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- Belle Gunness - Wikipedia
- Belle Gunness: Biography, Serial Killer, Facts, Life & Victims
- Hell’s Belle: The Violent Life and Strange End of Belle Gunness
- Belle Gunness: The Grisly Crimes Of The 'Black Widow' Serial Killer
- What Really Happened to Belle Gunness, Serial Killer and Butcher ... - A&E
- “Hell’s Belle” Gunness – Black Widow of the Midwest
- Belle Gunness Biography - Childhood, Facts, Family & Crimes of …
- Belle Gunness: The disturbing life of the lady Bluebeard - History …
- Things You Didn't Know About Serial Killer Belle Gunness
- Belle Gunness | Belle Gunness official web site
Annabelle: Creation (2017)
The Triplets of Belleville (2003)
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Belle Gunness GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
Belle Gunness, born Brynhild Paulsdatter Størseth (November 11, 1859 – possibly April 28, 1908), nicknamed Hell's Belle, was a Norwegian-American serial killer who was active in Illinois and Indiana between 1884 and 1908. Gunness is thought to have killed at least fourteen people (most of whom were men she enticed to visit her rural Indiana property through personal advertisements), while some sources speculate her involvement in as many as forty murders, making her one of the most prolific female serial killers in history. Gunness seemingly died in a fire in 1908, although her actual fate is unconfirmed.
Early life
Belle Gunness was born Brynhild Paulsdatter Størseth in Selbu Municipality in Søndre Trondhjem county, Norway, on November 11, 1859, to Paul and Berit Størseth; she was the youngest of eight children. She was confirmed at the Church of Norway in 1874. At age 14, Gunness began working for neighboring farms by milking and herding cattle to save enough money for the journey to New York City. She moved to the United States in 1881.
When she was processed by immigration at Castle Garden, Gunness changed her first name to Belle, then travelled to Chicago to join her sister, Nellie, who had immigrated several years earlier. In Chicago, while living with her sister and brother-in-law, Gunness worked as a domestic servant, then got a job at a butcher's shop cutting up animal carcasses. She was at least 170 centimetres (5 ft 7 in) tall and weighed around 95–113 kilograms (209–249 lb) and was physically strong in appearance.
Deaths associated with Gunness
= Mads Sørensen and children
=Gunness married Mads Ditlev Anton Sørensen in 1884. The couple owned a candy store which later burned to the ground. Their home had also burned down, and both instances granted the couple insurance payouts. Two babies in Gunness' home died from inflammation of the large intestine. Gunness had insured both of the children and collected a large insurance check after each death. Neighbors gossiped about the babies, since Gunness never appeared to be pregnant.
Sørensen had purchased two life insurance policies. On July 30, 1900, both policies were active at the same time, as one would expire that day and the other would enter into force. Sørensen died of cerebral hemorrhage that day. Gunness explained he had come home with a headache and she provided him with quinine powder for the pain; she later checked on him and he was dead. Gunness collected money from both the expiring life insurance policy, and the one that went into effect that day, making a total of $5,000. With the insurance money, she moved to La Porte, Indiana, and bought a pig farm.
= Peter Gunness
=Belle married Peter Gunness on April 1, 1902. The following week, while Peter was out of the house, his infant daughter died of unknown causes in Belle's care. Peter died eight months later due to a skull injury. Belle explained that Peter reached for something on a high shelf and a meat grinder fell on him, smashing his skull. The district coroner convened a coroner's jury, suspecting murder, but nothing came of the case. Belle collected $3,000 insurance money for Peter's death.
= Disappearances
=Gunness began placing marriage ads in Chicago newspapers in 1905. One of her ads was answered by a Wisconsin farmhand, Henry Gurholt. After travelling to La Porte, Gurholt wrote his family, saying that he liked the farm, was in good health, and requesting that they send him seed potatoes. When they failed to hear from him after that, the family contacted Gunness. She told them Gurholt had gone off with horse traders to Chicago. She kept his trunk and fur overcoat. John Moe of Minnesota answered Gunness's ad in 1906. After they had corresponded for several months, Moe travelled to La Porte and withdrew a large amount of cash. Although no one ever saw Moe again, a carpenter who did occasional work for Gunness observed that Moe's trunk remained in her house, along with more than a dozen others.
