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North Dakotas first mass murder took place on this
date in 1893. Six members of the Daniel Kreider family were killed on
their farm southeast of Cando, including four of their 8 children.
In the preceding years, Daniel and Barbara Kreider had
moved to Cando from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, by way of Missouri,
and appear to have been either Amish or Mennonite. Despite their family
of 8 kids, they were only 36 when they were murdered.
Daniel Kreider had a 22 year-old hired man named Albert
Bomberger, also from Pennsylvania. That year, an obituary published in
the Mennonite newspaper, the Herald of Truth, stated, This
young man had run away from home and had been a cowboy on the western
plains and bore no enviable character. The Pennsylvania story continued,
... (Bomberger was dissatisfied at the amount of work that was required
of him, but he seemed adverse to work and evidently had no reason for
dissatisfaction.
It seems Bomberger developed a romantic interest in Kreiders
oldest child, Annie, who was reported to be 15. Daniel, her father, responded
by telling Bomberger it was time he moved on.
The Herald of Truth article stated, Early on Friday
morning, July 7, as Sister Kreider was peeling potatoes in the kitchen,
young Bomberger went into the bedroom and shot her husband with a shotgun,
killing him instantly... She hastened into the room, when Bomberger met
her, and pushing her back to the kitchen shot her there, killing her almost
instantly. He then reloaded his gun, and when the children, who heard
the shooting, came down stairs, he drove them back, and then shot Murbey,
(11); Mary, (9); and David, (7). Bernice... (13), had hidden under the
bed while these murders were being committed, but slipped out of a window,
and jumping to the ground, ran out to a pony that she was accustomed to
ride, often without a bridle, but for some unknown reason she stopped
on the way to get a bridle, and this little delay gave Bomberger a chance
to catch her...
The three youngest children, Aaron, Eva and Henry, were
spared, either because they hid, or because Annie pleaded for their lives.
According to a separate report, Bomberger forced Annie to fix him breakfast
while he took all the money he could find. He raped her before fleeing.
Annie walked into Cando and reported the crime to authorities,
and within 3 days, Bomberger was captured at Deloraine, Manitoba. Because
lynching was a real possibility in Cando, he was jailed in the Grand Forks
County jail.
The surviving Kreider children were taken back to the
familys former home in Pennsylvania soon after the murders. Their
deceased family members were buried together in a grave 14 feet long by
7_ feet wide. Its reported that 12 to 15 thousand people attended
the funeral service.
Bomberger didnt deny the charges, and in late November,
he was returned to Cando long enough for Judge David Morgan to sentence
him to death. On January 19th, 1894, Bomberger was taken to a scaffold
constructed in a field about a mile outside of Cando and hanged. His attitude
was of indifference; he claimed that because he was drunk during the murders,
he wasnt as responsible as he otherwise would have been.
The Kreider farm was sold a month after the murders;
the farmhouse burned down in June 1917.
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