Was a dead body found inside an amusement park “mummy”?
Dear Cecil: A few years ago there was a story in the papers about a TV crew that accidentally discovered a dead body inside a “mummy” in a Long Beach amusement park fun house. But I never saw anything more about it. Did they ever figure out how the body got in there, or who killed the guy? Was anybody ever brought to justice? — Milo T., Los Angeles Dear Milo: The mysterious Long Beach Mummy turned out to be the earthly remains of one Elmer J. McCurdy, an Oklahoma outlaw who was killed in a train robbery in 1911. In those blissful pre-television days, it seems, looking at dead felons was a popular form of amusement, and a celebrated cadaver was always in demand. Poor Elmer was duly embalmed and sold to a traveling carnival, in which he entertained thousands of fun seekers throughout the south and southwest. Due to the nature of his business, Elmer’s posthumous movements are difficult to trace, but apparently he enjoyed his greatest success in the 1930s under the management of Louis Sonn