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The Sideshow Embalmed Bandit (Elmer McCurdy)

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Anonymous

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surreal, and frankly quite creepy. Has echoes of this classic from Snopes....

Claim: The "hanging man" in a funhouse turns out to be the corpse of an outlaw.
Status: True.

Origins: In December 1976 a Universal Studios camera crew arrived at the Nu-Pike Amusement Park in Long Beach, California, to film an episode of the television action show, the Six Million Dollar Man. In preparing the set in a corner of the funhouse, a worker moved the "hanging man," causing one of this prop's arms to come off. Inside it was human bone. This was no mere prop; this was a dead guy!

The body was that of Elmer McCurdy, a young man who in 1911 robbed a train of $46 and two jugs of whiskey in Oklahoma. He announced to the posse in pursuit of him that he would not be taken alive. He was proved right -- they killed him in the ensuing shoot-out.

McCurdy began his career as a sideshow attraction right after his embalming. He looked so darned good dressed up in his fancy clothes that the undertaker propped him up in a corner of the funeral home's back room and charged locals a nickel to see "The Bandit Who Wouldn't Give Up." The nickels were dropped into the corpse's open mouth (from where they were later retrieved by the entreprenurial undertaker).

No next of kin showed up to claim McCurdy, so the corpse kept mouthing nickels for a few years. Carnival promoters wanted to buy the stiff, but the undertaker turned them down. McCurdy was producing a steady income for the funeral parlor -- why tamper with success?

In 1915, two men showed up and claimed that McCurdy was their brother. They hauled the body away, supposedly to give him a decent burial in the family plot. In reality, McCurdy's "brothers" were carnival promoters and this was a ruse to get the deceased away from that proprietary undertaker. The promotors exhibited McCurdy throughout Texas under the same billing as the undertaker had given him -- "The Bandit Who Wouldn't Give Up."

After that tour, McCurdy popped up everywhere, including an amusement park near Mount Rushmore, lying in an open casket in a Los Angeles wax museum, and in a few low-budget films. Before the Six Million Dollar Man crew discovered this prop to be a corpse, McCurdy had been hanging in that Long Beach funhouse for four years.

In April 1977, the much-traveled Elmer McCurdy was laid to final rest in Summit View Cemetery in Guthrie, Oklahoma. To make sure the corpse would not make its way back to the entertainment world, the state medical examiner ordered two cubic yards of cement poured over the coffin before the grave was closed. McCurdy hasn't been seen hanging around amusement parks since.

Barbara "century at bernie's" Mikkelson

Sightings: Brian Dewan's "Cowboy Outlaw" (from his 1993 Tells The Story album) is about McCurdy's post-mortem career.

Last updated: 17 November 1998

NOTE: The latest edition of Snopes' Elmer McCurdy presentation is now located at:

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/dead-man-gawking/
 
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THis has to be the most fascinating unusual death case I've heard... the body found by the Six Million Dollar Man set when they thought it was a prop! And it wasn't, it was a dead body from 1911!

from Snopes: In
December 1976 a Universal Studios camera crew arrived at the Nu-Pike Amusement Park in Long Beach, California, to film an episode of the television action show, the Six Million Dollar Man. In preparing the set in a corner of the funhouse, a worker moved the "hanging man," causing one of this prop's arms to come off. Inside it was human bone. This was no mere prop; this was a dead guy!

The body was that of Elmer McCurdy, a young man who in 1911 robbed a train of $46 and two jugs of whiskey in Oklahoma. He announced to the posse in pursuit of him that he would not be taken alive. He was proved right -- they killed him in the ensuing shoot-out.

