Side-by-side composite: at left, a young Black woman in a dark blazer stands outdoors with hands clasped, looking at the camera; at right, a book cover titled Inquisition for Blood: The Making of a Black Female Serial Killer in the Jim Crow South by Lauren Nicole Henley, with a stylized axe silhouette in the background.

Second Thursday Lecture Series
Inquisition for Blood: The Making of a Black Female Serial Killer in the Jim Crow South
with Lauren Nicole Henley

Thu, Jul 09, 2026
6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Central
Virtual Events

Join us for a virtual evening with Lauren Nicole Henley as she discusses her new book Inquisition for Blood: The Making of a Black Female Serial Killer in the Jim Crow South (LSU Press, March 2026). This program is sponsored by the Friends of the Cabildo as part of the Second Thursday Lecture Series. It is free and open to the public, but registration is required. The program will take place on Zoom. Please register here and a link will be emailed to you on the day of the lecture.

About the Book
For three years in the early 1900s, a serial killer zigzagged across the rice belt region of the United States, using an everyday ax to slaughter Black families living within a mile of the Southern Pacific Railroad’s Sunset Route. The similarities among the murders were uncanny, yet lawmen in early twentieth-century America had neither the technology nor the vocabulary to identify the serial killer in their midst. Instead, regional authorities worked the cases as individual homicides.

This approach led to seemingly contradictory realities: the unknown killer was dubbed “the axman,” and a young Black woman named Clementine Barnabet was arrested as a suspect. She offered questionable confessions and swiftly gained international recognition, as the press reimagined Clementine as a cult-leading, ax-wielding, sacrifice-driven serial killer. But there was a problem: Clementine was already in jail by the time more than half of the murders occurred.

In Inquisition for Blood, Lauren Nicole Henley examines this conundrum as she describes how axman madness consumed an entire region for years. She unpacks these crimes and their aftermaths to show how Black communities responded to incomprehensible violence, how the state criminalized Blackness, and how a young Black woman ultimately came to be understood as a serial killer. Drawing on more than three thousand newspaper articles, hundreds of pages of court records, prison ledgers, death certificates, censuses, city directories, and more, Henley tells a historical narrative that is as intriguing as any true crime novel, challenging our assumptions about who has the ability to get away with murder.

About the Author
Lauren Nicole Henley is an assistant professor in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond. She earned her PhD in history from the University of Texas at Austin.

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