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Speedy Atkins

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Name
  
Speedy Atkins


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Died
  
May 27, 1928, Paducah, Kentucky, United States

Similar
  
Elmer McCurdy , Kayhausen Boy , San Pedro Mountains Mummy

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Charles Henry "Speedy" Atkins (1875–1928) was an American tobacco worker in Paducah, Kentucky, who became posthumously notable. A pauper at death, he drowned in the Ohio River. The city turned over his body for a pauper's burial to his friend A.Z. Hamock, the only African-American undertaker in town. Hamock preserved Atkins' body in an experiment with preservatives, and occasionally displayed it after his death. Hamock's wife had custody of the remains for 45 years, during which Atkins' mummy acquired increasing notoriety. The body of Atkins was finally buried in 1994, 66 years after he drowned. The event was covered by national media and TV.

Contents

Speedy Atkins Front Porch Yarns Speedy Atkins His Story

Biography

Speedy Atkins The Carpetbagger Speedy the Mortuary Mummy and his friends

Charles Atkins was born in Tennessee and, as an adult, moved to Kentucky to find work. Not much is known about his life. He settled in downtown Paducah as an hourly employee at a plant with ties to the tobacco industry. He gained the nickname "Speedy" at work because of his speed with handling tobacco. He was also known as a womanizer. Single and without known relatives, he befriended A. Z. Hamock, an African American who owned the city's only funeral home for blacks in the segregated city.

Speedy Atkins We visited Speedy in Paducah KY July 1985 He appeared on an

In May 1928, Speedy went fishing and fell with his line into the Ohio River, where he drowned. The city transferred his body to Hamock's Funeral Home for a pauper's burial. Having created a powerful preservative, Hamock decided to experiment with it to preserve Atkins' body. The mixture transformed the corpse into a wooden-like statue. While Atkins' black skin was altered to a reddish color, his facial features remained recognizable.

Speedy Atkins Henry Speedy Atkins drowned in the Ohio River in1928 No kin folk

Hamock put the preserved body of Speedy on occasional display at the funeral home; he mostly stored it in a closet. He did not charge a fee for viewers. Washed away by waters of the Ohio River during the Paducah flood of 1937, Speedy's body was recognized and returned to Hamock at his funeral home.

Speedy Atkins Charles Henry Speedy Atkins 1875 1928 Find A Grave Memorial

After Hamock died in 1949, his wife Velma took over custody of Speedy's body. She kept it for another 45 years before burial. During the 66 years that Speedy's body was preserved, awareness of the mummified corpse became more widespread.

Speedy Atkins Charles Henry Speedy Atkins 1875 1928 Find A Grave Memorial

Mrs. Hamock planned to bury the mummy in 1991 on her late husband's 100th birthday, but waited until May 1994. About 200 people attended Atkins' 1994 funeral and burial in Maplelawn Cemetery in Paducah.

Representation in other media

Speedy Atkins The Carpetbagger Speedy the Mortuary Mummy and his friends

Because of his body's unique condition, "Speedy" Atkins' mummy was featured in national media as well as Ripley's Believe It Or Not, the TV program That's Incredible, and the National Enquirer. His story was also told on the Discovery Channel.

References

Speedy Atkins Wikipedia