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Carroll Avenue

Echo Park, Los AngelesHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Los AngelesLos Angeles Historic-Cultural MonumentsNRHP infobox with nocat
Roads on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaStick-Eastlake architecture in CaliforniaStreets in Los Angeles County, CaliforniaVictorian architecture in California
House at 1300 Carroll Ave., Los Angeles, California
House at 1300 Carroll Ave., Los Angeles, California

Carroll Avenue is a street situated in Los Angeles, near Echo Park. It is in Angelino Heights, one of the older neighborhoods of Los Angeles. It consists of Victorian-era houses within a picturesque neighborhood, which has served as the backdrop for countless motion pictures from the earliest days of cinema to the present.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Carroll Avenue (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Carroll Avenue
Carroll Avenue, Los Angeles Echo Park

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Carroll AvenueContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.069594444444 ° E -118.254825 °
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Address

Carroll Avenue 1345
90026 Los Angeles, Echo Park
California, United States
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House at 1300 Carroll Ave., Los Angeles, California
House at 1300 Carroll Ave., Los Angeles, California
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Nearby Places

Murder of Marion Parker

Frances Marion Parker (October 11, 1915 – December 17, 1927) was an American child who was abducted and murdered in Los Angeles, California. Her murder was deemed by the Los Angeles Times "the most horrible crime of the 1920s", and at the time was considered the most horrific crime in the history of California. In later decades, Parker's death was the subject of various murder ballads. Parker went missing on December 15, 1927, after she was dismissed from her classes at Mount Vernon Junior High School in Lafayette Square: an unknown man, posing as an employee of her father, Perry, checked her out of school with the registrar, stating that her father had suffered an accident. The next day, the Parker family received ransom letters demanding $1,500 (equivalent to $23,672 in 2021) in gold. The letters were signed with various titles, including "Fate", "Death", and "The Fox"; and some had words written in Greek. Following the orders of the ransom, Perry Parker—a bank employee—met his daughter's abductor in central Los Angeles on December 17, 1927. Upon the exchange of the money, the assailant drove away, throwing Marion's mutilated body out of his car as he fled. The child had been significantly disfigured, her limbs cut off, her eyes fixed open with wires, and her abdomen disemboweled and stuffed with rags; her limbs were discovered the next day in Elysian Park. Parker's murderer was soon identified as William Edward Hickman (born February 1, 1908), a 19-year-old former co-worker of Perry Parker. Law-enforcement officers tracked Hickman throughout the Pacific Northwest over several days, relying on sightings in Albany and Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington, where he paid shop-owners with gold certificates given to him in the ransom. He was arrested in Echo, Oregon, on December 22, 1927, and then extradited to California, where he was convicted of Parker's murder. He made a written confession, in which he explained in detail how he strangled Parker, disarticulated her limbs, and disemboweled her while she was still alive. Hickman and his defense claimed that he was insane, and that a deity, "Providence", told him to commit the kidnapping and murder. He was one of the first defendants in California to use what was then a new law, which allowed defendants to plead that they were not guilty by reason of insanity. Hickman was convicted of the murder, and sentenced to death. After an unsuccessful appeal, he was executed by hanging at San Quentin State Prison in October 1928. Marion Parker was survived by her parents; elder brother; and twin sister, Marjorie.