On this day in Duluth in 1885, convicted murderer John Waisensen’s body was exhumed from a cemetery on the county poor farm and brought to Duluth. Waisensen and John Norland, both Finnish immigrants, were accused of the brutal murder of Joseph Farley on November 27, 1884. Waisensen and Norland were working for Farley in a shanty belonging to the “Irish-Canadian” outside of Tower, Minnesota. They crushed Farely’s skull with a hardwood club, covered him in brush, and set the shanty and body aflame, hoping to hide the crime. They got away with $70 and a pocket watch. Norland maintained that he had not witnessed the murder, but that Waisensen had threatened him with death to maintain his silence. Waisensen admitted to striking the fatal blow, but claimed the entire crime was Norland’s idea. Norland—who had been convicted of murder in Finland and escaped captivity by faking his own death—hung himself with a blanket in his cell in Duluth’s first St. Louis County Jail on April 9, 1885; it was his fourth attempt. Waisenen was convicted and hanged near the courthouse on August 28, 1885; it was the first hanging in Minnesota in at least seventeen years. Two days later, his body was exhumed for medical research by a Duluth physician. The Duluth Weekly Tribune said that “This is certainly about the best use to which this worthless carcass could be put.” Some of the newspaper coverage of the crime, trial, and execution can be found here: FarleyMurder_8.29.1885_04_DNT; here: FarleyMurder_8.29.1885_05_DNT; here: FarleyMurder_5.15.1885_DNT; here: FarleyMurder_8.29.1885_01_DNT; and here: FarleyMurder_9.1.1885_DNT.
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Fred, we have no information on that house on hand here at Zenith City. Looking at Google maps, however, it appears that there is nothing at 1501 E. First Street. If there was once a house there and it is now gone, it would require a search through the records in City Hall.
Any informstion or photos of a house at 1501 east 1st street?
It was suppose to be the home of a famous person.