In the damp woods of Olalla, Washington, a woman named Linda Hazzard built a sanitarium that promised health, purity, and healing. Her method? Fasting. Extreme fasting.By the time newspapers branded her clinic Starvation Heights, it was too late for many of her patients. Wealthy heiresses wasted away to skeletons, wills were altered, and the line between healer and killer blurred.In this weekâs episode of Same Crime, Different Time, we explore:* Why alternative medicine thrived in the early 1900s* How distrust of mainstream doctors made Hazzardâs promises so persuasive* The heartbreaking story of the Williamson sisters* And why her âcuresâ sound eerily familiar in todayâs wellness culture, from detox cleanses to starvation cultsHistory doesnât just repeatâit resurfaces in new disguises. Listen to the full episode â HERESame Crime, Different Time: haunting true crime and history from the Pacific Northwest.Sources:Smithsonian Magazine â âThe Doctor Who Starved Her Patients to Deathâ by Bess Lovejoy.HistoryLink.orgâDr. Linda Burfield Hazzard opens a sanitarium at Olalla, Kitsap County, on February 19, 1911.Washington State Archives â âLinda Burfield Hazzard: Healer or Murderess?â primary sources and court records.MNopedia (Minnesota Historical Society)ââHazzard, Linda Burfield Perry (1867â1938).âKNKX Public Radio â âOlalla, Washingtonâs Infamous Starvation Doctor.âhttps://murderpedia.org/female.H/h/hazzard-linda.htmSeattle Daily Times, 1907â1912 coverage (via digital archives).People Magazine â âBritish Heiresses Went to Trusted Doctor, Then One Was Starved to Death.â This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jbchambers.substack.com/subscribe
In the damp woods of Olalla, Washington, a woman named Linda Hazzard built a sanitarium that promised health, purity, and healing. Her method? Fasting. Extreme fasting.By the time newspapers branded her clinic Starvation Heights, it was too late for many of her patients. Wealthy heiresses wasted away to skeletons, wills were altered, and the line between healer and killer blurred.In this weekâs episode of Same Crime, Different Time, we explore:* Why alternative medicine thrived in the early 1900...