The National Iron & Steel Heritage Museum welcomes readers to a holiday open house from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday, 13 December. Stroll through candle lit grounds and enjoy holiday refreshments as you listen to carolers and the Lukens Band. Tour the historic buildings, and shop at the museum store. A train display and a visit with Santa Claus is sure to excite the little ones. The Museum is located in the Lukens National Historic District, 50 South 1st Avenue, Coatesville.
Young Alexander Meyer was a disturbed and angry young man with some major issues. He had failed sixth and seventh grade, and instead of having to repeat eighth grade again, he finally gave up on school. At age 16 he quit Downingtown Junior High. Meyer is not a relative, nor are his victims (that I am aware). I stumbled upon young Alex while reading Tortured Minds: Pennsylvania's Most Bizarre - But Forgotten - Murders by Tammy Mal. On 11 February 1937 Alexander Thweatt Meyer killed young Helen Moyer as she walked home from school in Coatesville along Modena Road. She was not his first. The jury was out only three minutes after hearing Dr. Michael Margolis' testimony on the death of Helen Moyer. The jury determined Meyer had murdered Moyer and should be held for first degree murder. The jury also condemned the parole system which had released Meyer back into the public, after having served just 14 months in Huntingdon Reformatory, for the murder of two other girls - Anna Blasc...
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