= Andrew Helgelien and discovery of multiple graves
=Her criminal activities came to light in April 1908, when the Gunness farmhouse in La Porte, Indiana burned to
the ground. In the ruins, authorities found the bodies of a headless adult woman, initially identified as Belle Gunness, and her three children. Further investigation unearthed the partial remains of at least eleven additional people on the Gunness property.
After the fire at the Gunness homestead led to the discovery of bodies believed to be Gunness and her children, La Porte police authorities were contacted by Asle Helgelien, who had found correspondence between his brother, Andrew Helgelien, and Gunness; the letters included petitions for him to relocate to La Porte, to bring money, and to keep the move a secret. A visit by Asle Helgelien to the Gunness farm with a former hired hand led to attention being paid to "soft depressions" in what had been made into a pen for hogs; after briefly digging one of the depressions in the lot, a gunny sack was found that contained "two hands, two feet, and one head", which Helgelien recognized to be those of his brother.
Immediate inspection of the site revealed that there were dozens of such "slumped depressions" in the Gunness yard, and further digging and investigation at the site yielded multiple burlap sacks containing "torsos and hands, arms hacked from the shoulders down, masses of human bone wrapped in loose flesh that dripped like jelly", from trash-covered depressions that proved to be graves. In each case, the body had been butchered in the same manner—the body decapitated, the arms removed at the shoulders, and the legs severed at the knees. Blunt trauma and gashes characterized the skulls that were found that had been separated from the bodies.
After finding the parts of five bodies on the first day, and an additional six on the second—some in shallow graves under the original hog pen, others near an outhouse or a lake—"the police stopped counting". With these discoveries, the perceptions of Belle Gunness, as reported in newspaper descriptions of a praiseworthy woman—dying in the fire that consumed her house, "in a desperate attempt to save her children"—were reassessed. Despite the initial success with the identification of Andrew Helgelien, and despite the fact that widening news coverage of the mass murders invited inquiries from families with men that had gone missing, "[m]ost of the remains could not be identified."
Involvement of Ray Lamphere and Gunness legacy
Ray Lamphere was Gunness' hired hand and on-and-off lover. In November 1908, Lamphere was convicted of arson in connection with the fire at Gunness' house. Lamphere later confessed that Gunness had placed advertisements seeking male companionship, only to murder and rob the men who responded and subsequently visited her on the farm. Lamphere stated that Gunness asked him to burn down the farmhouse with her children inside. Lamphere also asserted that the body thought to be Gunness's was in fact a murder victim, chosen and planted to mislead investigators. The brother of one victim had warned Gunness that he might arrive at the farm shortly to investigate his brother's disappearance. According to Lamphere, this impending visit motivated Gunness to destroy her house, fake her own death, and flee. When Lamphere was arrested, he was wearing John Moe's overcoat and Henry Gurholt's watch.
Edward Bechly, a journalist, was given a secret assignment to acquire access to a confession and publish it, thus bringing a second, inconsistent Lamphere account to public knowledge. The second confession was made to Reverend Edwin Schell, who was minister of the Methodist church of LaPorte, Indiana, who was personally requested by Lamphere to visit him at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City, Indiana, where he was being held. Realizing the importance of this confession, Reverend Schell recorded Lamphere's verbal confession on paper, had him sign it, and then sealed it and locked it in his personal safe. Bechly attempted to convince Schell to allow him to publish this later confession, but was denied by both Schell and his wife. However, a separate newspaper published a story with speculation regarding the second Lamphere confession. Schell offered the confession to Bechly, which was later published. The publication of Lamphere's confession resulted in the subsequent arrest of his accomplice Elisabeth Smith.
Gunness was pronounced dead, even though the doctor who performed the postmortem testified that the headless body was five inches shorter and about fifty pounds lighter than Gunness. No explanation was provided for what happened to the body's head. Whether Gunness died in the fire or escaped remained uncertain, although the sheriff blamed a Chicago American reporter for inventing the "escaped" story. Reported "sightings" of Gunness in the Chicago area continued long after she was declared dead. In 2008, DNA tests were performed on the headless corpse in an attempt to compare the DNA in the corpse against a sample from a letter Gunness had sent to one of her victims, but due to its age the sample was not able to be properly tested. After Gunness' crimes came to light, the Gunness farm became a tourist attraction. Spectators came from across the country to see the mass graves, and concessions and souvenirs were sold.
Legacy
Gunness has also been the subject of at least two American musical ballads.
Method, a 2004 film starring Elizabeth Hurley as Rebecca who is portraying Gunness in a film within the film, which was shot in Romania.
