Family history[edit]
Gedeon attended William Cullen Bryant High School. She was of Hungarian ethnicity, from a family which came to the United States in 1907.[3] The Gedeon family resided in Astoria, Queens, until 1929. They moved to 316 East 50th Street, where Gedeon's mother, Mary, ran a rooming house until December 5, 1936, when the establishment was turned over to a superintendent.[1] Earlier Mary Gedeon operated several speakeasies during the latter portion of the Prohibition era.[2]
Murderer's profile and arrest[edit]
The family relocated to an apartment at 316 East 50th Street (Beekman Place in the Turtle Bay neighborhood), where Gedeon's mother took in boarders. Gedeon, her mother, and a roomer in a fifth floor apartment there on the night of March 28, 1937. A sculptor, Robert George Irwin was later convicted of the triple homicide [6] [7][1] Irwin spent time in and out of Bellevue Hospital Center and Rockland County Hospital. He was briefly a boarder at the Gedeons but was put out of the household after he developed a crush on Gedeon's sister Ethel.
The manhunt which apprehended Irwin covered eight states and was the largest since the Lindbergh kidnapping. In late June 1937 a Cleveland, Ohio, hotel employee recognized Irwin, whose photograph appeared in the periodical True Detective Mysteries. Irwin was working there as a bellhop but when confronted by the employee fled quickly to Chicago, Illinois, where he was taken into custody by police waiting for him at the depot. Irwin confessed his affection for Ethel and said that the murders had been accidents. He arrived at the Gedeon apartment searching for Ethel but became enraged to find that she no longer lived there. So he killed the Gedeon women and the lodger in anger after Mary Gedeon allowed him to come inside. Having once sculpted a conventional bust of Herbert Hoover, Irwin admitted he wanted to behead Ethel and make a death mask.[5]