Dance or Die: The Axeman of New Orleans ⚠️ Content Warning: This episode contains detailed descriptions of murder, home invasion, and violence spanning multiple attacks. Listener discretion is strongly advised. New Orleans, 1918. A city built on music, celebration, and the sound of jazz drifting from every open window. And then, in the dead of night, a shadow. A chisel against a back door panel. A figure moving through a sleeping house. An axe rising and falling in the dark. For eighteen months, the Axeman of New Orleans stalked the city. He targeted Italian grocers — families asleep above their shops, vulnerable, unprotected. He killed six people. He wounded at least six more. He changed his method but never his purpose. And he was never caught. Then he wrote a letter. Addressed to "Esteemed Mortal" and dated from Hell, the letter made the city an offer: play jazz music at exactly 12:15 AM on Tuesday night and be spared. Anyone in a home without jazz playing would get the axe. New Orleans played jazz. Every dance hall. Every home. Every street corner. A local composer wrote a song for the occasion. The city danced — terrified — for its life. No one was killed that night. In this episode, Bubah and Z tell the full story — the 1891 mass lynching that set the stage, every attack from the 1912 Sciambra murders through the 1919 Pepitone killing, the flawed investigation that arrested multiple innocent people, the night an entire city danced to survive, and the theory Z raises that nobody else seems to have considered about why the Axeman picked that particular Tuesday night. The killer vanished as suddenly as he appeared. He was never identified. And somewhere, he probably lived out the rest of his life like a normal man. That's the part that should keep you up at night. If this episode has affected you, call or text 988 for the Crisis Lifeline, available 24/7. Text HOME to 741741 for the Crisis Text Line. Echos of the Past is hosted by a father and daughter who have both experienced the unexplained firsthand. We love the supernatural, the strange, and the mysterious — but we come with the facts. Every episode we dig into the cases, the history, and the evidence, searching for answers and sharing everything we find with you. Follow on Spotify and Apple Podcasts — a quick rating helps more people find the show. Email: EchosOfThaPast@gmail.comX: @EchosPoddCastFacebook: Search Echosofthepast — where the paranormal is normal! Sources & Research Notes This episode was researched using contemporary coverage from the Times-Picayune (1918–1919), including the original Axeman letter published March 16, 1919. Historical analysis drawn from Miriam C. Davis's The Axeman of New Orleans: The True Story (Chicago Review Press, 2017) and her VICE interview from February 2017, Robert Tallant's Ready to Hang (1951), Michael Newton's The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes (2009), and Richard Warner's research on the Mumphrey identification. We make every effort to be accurate. Reach us at EchosOfThaPast@gmail.com. #AxemanOfNewOrleans #NewOrleansColdCase #TrueCrime #SerialKiller #UnsolvedMurder #TrueCrimePodcast #TrueCrimeCommunity #TrueCrimeJunkie #ColdCase #NewOrleans #Jazz #CrimePodcast #MurderMystery #HistoricalCrime #UnexplainedHistory #Paranormal #ParanormalPodcast #1918 #ItalianAmerican #DanceOrDie © B&Z Moreno 2026 – Echos of the Past