On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was nat... On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was national news and 5,000 people attended the funeral. Lawson's brother Marion opened the house as a tourist attraction and charged visitors twenty-five cents. Over the years, songs were performed, books were written, and documentaries were filmed about the Lawson murders. So it really shouldn't surprise anyone that there is a small museum/shrine devoted to the murders in Madison, North Carolina. While the upstairs museum at Madison Dry Goods doesn't hold much in terms of artifacts--you can see a photo of the family, a photo of Lawson in his casket, a photo of the hearses, and two newspaper clippings--it is the museum's location that makes it notable. You see, the second floor of Madison Dry Goods was the former home of T.B. Knight Funeral Home, where the eight members of the Lawson family were embalmed. We dropped by Madison Dry Goods and owner Richard Miller showed us around the old funeral home and pointed out the embalming room, the chapel, and the viewing rooms. He also told us how he acquired some of the items in the museum. I had heard about the Charlie Lawson tragedy years ago because I lived in Stokes County. When I came here, I didn't realize there was actually a funeral home upstairs on the second floor, T.B. Knight Funeral Home. They were the embalmers and funeral director so they provided a direct link to Charlie Lawson. In fact, when I first got here, a person brought me a picture with the bodies out in front of the elevator, rolled up. I didn't know the significance, so I wish I had the picture today for my display. Because there was an interest in it because they were embalmed here, people like this one gentleman who's deceased now would say, "You've got to have this newspaper." There's not many Winston Salem Journals out there. Someone gave us the portable embalming table. It's not from Charlie Lawson, but it's from that era. It folds up like a suitcase. Someone gave us the pictures of him in the casket and the hearse. Because the building was so old and was once a funeral home, I asked him if there were any ghosts. Yes. A little girl. I've never seen her, but four people have seen her. One was a man. I was in here years ago and apparently she was looking out the window because the man wanted to know if my daughter was in here working with me. There's been three kids. One kids about three years ago grabbed his dad's arm and said, "I"m not going up there. There's a little girl standing there." I've had a couple kids who won't go down the hallway. Which naturally got us talking about ghost hunters. We had a woman who came in last week and she had just got back from Wilmington. She showed me the ghost on the ship. She wants to bring her friend up to take pictures of all the stuff. The museum is free and is open daily. But if Mr. Miller is there and has a minute, ask him about the murders and have him show you around the place. Maybe you'll even see the ghost of the little girl! What To Know Before You GoGPS Coordinates: (36.387675, -79.960118) Location: 104 West Murphy Street, Madison Rating
On Christmas Day in 1929, North Carolina farmer Charlie Lawson murdered his entire family before turning his gun onto himself. Almost a century has passed since this gruesome crime, but the question of motive has remained unanswered to this day.
Charles Davis Lawson was a tobacco farmer from Stokes County North Carolina. He owned a farm on Brook Cove Road near Germantown. He lived there with his wife, Fannie (37), and their seven childre…
The Lawson family murder case is one of the most heartbreaking and gruesome stories in American history. On December 25, 1929, Charlie Lawson, a farmer in Stokes County, North Carolina, murdered hi…
What dark secret made Charlie Lawson slaughter his family on Christmas Day?
On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was nat... On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was national news and 5,000 people attended the funeral. Lawson's brother Marion opened the house as a tourist attraction and charged visitors twenty-five cents. Over the years, songs were performed, books were written, and documentaries were filmed about the Lawson murders. So it really shouldn't surprise anyone that there is a small museum/shrine devoted to the murders in Madison, North Carolina. While the upstairs museum at Madison Dry Goods doesn't hold much in terms of artifacts--you can see a photo of the family, a photo of Lawson in his casket, a photo of the hearses, and two newspaper clippings--it is the museum's location that makes it notable. You see, the second floor of Madison Dry Goods was the former home of T.B. Knight Funeral Home, where the eight members of the Lawson family were embalmed. We dropped by Madison Dry Goods and owner Richard Miller showed us around the old funeral home and pointed out the embalming room, the chapel, and the viewing rooms. He also told us how he acquired some of the items in the museum. I had heard about the Charlie Lawson tragedy years ago because I lived in Stokes County. When I came here, I didn't realize there was actually a funeral home upstairs on the second floor, T.B. Knight Funeral Home. They were the embalmers and funeral director so they provided a direct link to Charlie Lawson. In fact, when I first got here, a person brought me a picture with the bodies out in front of the elevator, rolled up. I didn't know the significance, so I wish I had the picture today for my display. Because there was an interest in it because they were embalmed here, people like this one gentleman who's deceased now would say, "You've got to have this newspaper." There's not many Winston Salem Journals out there. Someone gave us the portable embalming table. It's not from Charlie Lawson, but it's from that era. It folds up like a suitcase. Someone gave us the pictures of him in the casket and the hearse. Because the building was so old and was once a funeral home, I asked him if there were any ghosts. Yes. A little girl. I've never seen her, but four people have seen her. One was a man. I was in here years ago and apparently she was looking out the window because the man wanted to know if my daughter was in here working with me. There's been three kids. One kids about three years ago grabbed his dad's arm and said, "I"m not going up there. There's a little girl standing there." I've had a couple kids who won't go down the hallway. Which naturally got us talking about ghost hunters. We had a woman who came in last week and she had just got back from Wilmington. She showed me the ghost on the ship. She wants to bring her friend up to take pictures of all the stuff. The museum is free and is open daily. But if Mr. Miller is there and has a minute, ask him about the murders and have him show you around the place. Maybe you'll even see the ghost of the little girl! What To Know Before You GoGPS Coordinates: (36.387675, -79.960118) Location: 104 West Murphy Street, Madison Rating
STOKES COUNTY, N.C. — For most people, their story ends at their grave but for the Lawson family, there were chapters still to be written. After the funeral, their home began to attract the curious. “Charlie Lawson’s brother [Marion Lawson] charged people to go in the house,” historian Kinney Rorrer said. “He charged them a […]
Detailed list of famous NC murder mysteries: Lawson Family Christmas Massacre, Jeffrey MacDonald, Michael Peterson, Faith Hedgepeth, Velma Barfield, Barbara Stager & more.
