Cincinnati's "Old Cunny": A Notorious Purveyor of Human Flesh

audiobook

Cincinnati's "Old Cunny": A Notorious Purveyor of Human Flesh

by Linden F. (Linden Forest) Edwards, Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County

EN·~20 minutes

Chapters

Description

In this compelling historical pamphlet, listeners are taken back to mid‑nineteenth‑century Cincinnati, where a shadowy figure known as William Cunningham earned the nicknames “Old Cunny,” “The Ghoul,” and “Old Man Dead.” A self‑styled “professional resurrectionist,” he supplied medical schools with the bodies they needed for anatomical study, often by illicit means that made him a household bogeyman. The narrative paints a vivid picture of his grave‑robbing exploits between 1855 and 1871, and of the uneasy reliance of respected physicians on his macabre services.

The author, a seasoned professor of anatomy and medical historian, frames Cunningham’s story within the broader ambitions of Ohio’s leading medical institutions. By juxtaposing the celebrated anatomists of the era with the lurid tales of this “dray‑man bogeyman,” the work explores how scientific progress often rested on morally ambiguous foundations. Listeners will hear a blend of scholarly insight and gritty folklore, offering a window into a time when the pursuit of knowledge walked a thin line between reverence and revulsion.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~20 minutes (19K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2021-07-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Linden F. (Linden Forest) Edwards

Linden F. (Linden Forest) Edwards

1899–1970

A medical scholar and anatomy teacher, he also wrote lively pieces on Ohio history that brought unusual corners of the past to a wider audience. His work blends careful research with a clear, readable style.

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PL

Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County

A long-running Indiana public library system, this organization became known for preserving local history and making it accessible to everyday readers. Its publications often reflect Fort Wayne’s regional past and the library’s strong interest in genealogy, community memory, and public education.

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