Monday, June 13, 2022

FLIGHT OF FANCY - "The Most Beautiful Suicide"

I doubt Galileo ever considered the human implications of his experiments, but the formula he came up with reduces the problem to startling simplicity. Six and one half seconds after she threw herself off the 86th floor Observatory of the Empire State Building (above), Evelyn McHale landed on the roof of a limousine parked on West 33rd Street, 1,050 feet below. The science was brutally simple. The humanity - not so simple. Just consider the recent history of that particular spot the unhappy lady landed on. 

The block between 5th and 6th Avenues, and 33rd and 34th streets had once been occupied by the mansion (above, foreground)  of real estate mogul William Backhouse Astor and his wife Caroline Webster "Lina" Schermerhorn Astor.  She was the leader of the vaunted "Four Hundred", the cream of Manhattan upper crust society. The number supposedly represented how many could have comfortably fit in Mrs. Astor's  ballroom. 

Then, in 1893 her son, John Jacob Astor IV, had her mansion torn down and replaced by, first, the 400 room Waldorf Hotel...
...and then in 1897, immediately adjacent, by the 550 room Astoria Hotel (above). Joining the two hotels ran a marble Corinthian column lined corridor, connecting five star restaurants in each hotel, and dubbed "Peacock Alley".
It was the place for elegantly dressed wives and mistresses to be seen strolling on Saturday afternoons and the original location of the famous New York Easter Parade.  Then, in 1929 the parades came to an end when the hotel management company sold both properties for $13.5 million to the Empire State Corporation. 
And the instant the sale was finalized, the president of Empire State, John Jacob Raskob, led his contractors through the front doors. He was intent upon capturing for his Connecticut estate the peacock alley marble columns (above, left) he had often admired. To his disappointment, those symbols of Gilded Age luxury and extravagance proved to have been plaster impostors.
Construction began on the Empire State Building on 17 March, 1930. The frame rose at the astounding rate of 4 ½ floors a week. Midway into the construction, one of the steelworkers was  fired in the middle of his shift. He threw himself down an open elevator shaft, becoming the first person to commit suicide on the new premises.
John Jacob Raskob may have thought about joining him, because 410 days later, a month and a half ahead of schedule, the building opened. The final cost was $5 million under budget, mostly because the depression had devalued the dollar. And because of that, on opening day, May Day, 1931, the Empire State Building was well over half empty.  It remained so for years. A decade later the press was still referring to The Empire State Building as  the "empty State Building" - a financial disaster.
The building barely survived financially into World War Two, when,  at 9:40am on a foggy Saturday, 28 July, 1945, a twin engine B-25 Mitchell Bomber slammed into the Empire State Building between the 78th and 80th floors (above). Fourteen people were killed.,
Nineteen year old elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver  was working on the 80th floor when the collision happened, and suffered severer burns. Worse, when firemen put her on an adjacent elevator, to get her to the ground floor so she could be transported to the hospital, those damaged cables broke and dropped her 75 stories into the basement.  
Amazingly, Betty Lou (above) survived with a broken pelvis, back and neck.  That remains the world's longest survivable elevator fall in history.  After five months of recovery she was released from the hospital.
In 1947 Evelyn McHale (above) was a 20 year old bookkeeper at the Kitab engraving company, in the Long Island community of Baldwin, New York. 
Over the weekend of 19 April of that year she traveled by rail the 67 miles to the little town of Easton, Pennsylvania. It was known as the “City of Churches”, with the highest ratio of houses of Christian worship to overall population in the United States.
But during prohibition it had also been known as “The Little Apple” where police protected the speakeasies, which every weekend were filled with New York City tourists looking to get drunk. On the hill overlooking Easton was the (then) all male Lafayette College, a military school of higher learning. And one of the 2,000 students attending Lafayette College in 1947 was Evelyn McHale’s fiancĂ©
Evelyn McHale's 1947 visit to Pennsylvania proved to be a disaster. Her fiance broke off their engagement. In some ways this kind of thing was to be expected. So many lives had been placed on hold during the Second World War, and so many lives had changed during the war, and were still changing once the war had ended.
The divorce rate, which pre-war had been two out of every one thousand marriages, had doubled in 1946. But those were statistics, and human beings are not.  When Evelyn returned broken hearted to her bookkeeping job on Monday morning, the numbers she oversaw brought her no comfort. And in the weeks that followed she obsessed on her disappointment.
People do not commit suicide (from the Latin “sui caedere”; to kill yourself) because they are depressed. But add depression to alcohol or other drugs, and the risk of suicide increases by 90%. Add easy access to a fire arm and they become a certainty.  And so do the odds if the individual has access to tall buildings or bridges.
If there is a family history of suicide, a history of physical or sexual abuse, or if friends or family have recently committed suicide, the risk grows even greater. And finally, if the person at risk is a Christian the risk is greater still. Protestants and Catholics kill themselves much more often than do Jews, or Buddhists or Muslims. Nobody seems to know why.
In the first fifteen years after its opening, 16 people threw themselves to their deaths from the Empire State Building.  But 1947 was a very bad year. In January a suicide injured an innocent pedestrian on the street below, and a lawsuit was threatened. The Empire State Corporation, which still owned the building, began to slowly consider alternatives, looking for a solution which did not disturb the esthetics of the 86th floor Observation Deck.