On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was nat... On Christmas Day 1929 in Germanton, Charlie Lawson killed his wife and six of his seven children before killing himself. The event was national news and 5,000 people attended the funeral. Lawson's brother Marion opened the house as a tourist attraction and charged visitors twenty-five cents. Over the years, songs were performed, books were written, and documentaries were filmed about the Lawson murders. So it really shouldn't surprise anyone that there is a small museum/shrine devoted to the murders in Madison, North Carolina. While the upstairs museum at Madison Dry Goods doesn't hold much in terms of artifacts--you can see a photo of the family, a photo of Lawson in his casket, a photo of the hearses, and two newspaper clippings--it is the museum's location that makes it notable. You see, the second floor of Madison Dry Goods was the former home of T.B. Knight Funeral Home, where the eight members of the Lawson family were embalmed. We dropped by Madison Dry Goods and owner Richard Miller showed us around the old funeral home and pointed out the embalming room, the chapel, and the viewing rooms. He also told us how he acquired some of the items in the museum. I had heard about the Charlie Lawson tragedy years ago because I lived in Stokes County. When I came here, I didn't realize there was actually a funeral home upstairs on the second floor, T.B. Knight Funeral Home. They were the embalmers and funeral director so they provided a direct link to Charlie Lawson. In fact, when I first got here, a person brought me a picture with the bodies out in front of the elevator, rolled up. I didn't know the significance, so I wish I had the picture today for my display. Because there was an interest in it because they were embalmed here, people like this one gentleman who's deceased now would say, "You've got to have this newspaper." There's not many Winston Salem Journals out there. Someone gave us the portable embalming table. It's not from Charlie Lawson, but it's from that era. It folds up like a suitcase. Someone gave us the pictures of him in the casket and the hearse. Because the building was so old and was once a funeral home, I asked him if there were any ghosts. Yes. A little girl. I've never seen her, but four people have seen her. One was a man. I was in here years ago and apparently she was looking out the window because the man wanted to know if my daughter was in here working with me. There's been three kids. One kids about three years ago grabbed his dad's arm and said, "I"m not going up there. There's a little girl standing there." I've had a couple kids who won't go down the hallway. Which naturally got us talking about ghost hunters. We had a woman who came in last week and she had just got back from Wilmington. She showed me the ghost on the ship. She wants to bring her friend up to take pictures of all the stuff. The museum is free and is open daily. But if Mr. Miller is there and has a minute, ask him about the murders and have him show you around the place. Maybe you'll even see the ghost of the little girl! What To Know Before You GoGPS Coordinates: (36.387675, -79.960118) Location: 104 West Murphy Street, Madison Rating
The Lawson Family Christmas Massacre There is nothing that can ruin the holidays like murder, especially when the victims are an unassuming farm wife and six of her seven children, all waiting for the happiness and joy that usually accompanied Christmas. The story becomes even more tragic when it is revealed that their killer was the husband of the farm wife and the father of those children – and that he took his own life just after slaughtering his family. The story of the Lawson Christmas Massacre took place in 1929, near Germanton, North Carolina. Charlie Lawson was a simple man with simple needs. He was a husband, father, and tobacco farmer. He worked hard, kept his family fed, made sure his debts were paid, and that he kept a roof over their head. The only true sorrow in his life had been when his third child, William, had died from pneumonia. Everything seemed right in the world for Charlie Lawson, but as they say, looks can often be deceiving. The entire Lawson family in a photo that was taken during a rare shopping trip in the Fall of 1929. Charlie bought everyone in the family a new suit of clothes and they posed in town for their first-ever family portrait. Back Row: Arthur “Buck”; Marie; Charlie; Fannie; Mary Lou Front Row: James; Maybell, Raymond; Carrie. As Christmas Day, 1929 approached, the Lawson children grew more excited. They didn’t expect a lot of gifts since they had just received new clothing a short time before, but there would be lots of food to eat and lots of fun to be had with friends and relatives who lived nearby. They had no way of knowing that the day would be anything but happy – it would end in a terrifying slaughter that still reverberates in North Carolina today. The victims of what turned out to be a baffling