Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Boy Rescued From Gypsies, Now of Unsound Mind

New York, 1908

Leonard Allen, Rescued from Gypsies, Runs Away Again — His Mother's Plaint.

Mrs. Mary Allen, of 14½ Union street, whose son, Leonard, was recently recovered from a gypsy camp at Fall River, Mass., called at the Times-Press office Friday and stated that the boy has again disappeared and she asked the aid of this paper in locating him. Mrs. Allen states that her son is of unsound mind and that she will not be at rest until he is committed to a State Hospital.

Leonard Allen, the weak-minded son of Mrs. Mary E. Allen, who wandered away from their home at 14½ Union street, Friday morning, was found late that afternoon on North street near the city limits. Mrs. Allen will take some steps to have him committed to an institution.

—Orange County Times-Press, Middletown, New York, April 14, 1908.


Fear of Gypsies Makes Boy Insane

Middletown, N. Y., May 22. — Seized with the fear that he would again be carried away by gypsies, Leonard Allen, fifteen years old, of this city, has become insane. He seized a large knife and threatened to kill his mother, Mrs. Mary Allen, a widow. The boy was committed to the Middletown State hospital. In August, 1906, young Allen, a healthy, rugged fellow, was taken away from this city by a band of gypsies. On March 18 last the boy was found at Fall River, Mass., | the police of that city having rescued him from gypsies.

—Distributed wire article


Told His Story Against Gypsies

Leonard Allen, the fourteen-year-old son of Mrs. Mary Allen, of 14½ Union street, who went to Fall River, Mass., the first of the month to give testimony before the grand jury against the Stanley gypsies, who took him away from Middletown two years ago, and were afterwards arrested for ill treating him at Fall River, returned to town Saturday noon, having been brought, back by Capt. Connor of the Fall River police force, who came here after him.

Young Allen was taken back the Middletown State Hospital, to which he had been committed after making an attempt on the life of his mother with a butcher knife.

—Orange County Times-Press, June 23, 1908, page 2.

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