Map of Cerro Gordo County in Iowa

Cerro Gordo County in Iowa

Chester N. Van Horn

Homicide

Chester N. Van Horn
41 YOA
Clear Lake Township
Cerro Gordo County
November 19, 1914

By Nancy Bowers

In 1914, prosperous Cerro Gordo County farmer Chester N. “Chet” Van Horn and his wife Charlotte lived with their two children four miles southwest of Clear Lake.

On Thursday, November 19, Charlotte and their daughter visited overnight at the nearby home of her parents, Michael and Mary Callanan. Their son stayed at a friend’s house.

The next morning, Charlotte Van Horn asked a neighbor woman to drive her home.

When the women entered the house about 9:00 a.m. on November 20, they found 41-year-old Chester Van Horn dead on a bed in a second-floor room on the southwest corner of the house.

The bed clothes were smoothed and pulled up to his shoulder blades and his face was turned to the wall. He lay on his left side with his left hand beneath him. Lying loosely in his right hand was a revolver.

Blood from a bullet wound over his right ear trickled down his face and neck and then onto the bed.

On a nearby table, an oil lamp was burning.

Charlotte Van Horn called in several neighbors, including David S. Rummell, Mrs. Lambertson, and A.N. Verberg and his father, to see the body.

Eventually, someone notified Cerro Gordo Coroner Dr. Norman W. Phillips, who examined the body and released it to Clear Lake undertaker and furniture dealer R.E. Williams.

After an inquest, a coroner’s jury returned a verdict of accidental death.

Further Investigation

Cerro Gordo County Sheriff Fred Marsh was not convinced by the coroner’s jury verdict, however, and employed Pinkerton Detective Charles Hedin to further investigate Van Horn’s death.

Hedin tracked down some interesting details.

A.N. Verberg told Hedin he was driving an automobile between Clear Lake and the Van Horn home just south of town about 9:00 p.m. on November 19.

A horse-drawn rig came towards him; in the illumination from his car lights Verberg could see two passengers — one Charlotte Van Horn and the other a man with his face concealed by a turned-up fur collar.

Robert Fletcher, the caretaker of the Outing Club of Clear Lake, told the Pinkerton Detective that on the night of the murder he was visiting a sick friend in town and saw Charlotte Van Horn and another person in a buggy as it passed under a street light at 9:00 p.m.

Hedin also learned that a revolver found with Van Horn’s body was ordered from a Chicago mail order company to be delivered to “Daniel DeVore” not long before Van Horn died. The package containing it was picked up and signed for at a Clear Lake rail express office.

Hedin and Cerro Gordo authorities believed that Charlotte Van Horn ordered the gun under an assumed name.

An Arrest is Made
Courtesy photo Mason City Globe Gazette
A newspaper photo allowed the curious to see Charlotte Van Horn’s face, which she kept veiled in court.

Murder charges were filed against Charlotte Van Horn by Justice of the Peace Stanberry and she was arrested on January 1, 1915 at The Retreat Sanitarium in Des Moines, where she had been a patient since her husband’s death.

Charlotte Van Horn was transported to Mason City and placed in the Cerro Gordo County Jail for a preliminary hearing.

At the hearing, hundreds of curious spectators crowded the courtroom. Many were frustrated at not being able to see Charlotte’s face because she wore a veil during the proceedings.

After his daughter’s arrest, Michael Callanan collapsed and was said by the Oelwein Register to be “seriously ill from the shock and old age.” Although he was not expected to recover, Michael Callanan rallied to support Charlotte emotionally and financially.

On January 11, Michael Callanan and his son Ralph provided the bond of $7,600 which was set at the hearing; and the accused was released from jail.

Veil is Partially Lifted

Then Charlotte Van Horn and her brother Ralph Callanan checked into Mason City’s famous Park Inn Hotel, which was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.

Courtesy photo msnbc.msn.com
After making her bail, Charlotte Van Horn retreated to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Park Inn Hotel in Mason City.

That evening, the siblings sat in the writing room of the hotel while a Mason City Globe-Gazette reporter asked questions.

The only words Charlotte Van Horn uttered were, “Oh, I am so tired tonight.”

Otherwise, her brother Ralph did the talking while she sat silently or, when directly addressed, glanced towards her brother and waited for him to respond.

The reporter wrote of her:

“A slight trace of the smile she seemed to be attempting to force came across her face as she looked up. . . . The deep lines in her face showed the confinement of the county jail and the strain of the preliminary hearing had told on the woman more than the indifferent attitude she assumed in the court room would indicate.

She wore no veil, which is another thing she has not done in public since her arrest. Her looks were that of a woman striving for a little human sympathy, which she had thus far failed to find. Her indifference manifested through the trial was gone and in its place was a languid attitude coupled with a longing for companionship.”

On February 1, two months after Charlotte’s arrest, a newspaper reported that Chester Van Horn’s brother Roland had also been charged with the murder, following revealing accusations by Charlotte. The Waterloo Evening Courier wrote:

“An affinity case is alleged to have been the motive for the murder and sensational developments are expected.”

Roland Van Horn, however, was quickly released and his alleged involvement was never mentioned again.

When an indictment for first degree murder came down in March, Charlotte’s bond was doubled to $15,000, which her father and brother provided.

District Judge Edwards postponed the trial until late April. Charlotte Van Horn then returned to the Des Moines sanitarium known as The Retreat, operated by Dr. Gershom H. Hill at 28th Street and Woodland Avenue.

