Lillian Randolph in Guthrie
Lillian Randolph
Courtesy photo Elizabeth O'Hara

Lillian Elizabeth Hedman Randolph


Homicide

Lillian Elizabeth Randolph
57 YOA
Case # 6500598
Guthrie Center, IA (Guthrie County)
May 2, 1965


Case summary by Nancy Bowers

Lillian Elizabeth Randolph, 57, was kidnapped from her rural home near Guthrie Center, Iowa, on Sunday, May 2, 1965. On May 11, state authorities found her body in the trunk of her car at the Polk County Municipal Airport. She had been stabbed 13 times.

Born August 5, 1908 in West Duluth, Minnesota, Lillian grew up in a close and loving, although poor, family. Her parents — Anna Christina Magnusson and Gustaf Hans Hedman, both Swedish immigrants — worked hard to provide for their six children.

Lillian trained as a teacher, married Bob O’Hara, and had two children — Henry (“Hank”) and Ann — before Bob died in an accidental fall at home. She hoped life would get easier for all of them when she married Roy Chalman, with whom she had two more children, Wendy and Vicki. But the Navy recalled Roy for the Korean War and he came back changed — angry and abusive with a tendency to drink too much. In the best interests of the children, Lillian divorced Roy.  

Lillian Hedman O'Hara with son Hank, mother and mother-in-law
Courtesy photo Elizabeth O'Hara
Lillian Hedman O'Hara, center, poses with her son Henry ("Hank"), her mother (above left) and mother-in-law.

Roy Chalman’s business failures cost Lillian the house from her first marriage. Soon, the life insurance from Bob O’Hara was gone, too. Lillian did substitute teaching in and around Duluth to support her children and worried about their education and future financial security.

Lillian had known Guthrie Center, Iowa, resident Howard Randolph casually for nearly 20 years because of his yearly fishing trips to Minnesota. In the summer of 1957, he began lavishing her with attention, gifts, and fancy dinners, and begged her to become his wife. He promised Hawaiian vacations, a fur coat, and a car.

What appealed most to Lillian, however, was that he said he was desperate for a family of his own and he promised college educations for her older children and only the best for the two young daughters, whom he wanted to make his “little princesses.”

Lillian was not in love with Randolph, but she believed he would take care of her and her children and ensure a safe and secure future. She hoped that friendship would develop into something deeper.

Howard Fitz Randolph was born in southern Missouri in 1907 into a hardscrabble existence. His widowed mother moved her family to Guthrie Center, Iowa, and through sheer will power — along with legal shenanigans, double-dealings, and penny-pinching — he created a poultry, butter, egg, and cream empire with distribution points and stores throughout central Iowa. He built a large and spacious home outside of Guthrie Center and always drove a late-model Buick.

Lillian O'Hara with her son Hank
Courtesy photo Elizabeth O'Hara
Lillian with her son, "Hank," at Leech Lake.

But, Howard was known in the county as “mean” and cruel and “cut-throat” and seemed to enjoy nothing more than a good legal fight in court, which he almost always won. His first wife had taken their child — which he claimed was not his because he was sterile from the mumps — and left him early in their marriage. After that, he had a long series of girlfriends and female companions scattered all over the state.

Despite her misgivings and with hopes for a better future — especially for her children — Lillian moved to Guthrie Center, Iowa, and married Howard Randolph in January of 1958. He adopted her four children.

Barely a month passed before Lillian and the children knew things were not going well. Randolph isolated Lillian to achieve control. He would not provide her a car, so she depended on others for transportation to church and for grocery shopping or walked from their remote home.

He was stingy and denied her even the most basic necessities, all the while giving expensive presents to other women he saw on the side. Almost everything he did was dominating and cruel. He became abusive to her and the two younger girls. Every time Lillian tried to break away, Howard proclaimed that all he wanted was a family and, especially, for the little girls to love him. The older children left home and married, but they, too, still fell under Randolph’s control in other ways.

The Randolph home outside Guthrie Center.
Courtesy photo The Guthrian
The home outside Guthrie Center where Lillian Randolph lived with her children.

After seven years of deprivation, degradation, and abuse — both emotional and physical — Lillian found a Des Moines lawyer to work out a plan for her freedom and the safety of her young daughters, on whom she felt Randolph was unhealthily fixated. She was granted separate maintenance (Randolph did not want townspeople gossiping about a divorce). The couple was still legally married, but Randolph was banned from the home and Lillian received 800 dollars a month from him.

Lillian blossomed. She bought a car and learned to drive. She went to church and the grocery. She drove to Urbandale, Iowa, to visit her son and grandchildren. She made trips to Minnesota to be with her siblings. She began making plans to move to another city, where her girls would be farther away from Randolph, and to get a job.

Lillian Randolph with her granddaughter, Elizabeth O'Hara
Courtesy photo Elizabeth O'Hara
Lillian Randolph with her granddaughter, Elizabeth O'Hara.

On Sunday, May 2, 1965 — Mother’s Day and her son Hank’s birthday — Lillian attended church with her daughters and went home for a few hours before she was to return to the church to set up for a Mother-Daughter banquet. Randolph took the two girls to the Ice Follies in Des Moines, and when they came home, the house was empty though a coffee pot still simmered on the stove. Lillian’s medium-blue 1965 Dodge Coronet was missing.

