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September 30, 2021

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September 30, 2021

Cardio Drumming 50+

8:00 am - 8:45 am Brandie Gruss, Life Coach
Beat workout boredom. Ages 50+, Cost $1 (Allen Eiry Membership Required)

Murder and Mayhem: The Day the Mad Dog Killers came to Town

Museum’s speaker series presents Murder and Mayhem in Seneca County in 1948 TIFFIN- On a steamy summer evening in July 1948, Jim Smith looked at his young wife and said, “Let’s get a root beer.” That suggestion proved to be a fatal mistake. Unbeknownst to the newlyweds, sitting in a nearby sedan at Stewart’s Root Beer stand that evening was Robert Murl Daniels and John Coulter West, fresh off their killing spree near Mansfield. Within the hour, Smith would be dead at the hands of the thugs dubbed The Mad Dog Killers. During the chaos, Rita Smith made a desperate and miraculous escape. But the killers weren’t finished. They drove on to Old Fort where they murdered a truck driver who had pulled off the road to rest near a beer joint called the Flat Iron Inn. A half century later, Rita Smith-Keller sat down with author/historian Lisa Swickard to recall the still vivid memories of that horrific night. On Thursday, Sept. 30, Swickard will present “Murder and Mayhem: The Day the Mad Dog Killers Came to Town” at the Seneca County Museum. The program will cover the crime spree that started in Columbus and ended in Van Wert, with a special spotlight on the Seneca County connection. “I’ve been researching this story for more than 30 years,” Swickard said. “My folks knew Jim Smith. Everybody in Fort Seneca and Old Fort at the time knew him and his family. It was such a blow to the community. And getting to talk to Rita almost 50 years later, with a box of Klennex sitting between us, was one of the highlights of my career. She was such a kind woman. How she came out of that ordeal with any semblance of sanity is beyond me.” Thanks to a generous donation by the Smith family, the Seneca County Museum is home to some of the heartbreaking remnants from that night. Jim’s shoes and wallet, Rita’s dress and several other items illustrate how two ex-cons forever changed the course of so many lives. Museum Director Theresa Sullivan will create a special, temporary display of the items to highlight Swickard’s presentation. “As the audience listens to Lisa recount the somber story, the audience will be able to view some artifacts from the Seneca County crime scene.” Sullivan explained.

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