In 2017, true crime podcast My Favorite Murder released a live episode detailing Gunness' crimes.
The Farm, a 2021 film starring Traci Lords, is based on Gunness.
Hell's Princess: The Mystery of Belle Gunness, Butcher of Men is a 2018 non-fiction book by Harold Schechter on the life of Gunness.
In the Garden of Spite: A Novel of the Black Widow of LaPorte is a US-published 2021 novel by Camilla Bruce with elements of "Norwegian noir and true crime" based on Gunness. It was published in the UK with the title Triflers Need Not Apply.
My Men, a 2023 Norwegian novel by Victoria Kielland, is a fictionalized account of Gunness's life.
In 2024, the novel Bajo tierra seca by César Pérez Gellida, which was awarded the Spanish Premio Nadal, was inspired by Gunness.
In 2025, the true crime podcast The Casual Criminalist published an episode on Youtube. Which covered Gunness's life. The episode was titled Belle Gunness: America's Most Prolific Female Serial Killer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_hqm1AhtDM
See also
Lonely hearts killer
List of fugitives from justice who disappeared
List of unsolved murders
General:
List of serial killers in the United States
List of serial killers by number of victims
References
Further reading
Janet L. Langlois (1985). Belle Gunness, the Lady Bluebeard: Narrative Use of a Deviant Woman. In: Susan J. Kalcik, Rosan A. Jordan (editors) (1985). Women's Folklore, Women's Culture. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812212068. Pages 109–124.
Anne Berit Vestby (2006). Only Belle: Bare Belle - En seriemorder fra Selbu.
Lillian de la Torre (1955). The Truth about Belle Gunness (MysteriousPress.com/Open Road)
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Belle Gunness - Wikipedia
Belle Gunness, born Brynhild Paulsdatter Størseth (November 11, 1859 [3] – possibly April 28, 1908), nicknamed Hell's Belle, [1] was a Norwegian-American serial killer who was active in Illinois and Indiana between 1884 and 1908. [1]
Belle Gunness: Biography, Serial Killer, Facts, Life & Victims
Oct 3, 2023 · Serial killer Belle Gunness is reported to have murdered more than 40 people between 1884 and 1908 before disappearing without a trace.
Hell’s Belle: The Violent Life and Strange End of Belle Gunness
Oct 13, 2022 · Known by the spectacular nicknames The Bluebeard in Skirts and Hell’s Belle, Belle Gunness was the talk of La Porte, Indiana, for years after her crimes were unearthed. Belle Gunness, birth name Brynhild Paulsdatter Størset, was born in Selbu, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway, on November 11, 1859.
Belle Gunness: The Grisly Crimes Of The 'Black Widow' Serial Killer
Jan 5, 2022 · Known as "Hell's Belle," Belle Gunness lured men with the promise of marriage — then killed them, stole their money, and claimed their insurance policies.
What Really Happened to Belle Gunness, Serial Killer and Butcher ... - A&E
Apr 11, 2018 · True-crime author Harold Schechter first ran across the name Belle Gunness more than 10 years ago while researching a different book, but he could never get out of his mind the lurid details of her crimes—poisoning and chopping …
“Hell’s Belle” Gunness – Black Widow of the Midwest
“Hell’s Belle” Gunness was America’s most degenerate female serial killer in history, who likely killed both her husbands and all of her children. What is certain is that she murdered most of her boyfriends and her two daughters, Myrtle and Lucy.
Belle Gunness Biography - Childhood, Facts, Family & Crimes of …
Belle Gunness was known for being a notorious serial killer who operated in the early 20th century. She is infamous for her brutal murders and the mystery surrounding her disappearance.
Belle Gunness: The disturbing life of the lady Bluebeard - History …
From her modest beginnings in her early life to her gruesome crimes, then unexplained disappearance, Gunness holds a particularly unique place among her deadly peers. A woman who defied all expectations, she evolved into one of …
Things You Didn't Know About Serial Killer Belle Gunness
Feb 8, 2022 · One might call Belle Gunness a "black widow killer." She was a Norwegian-born serial killer thought to have murdered at least 14 people and perhaps as many as 40 in the late 1800s and early 1900s throughout Illinois and Indiana.
Belle Gunness | Belle Gunness official web site
She became a world sensation in 1908 when her luxurious farm outside Chicago burnt to the ground and the bodies of her three children were found tangled together with the corpse of a headless woman. Was it actually Belle herself in the ruins? Or did she arrange it all?