equaled.
The old man was not of prepossessing appearance, if, for
instance, you take Philo Vance as a criterion for fashionable
detectives. He was short, quite bald, went without coat or tie
whenever he could, and might need a shave. His language was not
Oxford's best, but it was always expressive; his accent was the
peculiar twang of the Jersey pine belt. A pipe, venerable and
uncommonly strong, was a constant companion. But he had pale eyes
which were remarkably alive: a hunter's eyes, if you will.
Inner Office Unimposing
His inner office was not imposing. He desk was always
piled up
with a miscellany of letters and records, as were the antiquated
filing cabinets. A cuspidor was always handy, in plain sight. In
one corner was an old burlap bag that contained parts of a skeleton
with a peculiarly fractured leg, the only clue to an unidentified
murder victim of many years ago.
He was a man of simple tastes and a firm believer in the
axiom that justice was inexorable. Even in the humiliating final
chapters of a glorious career - imprisonment because he pursued a
course that, however erroneous, he felt was justified to save the
life of a man he felt was innocent - you could not accuse him of
bitterness. In one of his last letters, he wrote a friend: "I hold
no malice toward anyone. I believe in God and always will. I have
never lost my faith".
Now this resume may seem a bit maudlin because this
reporter, as did probably every reporter in the East, knew him well.
But bear in mind that conviction or no conviction, 8000 names from
Burlington County alone were only recently affixed to petitions
requesting a Presidential pardon for the old man.
Fame Became International
Ellis Parker cleared practically every murder case that
came his
way - and the sum total amounts to more than 300. The homespun
sleuth's activities were not confined to Burlington County. First,
other counties began borrowing him to help clear up puzzling crimes.
His fame spread to other states, and later he was to win praise from
Scotland Yard and the French Surete. Once California and Greek
authorities asked his aid, and with the information given him in the
mail he solved their problem for them.
He thought faster than the criminal he sought, which is
the
hometown way of saying that psychology played a major role in his
detection work. His methods were not always orthodox; 18 years ago
he virtually kidnapped a murder suspect and proved the man's guilt.
Probably the good fold wondered a little at the
international tribute that has been heaped upon the old man for he
remained in Mt. Holly when he might have had bigger and better
positions. He knew practically every resident of Burlington County
and called them by their first names. His office was open house to
visitors of every walk in like and he held court, as it were, in the
Elks Home where he spent a great deal of his leisure time.
Fearless of Danger
He held fear and contempt and disregarded the dangers
that
sometime walked at his shoulder. Once he narrowly escaped an
assassin's bullets. Another time he risked his life to save that of
a guard attacked by a condemned man.
Among the earlier of his most famous cases was the solution to the
slaying of Honest John Brunen, carnival man, at his Riverside home in
1922.
Charles Powell, of Camden, was arrested as the
"trigger man".
He turned state's evidence and implicated Brunen's widow, Doris, and
her brother, Harry C. Mohr. Powell told Parker he was hired by Mohr
to kill Brunen.
Powell confessed he stood in a cellar door in the rear of
the Brunen home and shot Brunen at close range as he was seated at
the window reading a newspaper. Mrs. Brunen was acquitted of the
murder. Mohr was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Powell was given 20 years in state prison and later was removed to
the State Hospital for Insane.
Broadway Brown Case
Another murder solved by Parker was that of Broadway
Brown,
wealthy club man of Cinnaminson Township. Adam Szewczak, Eddie
Adamski, and Solomon Lutz were indicted for the crime after a year's
investigation. Adamski was captured in NY after escaping from the
Burlington County Jail. Lutz was a NY barber. Their arrests led to
Szewczak's implication. He was found serving time for a bond theft
in the Eastern Penitentiary, Philadelphia.
The men were attempting to break into the Brown home when
the young executive of a Philadelphia business house returned home in
his car. He questioned the men and it was charged Szewczak fired the
fatal shot. Adamski turned state's evidence. Lutz denied any part
in the crime, claiming he rented his automobile to the two other men
for the trip to Brown's home.
Szewczak was found guilty and given life imprisonment.
Adamski, who pleaded guilty, was given from 15-20 years in state
prison. Lutz was acquitted.
Shot At By Fugitive
Parker narrowly missed death when he boarded a trolley
car in
1916 at Rancocas Park to search for John C. Kariy, who was wanted for
a theft. Kariy began shooting in a crowded car and missed wounding
Parker and several passengers. He escaped at the time.
But in 1930 Kariy was arrested at Riverside with two
other
men for carrying concealed deadly weapons. They were accused of
robbing several women of money. Parker remembered Kariy as the man
who did the shooting on the trolley car and was given seven to 15
years in state prison by former Judge Charles A. Rigg.
Charles Brown was sentenced to be hanged in 1901 for the
murder of Washington Hunter, an aged toll-gate keeper. A few minutes
before he was to be executed he struck at two guards with a bludgeon
he fashioned from lead pipe he ripped from his cell. They knocked
the weapon from his hands as he fled into the prison courtyard. The
man raised an ax to strike at the keepers and Parker ran up from the
rear and knocked it from his hands. A few moments later Brown was
executed under heavy guard.
Solved Murder of Sailor
Another murder he solved was the murder of Robert Evan, a
sailor, whose wife Hattie, and three marines were convicted of the
crime. James Mercer Davis, former Ocean County prosecutor, called
Parker in on the case. Evans and a friend were beaten to death when
they returned from the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

Another sensational case Parker handled was the murder
of
Matilda Russo, 12, of Moorestown. Louis Lively, known to have killed
a woman in Philadelphia, was hunted for days for this crime. He
finally turned up at Vineland to shoot it out with the police. He
was captured after wounding Patrolman Florentino. Lively was
electrocuted for the crime.
20 Years on Trail
Twenty years after Henry Rider, known as the "cranberry
king" was
shot in a holdup at Atsion, Parker caused the arrest of the last of
his assailants in California.
In another case Parker was asked by the prosecutor of
Southern California County for assistance in solving the murder of a
school teacher at Stockton, Calif. The slayer, a Greek, had deserted
his family in the state of Washington, murdered the teacher and fled
to his native country.
Parker had a friend, a professor at Princeton
University and
former ambassador to Greece. He consulted him as to the legal
proceedure. The man was captured in Greece and given the death
penalty there without extradition to this country.
Billy Sunday, famous evangelist, paid a tribute to
Parker on
May 1, 1930, while holding a six weeks evangelistic campaign at Mt.
Holly. Sunday ranked Parker with Sherlock Holmes and said he was a
"great and good man" and invited the sleuth to a front row in his
tabernacle at King and Grant Streets.
At a Testimonial
Dinner (Program can be viewed by selecting on main menu.) given at
Medford Lakes on May 2, 1934, George de Benneville Keim, then
secretary of the republican national committee said "there is only
one Ellis H. Parker. His success is routed in his devotion to fair
play."
Judge Harold B. Wells, former common pleas judge of
Burlington
County and now a member of the Court of Errors and Appeals, said:
"Parker possesses the human touch. I was on the bench in the county.
I was once baffled over a case of a boy stealing a bicycle. Ellis
said it would be wrong to send the boy to an institution.
'What he needs is a bike,' said Ellis.
We took up a collection, Ellis contributing, and the boy was never
back in juvenile court."
Robert Peacock, assistant attorney general, who was
Parker's
secretary in 1900, said: "Rufus Jackson passed Mr. Parker on the way
to the gallows and paused to say: 'In two minutes I will be dead.
You have been fair to me.'"
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