Still, at about 10:30 on the morning of Thursday May 1st, 1947, when Evelyn McHale stepped from the elevator on the 86th floor observatory, there was nothing between her and eternity, except the impulse to clamber atop the chest high wall (above)  and take the step.  First she took off her grey (or perhaps green) cloth coat and draped it over the wall near the south west corner of the observation deck. 
Then she laid her purse on the floor. She removed her shoes. Then she deliberately let her scarf float from her fingers into the void. She watched it swirl and float in the wind eddies. And when she saw it begin to slip downward, she pulled herself up atop the lip of the wall, stood and after a brief moment, threw herself into space.
Six seconds is long enough to think, and if Evelyn McHale was not radically different than those who attempted suicide from San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge and lived, then we know what she was thinking as she plummeted weightless toward the pavement. Universally these failed California suicides report that their first thought after jumping was, “This is the worst mistake of my life.” After that first second, however, the sensory overload would likely have not left her with the ability to even think of a prayer.
In the first second of the end of her life Evelyn McHale dropped 32 feet, or about three stories. Over the next second she fell an additional 64 feet. Over the third second she traveled another 128 feet. Over the fourth second she fell 238 feet. By the fifth second she was traveling over 60 miles an hour, and the sensation of falling would have caused her body to release massive amounts of adrenalin. But she would never feel its effects. 
She might have felt an eerily calm, which I suspect would have surprised her. She might have realized she was falling away from the building, driven by the wind and by her effort to avoid the abutments and ledges which jutted from the sides of the building (above).  And if she had felt the regret for her decision to jump, it was now too late. At the speed of about 100 miles an hour, her body slammed onto the sheet steel roof of a Cadillac limousine parked 200 feet up 34th Street from 5th Avenue.
Something caught traffic cop John Morrissey’s eye. He was working at the corner of 34th Street and Fifth Avenue. When he looked up he saw a white cloth, dancing lightly about the upper floors of the Empire State Building. It was just 10:40 A.M. and suddenly there was a loud crash, and the wrenching sound of bending metal and shattered glass tinkling on concrete. Officer Morrissey ran west on 34th Street.
He found a crowd gathered around the big black limo, with United Nations’ license plates, parked on the north side of the street. All of the windows were shattered, and the roof had been caved in. There, embraced by the folded steel, Officer Morrissey saw the body of a young woman.
Her white gloved left hand seemed to be playing with the pearls strung around her neck, almost as if counting a rosary. Her white gloved right hand was cautiously raised as if seeking permission to interrupt. She was barefooted. One stocking was bunched about her crossed ankles, as if she had been caught in the act of undressing. There was no visible blood, no dismemberment. She was a sleeping beauty. But images can be deceiving, as the workers from the medical examiners office could have testified.
When they picked her up, her once firm body must have behaved more like Jell-O. Every bone would have been fractured and splintered, and her internal organs turned to mush by the violence of her death.
Those who contemplate suicide should consider the impact of their actions on the innocent who must clean up after them. Suicide is the rudest way to exit this world.
A few moments after her death, Robert Wiles, a young photography student, approached the scene. He had been eating breakfast across the street, at the same lunch counter as the limo’s driver. Now he approached the scene and snapped a single photo. He immortalized Evelyn McHale. He sold the photo to Life Magazine, which published it a week later, on page 43. The caption (above) read; “At the bottom of the Empire State Building the body of Evelyn McHale reposes calmly in the grotesque bier her body punched into the top of a car.” Robert Wiles never took another professional photograph. Each suicide, it is figured, shatters the lives of at ;east six other people. I suspect, Robert Wiles was one of the first shattered by Evelyn McHale's suicide.
The New York Times headlined the story, “Empire State Leap Ends Life of Girl, 20”. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said, “Doubting Woman Dives to Death”, and the Chicago Tribune claimed, “Afraid to Wed, Girl Plunges to Death from Empire State.” (above)  The photograph, now labeled as "The Most Beautiful Suicide”, may have been at least partly responsible for the 14 July, 1947 fatal leap of a 22 year old man from the same observation deck. Guards were now stationed to stop any more copycats.  And during October and November, they managed to avert five more deaths.
Finally the management was forced to admit this was not a temporary trend, and in December the now iconic inwardly curving fencing was installed to discourage those possessed by the impulse to end their lives.
Over time other sad people making "The greatest mistake of their lives", have realizing lower floors and windows installed before the advent of air conditioning can still provide enough height to assure death upon impact after jumping from the Empire State Building.
You might not know it to read the headlines but every year twice as many Americans kill themselves as kill each other. There is another suicide in the United States every 17 minutes. And although it is only the 11th leading cause of death ( 7th leading cause of death in males, 16th in females), suicide is the 3rd leading cause of death for all humans between the ages of 15 and 24 years of age, and the second leading cause of death in college students. The working theory seems to be that if we just don't talk about it, it will go away. But honestly, that simply does not seem to be working.  If you think someone might be suicidal, then they are. Do not leave them alone. Immediately remove their access to firearms and all drugs, and call 911. Death can be a release, but it is never beautiful. Never.
 - 30 -

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