Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Arts & Culture

HISTORY DETECTIVES SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS: Texas Servant Girl Murders

Detectives Tukufu Zuberi and Kaiama Glover on location in Austin, Texas. Can they solve the case of the Servant Girl Murders?
Courtesy of Lion Television
Detectives Tukufu Zuberi and Kaiama Glover on location in Austin, Texas. Can they solve the case of the Servant Girl Murders?

Airs Tuesday, July 15, 2014 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV

The HISTORY DETECTIVES SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS team brings cutting edge tools to some of our biggest historical mysteries. Each new hour-long episode asks probing questions behind a single iconic mystery from America's past. Three investigators team up to solve each case: Wes Cowan, an independent appraiser and auctioneer; Kaiama Glover, professor at Barnard College, Columbia University; and Tukufu Zuberi, professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. As the detectives unearth fresh evidence, sift through clues and crisscross the country in search of answers, they reveal new perspectives on stories we thought we knew.

Eula Phillips was a victim of what is believed to be one of the first serial murders on record. Can the HISTORY DETECTIVES solve this heinous crime?
Courtesy of Dorothy Larson
Eula Phillips was a victim of what is believed to be one of the first serial murders on record. Can the HISTORY DETECTIVES solve this heinous crime?

Autopsy Report for Susan Hancock

On Dec. 24, 1885, Susan Hancock was brutally murdered in Austin, Texas. This report is from an autopsy of her body, performed on December 28 by Dr. W. J. Burt. A transcript is below the images, and you can learn more about the "Texas Servant Girl Murders" in episode three of HISTORY DETECTIVES SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS.

"Texas Servant Girl Murders" - In 1885, six African-American servants and two white society women were killed in Austin, Texas — almost all bludgeoned with an ax, dragged from their beds and raped. As quickly as the killings started, they stopped. No killer was ever identified.

Desperate to find someone to blame, the authorities first rounded up hundreds of black men. Later, they pointed the finger at a white man, James Philips, whom they accused of murdering his teenage bride. Although Philips was eventually acquitted, the trial was akin to the OJ Simpson trial, with sensational, lurid details spilling out in court. After the furor and panic died down, so did the memory of the killings.

Advertisement

Can the HISTORY DETECTIVES solve these murders? They pore over the records and apply cutting-edge police techniques to determine who killed the servant girls of Austin.

PBS HISTORY DETECTIVES is on Facebook, and you can follow @histdetectives on Twitter. Past episodes and video clips from the series are available for online viewing.

Texas Servant Girl Murders Preview

History Detectives Special Investigations Preview

"The detectives are back with a new mission: Solving the biggest mysteries in American history! History Detectives Special Investigations premieres Tuesday