crime included six of the children, and Charlie’s wife of 20 years, Fanny. The youngest child was Mary Lou, who was only four months old at the time of her death. The only surviving child was Arthur, a 16-year-old that everyone called Buck. He only survived because he was sent on an errand by his father that Christmas afternoon. The errand itself was a disturbing one. Buck and his cousin were sent trudging through the snow to Germanton to buy more shotgun shells for Charlie. However, when Buck returned home, he was stunned to find that his mother, sisters Marie, 17, Carrie, 12, Maybell, 7, and baby Mary Lou, and brothers, James, 4, and Raymond, 2, had all been slain by his father. They had been killed one by one, and Charlie had apparently chased down Carrie and Maybell after they ran away from the Lawson house in terror. Charlie had annihilated his entire family. The interior of the house looked as though it had been drenched with buckets of blood. Some of the Lawson family had been killed by gunshot, others had been beaten to death, and others had died from a combination of the two. All of the bodies were found inside of the house, or in the adjacent tobacco barn. Some accounts say that Charlie placed small stones over the eyes of his victims. Buck immediately ran to a neighbor’s house to ask the man to call the sheriff. He was sure that intruders had broken in and killed his family. As lawmen arrived on the scene, they came to a grim realization about what had occurred – Charlie Lawson had been the one who did the killing. When they told Buck, the young boy collapsed in the front yard. Hours passed with no sign of Charlie. Men combed the surrounding woods and at some point around 10:00 p.m., a shot rang out in the trees behind the barn. All activity around the house suddenly stopped and everyone looked anxiously toward the woods, and then to the sheriff. Believing that Charlie may have fired the shot, and fearing that anyone venturing into the woods could be shot, the sheriff didn’t move. Eventually, a few of the men ventured into the shadowy forest. Moments later, they called back that Charlie was dead. The scene in the woods was a strange one. Charlie had been there for hours, walking around and around in a circle around a tree. He had walked around and around the tree so many times that the snow had melted, making a path. Eventually, he sat down at the base of the tree, leaned back, put the gun barrel in his mouth, and pulled the trigger. Newspapers all over the country featuring glaring headlines about the murders the next day. The eyes of the entire country were focused on Stokes County, North Carolina and after the initial shock of what had happened, the only one question remained: Why? There was no apparent motive. The Lawsons weren’t rich, but they weren’t having any financial problems. Charlie Lawson was a likable man. He was a hard worker. He didn’t have any extreme religious or act strange in any peculiar way. Most people in the community liked and respected him. They couldn’t imagine why he would have done such a terrible thing. Soon, though, two theories emerged. The first was that Charlie had a medical condition that affected his mind and made him snap that day. Earlier that summer, while breaking up some new fields, Charlie had been hit in the head with a tool. He didn’t seem severely injured by it, but a few weeks later, he started seeing a local doctor for what he described as blinding headaches and trouble sleeping. A few friends belatedly admitted that Charlie had never been the same after the injury. A few weeks later, Charlie and his sons were working in the fields and Charlie became angry with Buck, and attacked him. Buck, almost as large as his father, defended himself until Charlie backed down. Charlie had never acted that way before. Buck then took it upon himself to try and protect the rest of the family from Charlie’s temper – which may have been the reason that Charlie sent him away on an errand when he massacred the rest of the family. The second theory that emerged was much more scandalous. There were rumors that Charlie had impregnated his teenage daughter, Marie, and had killed his family to prevent the incestuous scandal from being known. Whatever the truth was, though, Charlie took it to his grave. The murders attracted so much attention that at least 5,000 curiosity-seekers showed up for the funeral of the Lawsons, who were buried in a single plot at the Browder Family Cemetery, outside of Germanton. To protect the Lawson house, Marion Lawson, one of Charlie’s young brothers, planted posts around the farm and strung up a wire fence around the site. Townspeople assumed that Marion was trying to keep away the morbidly curious, but that was not the case – he was turning the house into a tourist attraction. In the spring of 1930, hundreds of travelers came to see the place where the murders occurred. They handled the family’s belongings, gaped at the bloodstains on the floors and walls, and stood on the spot