The Iowa Medical Journal wrote of The Retreat:

“A large, quiet, homelike place for the care and cure of nervous invalids . . . . [It] is a comfortable place to rest, to be entertained, to take baths, massage, electricity and medical treatment.”

Because of her treatments, many speculated that Charlotte was mentally unbalanced and would use an insanity defense.

Courtesy photo Iowa Medical Journal
Charlotte Van Horn was a patient at The Retreat, which catered to “nervous invalids.”
The Trial

Jury selection in the murder trial began on April 27. Charlotte Van Horn, according to the Webster City Tribune, wore “a black sailor suit and . . . a small black hat with a thin veil over her face” and was accompanied to the courthouse by her father, brother, and son.

Attorney Daniel W. Telford assisted County Attorney L.A. Hill with the prosecution, and James E.E. Markley represented the defendant.

Witnesses A.N. Verberg and Robert Fletcher both testified to seeing Charlotte Van Horn riding away from the death scene in a buggy with a man on the night her husband was shot.

Defense attorney Markley belittled the make and model of A.N. Verberg’s automobile and questioned if the lights on it were strong enough for him to see who was in the buggy.

Markley also was able to create confusion in Fletcher about which night he saw the horse and rig.

Those who observed Van Horn’s body at the scene — Mrs. Lambertson, David S. Rummell, and the Verbergs, as well as undertaker R.E. Williams — testified about the position of the body and the gun.

They all admitted to Markley they had not looked for powder burns. He also grilled them about oil left in the burning lamp, asserting that the amount could establish time of death.

As Markley thoroughly questioned each witness about the location of the victim’s right hand and the gun, it became clear he would not use an insanity defense as was anticipated, but rather a suicide scenario.

The prosecution tried to establish that Charlotte Van Horn ordered the revolver found in her dead husband’s hand from a Chicago mail order house under the name “Daniel DeVore” and that she picked it up at a Mason City express office, signing that name.

Courtesy photo Penny Postcards from Iowa, IAGenWeb
The Cerro Gordo County Courthouse in Mason City, where Charlotte Van horn was tried for murder.

A handwritten cake recipe was introduced by the prosecution and Mrs. Lambertson testified that she saw the defendant write the recipe. An expert claimed the penmanship matched that of “Daniel DeVore.”

However, the railroad express agent who dealt with the package could not swear absolutely that Charlotte Van Horn was the person who received it. Further, no witnesses could say she was seen with the revolver.

Because the gun purchase was a key element in the prosecution, the inability to directly tie Charlotte Van Horn to it caused the state’s case to collapse.

A Startling End to the Case

Following a motion to dismiss by the defense, Judge Edwards took the case away from the jury and acquitted Charlotte Van Horn of the charges. The Emmetsburg Democrat wrote: “The judge who presided declared that the evidence against her was not worthy of judicial consideration.”

The judge’s verdict came so suddenly that the courtroom was only partially filled with spectators. There was no overt reaction from those present, perhaps indicating a lack of public sympathy towards the accused.

Charlotte, however, was described by the Cedar Rapids Republican as being “overcome with joy.”

Newspapers speculated that Charlotte Van Horn would return to the sanitarium and then live with her parents.

In 1930, she was residing in Los Angeles, California, with her son Chandler and her niece, Eunice Callanan.

The Life of Chester Van Horn

Chester N. Van Horn was born in April of 1873 in Wisconsin to Louisa and C.M. Van Horn. He had three siblings: Harry H. Van Horn, Clara M. Van Horn, and Roland Willard Van Horn.

About 1896, he married Charlotte Callanan and they had two children, Tena and Chandler.

Courtesy photo Iowa Gravestone Photo Project
Chester Van Horn’s stone in Clear Lake Cemetery.

Van Horn is buried in Clear Lake Cemetery.

Information Needed

Questions and information about the 1915 death of Chester Van Horn should be directed to Iowa Cold Cases through the Contact form.

Sources
  • “Bond Double That Required Before,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, March 11, 1915.
  • “Charged With Murder,” Atlantic News Telegraph, April 26, 1915.
  • “Charlotte Van Horn Given Up To Sheriff,” Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette, January 26, 1915.
  • “Developments In Murder Case At Mason City,” Waterloo Evening Courier, February 2, 1915.
  • Emmetsburg Democrat, May 5, 1915.
  • “Father Of Accused Woman Seriously Ill,” Oelwein Register, January 13, 1915.
  • Iowa Medical Journal, Volume 17, Issue 4.
  • “Mrs. Van Horn Found Not Guilty,” Cedar Rapids Republican, May 2, 1915.
  • “Mrs. Van Horn Is Released On Bail,” Mason City Globe Gazette, January 12, 1915.
  • “Selecting Jury To Try Husband Slayer,” Webster City Tribune, April 30, 1915.
  • “State News,” Humeston New Era, February 10, 1915.
  • “Tell Of Finding Of Body And Gun,” Mason City Globe Gazette, April 29, 1915.
  • “Testify They Saw Wife Near Scene Of Murder,” Waterloo Evening Courier, April 29, 1915.
  • “Trial of Mrs. Van Horn Postponed,” Cedar Rapids Republican, April 14, 1915.
  • “The Van Horn Murder Trial Begins On April 26th,” Oelwein Daily Review, April 14, 1915.
  • “Woman Accused of Murder,” The Iowa State Recorder, January 6, 1915.

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