Maison Magazine

August 2018

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Mystery and Murder Lake Crescent often lies quietly as an oft- seen treasure only making headlines when it gives up an old secret, such as the 2002 discovery of the wreck of a 1927 Chevrolet that carried a missing couple, Blanch and Russell Warren, to a watery grave in July 1929. This is not the only secret the old Lake has held. In 1936, Hallie Latham Illingworth, a Kentucky native who became a waitress at Lake Crescent Tavern, married a local beer truck driver. Multiple reports of domestic violence ensued and the local police were called several times to intervene. Before Christmas in 1937, Hallie suddenly vanished. Her family didn't hear a word from her for months, while her husband claimed she ran off with another man. He later left the state and moved to California with a woman from Port Angeles with whom he was rumored to be romantically involved. For three years, Hallie was considered a missing person. On July 6th, 1940, two fishermen on Lake Crescent spotted a woman's body floating on the lake, the body was nearly perfectly preserved. According to HistoryLink.Org, "The dead woman's flesh had turned to something like Ivory Soap", a condition known as 'saponification.' The soap-like condition resulted from minerals in the lake interacting with the fats in the woman's body. The lake's near-freezing temperatures had virtually refrigerated the corpse for years. The body was identified as Hallie, who was then dubbed The Lady of the Lake by locals. Her husband was eventually arrested for her murder. Beaten and strangled to death, Hallie's body was weighed down with heavy weights and dropped into the deepest part of Lake Crescent. Many say that the lake is still haunted.

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