There was no disturbance in the house, although there were two scuffs on the rug that looked like drag marks. Lillian’s purse was missing.

In the preceding days, residents of Guthrie Center and the surrounding county had seen a white Cadillac at various locations, most particularly the golf course which overlooked the Randolph home. Uniformly, its two male occupants were described as “swarthy,” “Fernando Lamas-like,” “dark-skinned with black hair,” and “out of place.” Howard Randolph had also been seen talking to the strange men in the white Cadillac. As the girls were being driven away in Randolph’s car to the Ice Follies, they looked back from a nearby road and saw a white car pull into the driveway of their home.

On Tuesday morning, May 11, 1965, Lillian’s Dodge was found parked at the Des Moines Airport 62 miles southeast of the Randolph home. The doors were unlocked and the keys were in the ignition. Her purse — containing 11 dollars — was under the driver’s seat. Inside the trunk, authorities found Lillian's body, dressed in the same clothes she'd last been seen wearing: a white, sleeveless floral-design blouse; black capri pants; and black flats.

Lillian Randolph's Dodge Coronet, found at the Des Moines Airport
Courtesy photo Cedar Rapids Gazette
Investigators search Lillian’s 1965 Dodge Coronet at the Des Moines Airport after finding her body in the vehicle's trunk.

She'd been stabbed 12 times in the chest and once in the back, and had been dead since May 2. When investigators removed the trunk liner, they discovered a .25 caliber slug and cartridge casing.

Authorities had a great deal of circumstantial evidence based on Howard Randolph’s behavior, phone calls, and eye-witness reports. They also felt he had substantial motive — financial greed — based on his desires to have the house returned to him and to stop paying Lillian the 800 dollars each month.

Speculation was that the two men in the white Cadillac checked out the scene in the days preceding the murder. They sat on a golf course bench from which they could see the Randolph house, and knew when Howard Randolph and the girls left for Des Moines. It was presumed that they then drove to the home, went inside, and either forced Lillian out or tricked her by some means. It also was believed that Lillian was killed elsewhere and then put into the trunk of her car before it was driven to the airport and abandoned there.

Most significantly, investigators believed the men had been paid to do it by Howard Randolph. That suspicion only increased when authorities identified a suspect: someone who once worked for Randolph’s poultry business.

The individual also was suspected of having played a role in the murder of another Iowa woman, Diane Marie Schofield, a Des Moines waitress and masseuse whose body was found in the trunk of her car at the same airport on July 10, 1975. (Schofield's case also remains unsolved.)

Howard Randolph died in 1994. He was never legally charged with Lillian's murder but was found guilty in the hearts and minds of her family and the Guthrie County community. Law enforcement, too, believed he was culpable but felt the lack of solid evidence would hinder a conviction.

Lillian’s funeral was held May 13, 1965 in the Guthrie City Immanuel Lutheran Church and she was buried in Duluth, Minnesota, but not with the name “Randolph.”

Wendy and Vicki went to live with their sister Ann O’Hara Shackleford’s family after their mother’s death. All of Lillian’s children took back their birth surnames. Her children and grandchildren still remember and mourn this beautiful and caring woman who sacrificed her all for her children.

Lillian was survived by her children Henry “Hank” O’Hara and his wife Peg; Ann Elizabeth O'Hara Shackleford and her husband Harold; Wendy Chalman; Vicki Chalman; and several grandchildren. She was also survived by her siblings: Helen Hedman Erickson, Amy Hedman Johnson, Clifford Hedman, Loraine Hedman Belluci, and Leonard Hedman.


If you think you have information that could help solve this case please click here to send your information to the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation.


Sources:

Iowa Dept. of Criminal Investigation
Des Moines Police Department
“2 Girls’ Custody Hearing Dec. 8,” Des Moines Register, December 1, 1965.
“Body of Woman Found in Trunk,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, May 12, 1965.
“Clues Sought In Slaying of Iowa Woman,” Cedar Rapids Gazette, May 12, 1965.
Des Moines Police Department
“District Court News,” The Guthrian, June 28, 1965.
“Identify Body Found in Trunk of Auto,” Muscatine Journal, May 11, 1965.
Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
“Iowa Murder Mystery,” Cedar Rapids Gazette, May 12, 1965.
“Killings Go Unsolved,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, May 26, 1965.
Lillian’s Legacy: Marriage and Murder in Rural Iowa, Carroll R. McKibbin, Bloomington, Indiana, 2003.
"Murder in a Small Town: Retired Cal Poly Professor Tries to Solve a Mystery in Guthrie Center, Iowa," San Luis Obispo Tribune, July 20, 2003.
“News,” Mason City Globe-Gazette,” May 26, 1965.
Personal correspondence from family members
“Pick judge to listen to custody suit,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, December 1, 1965.
“Probe mystery death at Des Moines: Body of woman found in trunk,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, May 12, 1965.
“These Iowa Murders Still Defy Experts,” Waterloo Daily Courier, May 27, 1965.
“Six Unsolved Murders Here," Des Moines Register, July 11, 1967.
“Stab Wounds Add to Mystery Of Body in Trunk,” Waterloo Daily Courier, May 12, 1965.
 “Work Continues On Murder Case,” The Guthrian, May 17, 1965.


Page last updated: May 19, 2010