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William Edward Hickman was an early 20th century
American kidnapper and child murderer who called himself "The Fox".
Contents
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3Notes
The kidnapping and murder of Marion Parker[edit]
On 15 December 1927, Hickman kidnapped Marion Parker -- the 12-year-old
daughter of Los Angeles banker Perry Parker -- and ransomed her. However,
before Parker could pay the ransom, Hickman killed little Marion. He
decapitated, dismembered and disemboweled her.[note 1]
When Hickman met Parker to collect the ransom, he placed the reassembled
parts of Marion's body in the passenger seat of a parked car. He had stitched
Marion's eyes open so her father would think that she was still alive. When
Parker gave Hickman the ransom money, Hickman jumped into the car and sped off.
At the end of the block, Hickman opened the door and shoved Marion's body parts
out onto the street and sped away.
Because Hickman had stuffed towels from the flophouse where he was staying
into Marion's torso, his identity was quickly traced. He was caught a week
later in the northeastern Oregon town of Echo. He later confessed to a dozen armed
robberies and at least one more murder. He was hanged for his crimes on 19
October 1928 at the age of 20.[1]
Objectivist hero
(of a sort)[edit]
So, why does this piece of human excrement warrant
a page on RW? Because it turns out that Hickman became a hero to none
other than Ayn Rand. In the Journals of Ayn Rand, she wrote
that she attempted to write a novel titled The Little Street. The
novel's hero, Danny Renahan, was "suggested" by Hickman, but
"with a purpose. And without the degeneracy." Rand viewed Hickman as
having a "wonderful, free, light consciousness" regarding "the
necessity, meaning, or importance of other people."[2] Although The
Little Street was never completed, Rand took what she saw as the most
compelling aspects of Hickman and his crimes, and incorporated these
characteristics into many of her later protagonists, including the
vaunted John Galt.
Those compelling aspects included:
·
A purely self-centered hero
who was willing to do whatever it took to achieve certain goals;
·
An unimaginative society that (in Rand's eyes) had committed worse crimes
than the hero. When faced with the acts of Rand's hero, this shortsighted
society -- in the ultimate act of psychological projection --
united in an effort to utterly destroy said hero.[3]
Notes[edit]
1. ↑ Because he
disemboweled her, it was impossible to determine if he had also sexually molested Marion.
References[edit]
2. ↑ Prescott,
Michael. "Romancing
the Stone-Cold Killer: Ayn Rand and William Hickman", crime
author Michael Prescott's website, ©2005.
3. ↑ Siabarra,
Chris Matthew. "A
Renaissance in Rand Scholarship", Reason Papers, 23
(Fall 1998): 132-59. (NYU website reissue)
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