where the Lawson children breathed their last. The locals grumbled about the “shameful” attraction for a time, but only until they realized that the tourists were stopping in town to eat, buy gas, and stay in the new hotel. With the money Germanton was making from the tourists, the little town began to thrive during an era when most of America was suffering. As morbid as it may sound, it’s believe that Charlie Lawson saved from Germanton from the Great Depression. After interest in the Lawson farm began to wane, parts of the gruesome display were packed up and taken on the road. It made the rounds of sideshows and carnivals throughout the country for a number of years before it was eventually shut down, and some of the pieces were returned to the farm. As decades passed, and the house fell into decay, children and adults alike wandered through the property. On many occasions, people left the house believing that at least of the deceased Lawsons were not resting in peace. By 1980, the old Lawson house was no more. The new owners had replaced the house and barn with a cultivated field. There was nothing left to see, and nothing to explore. But that doesn’t mean that the hauntings have stopped entirely. The home that once belonged to the Lawsons’ closest neighbors is now the Squires Inn Bed and Breakfast. Shortly after moving into the house, the owner looked up and noticed a little boy and girl peering back at her through the glass in the one of the door. They disappeared, but she saw them again, and decided to do some research. After discussing her experiences with a local historian, she was shown the Lawson family portrait, taken shortly before they died. The woman immediately recognized her young visitors in the photograph. She had been visited by Maybell and James Lawson. The historian told her the Lawson children had frequently crossed the field to play with the children who had once lived in her house. As the years have passed, the children have remained. Although saddened by their fate, the inn’s owner states that she finds some peace in the fact that the children have each other. This complete story of the Lawson family murders can be found in the book, FEAR THE REAPER, by Troy Taylor and Rene Kruse.
Christmas, 1929, Charles Lawson sent his son Arthur to the store. Then he snapped and murdered his wife and remaining children before killing himself.
Outside of Germanton, on a Christmas evening in 1929, Charlie Lawson paced in furious circles around a tree located deep within a thicket of forest. He held a
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STOKES COUNTY, N.C. – Tucked away in a quiet corner of the county, known as Brook Cove, you’ll find a small family cemetery. Buried here are more than just the remains of those who lived and farmed the community. There are secrets here too. Secrets of why a man named Charlie Lawson killed his wife, […]
A selection of three vintage Doc & Merle Watson cassette tapes. All are in excellent vintage condition and play well with no distortion, warbling or extra tape noise. Artist: Doc & Merle Watson Album: Ballads From Deep Gap / Treasures Untold / Red Rocking Chair **Please see photos for condition details** Tracklists: Ballads From Deep Gap: Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms 2:49 My Rough And Rowdy Ways 2:28 The Wreck Of Old Number 9 2:55 Gambler's Yodel 2:55 The Cuckoo 2:46 Stack O'Lee 3:50 Willie Moore 4:00 Travellin' Man 3:28 The Tragic Romance 3:18 Texas Gales (Instr.) 1:30 The Lawson Family Murder 2:36 Alabama Bound 2:47 Treasures Untold: – Introduction 3:16 – Lights In The Valley 3:49 – Beaumont Rag 1:23 – I Heard My Mother Whispering 3:31 – Billy In The Low Ground 1:36 – Omie Wise 4:20 – Reuben's Train 2:49 – Hicks' Farewell 4:00 – Ramblin' Hobo 1:41 – White House Blues 1:38 – Jimmy Sutton/The Old Buck Ram 0:58 – I Want To Love Him More 2:35 – Grandfather's Clock 1:39 – Chinese Breakdown 1:08 – Handsome Molly 2:21 – Beaumont Rag 1:58 – Farewell Blues 1:59 – Lonesome Road Blues 1:16 – Footprints In The Snow 2:13 Red Rocking Chair: Sadie 2:23 Fisher's Hornpipe / Devil's Dream 1:38 Along The Road 2:42 Smoke, Smoke, Smoke 2:39 Below Freezing 2:12 California Blues 3:13 John Hurt 2:22 Mole In The Ground 2:22 Any Old Time 2:21 Red Rocking Chair 1:57 How Long Blues 2:42 Down Yonder 2:15 Shipping: All LPs are shipped in professional 12” box mailers. All cassettes & CDs are wrapped in bubble wrap and shipped in padded bubble mailers. All items shipped via USPS Media Mail. Please feel free to contact us if you would prefer expedited shipping.
PETA chose North Carolina for the campaign because they say the state is experiencing a flood of stray animals, pet surrenders, and crowded shelters.
Afternoon of Christmas Day, and all but one of the Lawsons would be dead. The bodies of each family member were found with rocks beneath their heads and their arms crossed. To this day the motive a…
The delayed 2023 Primetime Emmy Awards take place on Monday, January 15, 2024 in Los Angeles.