Wednesday, February 10, 2016

February 10, 1916 -- Hundred Guests Poisoned at University Club Banquet


February 10, 1916 -- More than 100 guests at a banquet in honor of Archbishop George William Mundelein, pictured above, are poisoned at the University Club after a cook, Jean Crones, puts arsenic in the soup. Mandelein, who had just arrived in Chicago to take over the city's archdiocese, had skipped the soup and was fine. No one died, but a third of Chicago's elite were mightily incommoded. There was little interest in the evening's entrées after the soup had its affect, and orders were quickly sent to hurry the ice cream and coffee and skip the cheese. In his address to the group, the Cardinal said, "I have one thing in view, one thing to perform. That is that when my days are ended and my work is done, the people of Chicago, irrespective of creed, will be grateful that I have come among them and that they will believe I have been a good influence not only to my church but to the whole city." Crones, the cook, turned out to be an Italian anarchist by the name of Nestor Dondoglio. He disappeared and was never caught.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You got the name correct in the first use, Mundelein. It’s wrong in the second sentence.

Anonymous said...

I have seen it reported in contemporaneous news articles that 3 people died at the event, and that the poison was antimony potassium tartrate, better known as tartar emetic.