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Image / Service for Everett girls

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Title
Service for Everett girls
Alternative Title
Los Angeles Herald Examiner Photo Collection
Creator
Bentley, Frank
Date Created and/or Issued
1937
Contributing Institution
Los Angeles Public Library
Collection
Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection
Rights Information
Images available for reproduction and use. Please see the Ordering & Use page at http://tessa.lapl.org/OrderingUse.html for additional information.
Description
Title supplied by cataloger.; Upper left corner of photographic print is missing.
On June 27, 1937, Jeanette Stephens, 8, and her friends, Melba Everett, 9, and Madeline Everett, 7, were lured from Centinela Park in Inglewood. An extensive search ensued, with the police enlisting the aid of 500 Boy Scouts. Two days after their disappearance, a Boy Scout found the three bodies in a ravine in Baldwin Hills; the shoes of each girl were removed and placed in a pile near their bodies. From the moment news of the case broke, Albert Dyer, Inglewood resident and traffic guard at Centinela Elementary School where the girls were students, followed the story closely. He began keeping a scrapbook of newspaper clippings and offered the police theories about the case. As soon as the bodies were found, Dyer arrived on the scene in Baldwin Hills and began demonstrating strange behavior. Authories began to suspect Dyer and took him into custody. He was questioned at a jail in Los Angeles, as threats upon his life were being made in Inglewood. Dyer explained how he abducted the girls from the park and enticed them with the prospect of rabbit hunting in Baldwin Hills. Dyer confessed, "I had no other reason than sex" and he went on to describe how he strangled each girl. Despite that he later recanted his confession, Dyer was tried and convicted on August 26, 1937. On September 16, 1938, he was hanged at San Quentin.; Jeanette Stephens was buried at Inglewood Cemetery.
The funeral service for the Everett girls at Forest Lawn, Glendale. Overcome by grief is Mrs. Merle Everett (right of center), who is being escorted by, from left to right, her brother Dan Oliver, her husband Merle and an attendant from Pierce Brothers Mortuary. Photograph dated July 2, 1937.
Type
Image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;21 x 26 cm.
Photographic prints
Identifier
00105981
Herald Examiner Collection
HE box 7200
CARL0005271780
http://173.196.26.125/cdm/ref/collection/photos/id/31261
Subject
Everett, Merle
Everett, Merle--Family
Everett, Melba--Death and burial
Everett, Madeline--Death and burial
Everett, Melba--Family
Everett, Madeline--Family
Forest Lawn Memorial-Parks & Mortuaries (Glendale, Calif.)
Funeral rites and ceremonies--California--Glendale
Murder victims' families--California--Glendale
Crying--California--Glendale
Grief--California--Glendale
Parents--California--Glendale
Families--California--Glendale
Spectators--California--Glendale
Lawns--California--Glendale
Flowers--California--Glendale
Graves--California--Glendale
Flower arrangements
Wreaths--California--Glendale
Trees--California--Glendale
Cemeteries--California--Glendale
Men--California--Glendale
Glendale (Calif.)
Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express photographs
Herald-Examiner Collection photographs

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