Anna Marie Hahn immigrated from Bavaria, Germany in the late 1920s.
She married a working-class Cincinnatian, opened a bakery and briefly
settled into traditional American domesticity; but Anna hated the long
hours working in a bakery, grew bored of her husband, and staked out a
differnt path. She became a "home nurse," providing services for
elderly men in Over-the-Rhine. Patients found her physical beauty and
charm endearing, but the relationships usually ended tragically.
Anna's patients had a bad habit of dropping dead and a curious
propensity for leaving her all of their worldly possessions. Although
she was well into a successful killing spree at the time, Anna was not
under suspicion by Cincinnati Police until a diamond theft and a
corpse in Colorado began unraveling the crimes of a serial killer.
Tried and convicted of murder in Cincinnati, Anna Marie Hahn became
the first woman in the U.S. to die in the electric chair in 1938.
Many of the basic facts of Anna Marie Hahn's life and crimes are
uncontroverted, but other aspects of Hahn's life are more contentious.
People disagree over the number of her victims, what caused her to
come to the U.S. -- opportunity vs. fleeing a possible murder charge
-- and most notably, what motivated this fun-loving German girl to
commit a string of heartless homicides. Murder On The Menu, Anna Marie
Hahn, unravels the facts and explores the mysteries of this enigmatic
killer over a four-course menu to die for with wine pairings selected
by the Wine Cellar at Longworth Hall.
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21/08/2020 Last update