McCurdy began his career as a sideshow attraction right after his embalming...



for the reast of the story and how he got there, check out the article here:

snopes.com/horrors/gruesome/mccurdy.htm
NOTE: The latest edition of Snopes' Elmer McCurdy presentation is now located at:

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/dead-man-gawking/

edited to say that there is a whole book written on the guy if my link works:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/046508348X/102-5104410-0364101?vi=reviews
 
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... As far as the Old West, the dead bodies were often propped up and photographed, even posed with. The case of one such fellow can be read about here, and how his dead body almost wound up on The Six Million Dollar Man :

freakopedia.com/Stories/mummy_in_the_dark.htm
LInk is long dead. The MIA webpage can be accessed via the Wayback Machine:
https://web.archive.org/web/20031211184036/http://www.freakopedia.com/Stories/mummy_in_the_dark.htm


to quote a bit:

Elmer McCurdy was not a famous outlaw. In fact his last train robbery netted him $46. and two jugs of whiskey. He announced to the posse in pursuit of him that he would not be taken alive and the posse obliged by killing him in a shoot-out.

He gained notoriety for what happened after his death. In 1977, Oklahoma train robber and safecracker Elmer McCurdy was buried next to Bill Doolin in Guthrie, Oklahoma, after spending 66 years on the road as "a real dead outlaw" in sideshow and carnival attractions.


McCurdy's body became a sideshow attraction right after his embalming. It is claimed that the local undertaker though he had done such a wonderful job at restoring McCurdy that he let the twons folk see him for a nickle a piece. The nickels were dropped into the corpse's open mouth , later collected by the undertaker. No one ever showed up to claim McCurdy's body, so, legend has it that undertaker kept him around to collect nickles for a few years after the enbalming. Carnival promoters wanted to buy the stiff, but the undertaker turned them down. He didn't want to lose his most steady form of income.
 
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You’d have to be barmy to get your body embalmed
Putting your remains in the hands of others can only result in a grisly end.
By Rowan Pelling
8:33PM BST 18 Oct 2011
... After the outlaw Elmer McCurdy was killed in a gunfight, his body was embalmed by an undertaker who charged a nickel a time to see “The Bandit Who Wouldn’t Give Up”. Five years later, McCurdy’s supposed long-lost brother pitched up, declaring that he wanted to give the body a proper burial. A fortnight later, the cadaver was the star exhibit in a travelling carnival; it was displayed at museums and haunted houses before being hung from a gallows inside the “Laff in the Dark” funfair attraction at Long Beach. McCurdy’s identity was only re-established after someone accidentally snapped an arm, and discovered that the “prop” was a real corpse. ...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/8833 ... almed.html
 
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does anyone remember a program on tv where a haunted house had an actual body of a gunslinger on display? his body had been there for many many years - painted over regularly etc - and iirc they only realised when his arm came loose.... or maybe my mind is playing tricks with me again??!!
 
The incredible story of 'Dawn Doe', a real skeleton used in George Romero's 'Dawn Of The Dead' ..

https://halloweenlove.com/the-incredible-story-of-dawn-doe-a-real-skeleton-seen-in-dawn-of-the-dead/

I own the book, Grande Illusions, Tom Savini's F/X work tutorial and he discusses and provides photographs of his work on this skeleton as well as a newspaper clipping from the time going into deeper detail about the names of everyone involved in its discovery. The print is tiny but just readable, if anyone wants me to retype the news clipping here, I can do ..

More real bodies used in films ..

http://www.horror.land/films-that-used-real-bodies/
 
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Elmer J. McCurdy (January 1, 1880 – October 7, 1911) was an American bank and train robber who was killed in a shoot-out with police after robbing a Katy Train in Oklahoma in October 1911.

Dubbed "The Bandit Who Wouldn't Give Up", his mummified body was first put on display at an Oklahoma funeral home and then became a fixture on the traveling carnival and sideshow circuit during the 1920s through the 1960s.

After changing ownership several times, McCurdy's remains eventually wound up at The Pike amusement zone in Long Beach, California
where they were discovered by a film crew and positively identified in December 1976.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elmer_McCurdy
 
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Its a delightful and grisly story.

If this happened in a Non western country we could all tut and say how barbaric it was....
 
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