American Decades
In Cold Blood
The Clutters.
On Saturday night, 14 November 1959, the lights did not burn late at the home of Herbert Clutter and his family near Holcomb, Kansas. The Clutters customarily rose early on Sunday to prepare for church. In many ways they represented the heartland American ideal. Herbert Clutter was a successful wheat farmer and the current chairman of the Kansas Conference of Farm Organizations. A respected man in the community, Clutter never touched alcohol or tobacco or even caffeine. His wife Bonnie was a retiring woman and something of an invalid, but she was well liked and was a caring mother of their four children, two of whom were still at home. Their youngest daughter, Nancy, was six-teen and her brother Kenyon was a year younger. Both were straight-A students. Mr. and Mrs. Clutter had two other daughters.The Murder Scene.
The morning of 15 November, two friends of Nancy whom the Clutters took to church each Sunday...
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1960's Law and Justice
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Attorney General and the Teamster
- Baker v. Carr
- The Boston Strangler
- The Trial of the Chicago Seven
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- In Cold Blood
- Criminal Law in the 1960s
- The Drug Wars
- Freedom of Religion
- Juvenile Delinquency
- Juvenile Rights
- Mississippi Burning
- New York Times v. Sullivan
- The Shootist
- The Supreme Court of the 1960s
- Voting Rights Act of 1965
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1960–1969
