- Born
- Died
- Birth nameEdward Theodore Gein
- Nicknames
- The Butcher of Plainfield
- The Grandfather of Gore
- The Ghoul of Plainfield
- Height5′ 7″ (1.70 m)
- Ed Gein and his elder brother Henry lived on a rural farm near Plainfield, WI. George Gein, his father, was a tanner and carpenter and was drunk most of the time. Augusta, Ed's domineering mother, was the real power of the house. She was a religious fanatic who constantly warned her sons about the sins of premarital sex and railed against "evil" women. Ed's father died in 1940, and brother Henry died four years later fighting a marsh fire (although it was later suspected that Ed might have killed him). Ed stayed at the family farm with his mother and never strayed out of the surrounding few counties. When she died of a stroke in 1945, Ed was left all alone at the "tender" age of 39. He sealed her bedroom and the rest of his house off, living in just the kitchen and one other room. During the period of 1950-55, he visited three local cemeteries at night and dug up at least ten graves. He removed bits and pieces from each body, returning some to their graves. He used skullcaps for bowls, and stitched chair seats and lampshades out of human skin. On special occasions, he would dance outside in the moonlight wearing numerous stitched skin coverings, including the face masks of some of his victims. His first murder was committed on December 8, 1954, the other occurred on November 16, 1957. He attacked his last victim in her store and dragged her body to a truck parked out back. Later that evening the victim's son stopped in at the store to check on his mother and found the doors locked, the cash register missing and a trail of blood leading out to the back door. He recalled that he had seen Ed at the store the day before. When the police went to his farm, they found her headless body in his shed, hanging by it's heels from the rafters. Gein was arrested and eventually confessed to his crimes. On January 16, 1958, he was sent to Central State Hospital at Waupun, WI. In November 1968, he was judged competent to stand trial. He was now diagnosed to have chronic schizophrenia, found "not guilty by reason of insanity" and returned to Waupun. It has been theorized that Gein might have killed two men who hired him as their hunting guide in 1952 and were never seen again. There were also two other unidentified women's body parts were found at his farm. In that his murder & grave robbing victims were all of middle or elderly age, these two women's remains were decisively young, in their teenage years. This was never conclusively investigated. In 1978, he was moved to Mendota Mental Health Institute. Gein was a model prisoner and died quietly in his sleep in the geriatric psychiatric ward in 1984. He is buried next to his mother in the Plainfield Cemetery.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Sujit R. Varma
- According to people who knew him personally, his last name rhymed with "bean".
- His intelligence was measured at average, with an IQ of 99, signifying average intelligence; a pretty good score for someone who dropped out of school in eighth grade.
- Gein was arrested on one charge of murder and one count of theft but was proclaimed mentally unfit to stand trial until ten years later. He spent the remainder of his life since his arrest in a mental hospital.
- Ironically, he is now buried, next to his mother Augusta, in Plainfield Cemetery, the same cemetery where he use to dig up dead bodies. He passed away on July 26, 1984, one month away from what would have been his 78th birthday on August 27.
- His tombstone was stolen during the early 1990s and today a small wooden cross with his name and death date inscripted was put there by someone unknown.
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