Update: Please read the story below, but first, you can now watch a rare film about Lazarus from 1949.
By Don Ray and Neal Velgos
Indeed, feature stories and
articles appeared in the Los Angeles
Sentinel and the Los Angeles Times,
which brought thousands of people to Mrs. Green’s yard at the corner of 188th
Street and Avalon Boulevard where she would exhibit Lazarus at various times
during the day.
By Don Ray and Neal Velgos
First written in 1984
but never before published.
Who would believe such a
farfetched tale? A chicken gets its head chopped off, then comes back to life
and walks around crowing for three weeks as if nothing is wrong. Stranger things
have happened. That’s where the humans come in. Thousands show up to see the
headless wonder. City officials pose next to it for photos. And eventually, the
owner has to go to court to keep it alive.
Many folks in South-Central
Los Angeles believed the story — at least those who saw it with
their own eyes. They recalled that spring day in 1949 when a neighbor woman
bought the beheaded chicken, and had to change her dinner plans that evening.
The woman was Martha Green, and she named her headless — but definitely not
lifeless — chicken Lazarus. The two of them made nationwide news that year.
Lazarus put the small community
of Watts on the map, at least briefly. It was
long before riots that would start just
a block way and would scar the city and its people in 1965. It the story of
Lazarus played out years before Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers
would be recognized as a folk art landmark.
The story began on April 2nd
in a feed store in the 11800 block of San
Pedro Street, where a New Hampshire Red Fry had an
appointment with the chopping block. Mrs. Green paid $2 for the four-pound
chicken, dropped it in her bag and covered it with vegetables and canned goods.
It didn’t make a peep until she
got it home an hour later.
Mrs. Green told reporters that
she had dumped it in the sink, turned on the hot water and put away the food.
She turned around to pluck the bird, but what she saw made her scream and run
from the house. The rooster stood on the sink — very much alive — and crowed
the best it could — without its head, that is.
Mrs. Green, then close to 60
years old, was not frightened for long. She had raised and killed hundreds of
chickens on the farm back in Illinois,
and not one of them had ever ignored death’s call in quite this way. There had
to be some explanation, and her strong religious belief supplied the answer.
She spread the word that Lazarus was a sign from God.
Walter Pierce, 69, who still lived
in Watts in 1984, recalled how the story
spread around the neighborhood.
“Everyone around here was
saying a woman’s go a chicken with its neck cut off — crowing! It was a
miracle. And all miracles,” he said, “come from heaven.”
Edward S. Cooper, 77 in 1984,
was an attorney who watched with interest as the episode unfolded.
“The story got out very
quickly,” he said, “and people came to her home on foot, on bicycles, and
what-not. And from then on, the story was picked up and Lazarus became a real
thing.”
Albert B. Moore, who was 94 in
1984, knew Mrs. Green, and first saw Lazarus there at her house.
“He’d walk around there in the
yard,” Moore
said. “There were so many people you couldn’t see him. They used to feed the
rooster down through its throat. That was an amazing thing, you know.”
Edward Cooper said that the
people who gathered at the house were of all ages and races. However, some
spectators came with greater hopes than just seeing the miracle chicken — they
wanted the chance to experience their own miracle.
“It was an attraction, and
people thought it was a miracle — that Mrs. Green had healing powers,” said
Cooper. “People came to her home that were ill or crippled and wanted to have
some relief for their illnesses.”
There are no known accounts of
anyone being cured, but Mrs. Green attracted many followers, and the crowds
kept coming to her home.
The novelty turned to
controversy when one particular man appeared in the crowd one day. He was an
inspector for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) who
did not like what he saw. He insisted that authorities charge her with harboring
a wounded animal.
He ordered that Lazarus be put
out of his misery.
This was unacceptable to Mrs.
Green. No man had the right to kill this “act of God,” which, by now, she had
also grown quite fond of as a pet. She went to the attorney, Edward Cooper, who
had represented her before, and convinced him to help her fight the matter in
court.
In the meantime, the City of Los Angeles placed Lazarus
in the care of Dr. Allen Ross, a veterinarian. Mrs. Green, her attorney and Dr.
Ross went to court in Compton
before Justice of the Peace Stanley Moffat. I was a strange case for Cooper,
who said he donated his time and effort.
“I decided to take the case
because I felt that, if the evidence showed that the rooster was not suffering,
the SPCA would have no basis to request that it be destroyed.”
The star witness was Dr. Ross,
who testified that the person who had cut the head off the chicken had cut at
an angle — just above the brains. That’s what kept it alive.
It was the memorable conclusion
to the three-day hearing that Cooper remembered best.
“During the entire trial,” he
said, “the chicken was before Judge Moffat on the council’s table. And as he
found Mrs. Green not guilty, the chicken got up and started crowing.”
The judge acquitted Mr. Green,
and ordered that the veterinarian return Lazarus to her — by now, some two
weeks after it lost its head. And the rooster still showed no signs of ill
health.
For some reason, the case was
important enough to the SPCA that it refilled the case in downtown Los Angeles, another
jurisdiction, for the same purpose — to put Lazarus to death.
Lazarus was unaware of the second
battle that was pending, He was causally strolling around Mrs. Green’s fenced
front yard when they came to serve the papers. Mrs. Green and her loyal friends
were first shocked, and then angered. They immediately vowed to pick up the
fight one more time. But it was Lazarus, now on his twentieth extra day of
life, who decided that enough was enough.
He let out one last, defiant
crow, hung his neck and died.
The crowd was in turmoil, but
Mrs. Green reportedly looked toward the heavens and praised the Lord for taking
the life of Lazarus — before a mere mortal could do the task.
Newspapers from all over the
country reported the death of Lazarus. But the feeling of loss was greatest
right there in Mrs. Green’s neighborhood.
“I felt sad,” said Albert
Moore. “When you get attached to something — whether it’s a dog or a cat or a
headless rooster — and it should happen to pass, you can’t help but feel it.”
Not everyone, however, shared
his feelings — particularly some of Mrs. Green’s closest neighbors. Mildred
Jones, 74 in 1984, remembered the constant crowd of people near the house. She
said she chose not to see the chicken.
“I don’t enjoy looking at
something like that,” she said. “But there were a lot of people who came up
there at the corner. I didn’t want to see a chicken without its head, running
around. Those kinds of things are gruesome to me — like something on television
that gets to be too much for you.”
Another neighbor said she was
at work during the hours Lazarus was available for public viewing. However, she
said she probably wouldn’t have gone to see him anyway. She strongly
disapproved of Mrs. Green’s involvement with it, she said.
And there were many who doubted
that Lazarus was a diving miracle at all. Mrs. Kathryn Epps, 66 in 1984, was
the wife of Mrs. Green’s minister. She took a more scientific view of Lazarus.
“I expect it was something that
didn’t happen,” she said. “It was something in the nerves. I’m not one of those
people who thinks that God had something to do with it.”
For his legal efforts in the
case, Edward Cooper was able to enjoy a lot f of favorable publicity.
“The case had worldwide
attention and I received letters from all over the world,” he said. “I
represented several churches after that in the black area.”
Those who missed the chance to
see Lazarus in person while he was alive got to see him in a film featurette
that played in theaters throughout the South. Also, the drama of the Lazarus
affair came out in the form of a play that bore the name of the famous rooster.
It had a brief run in a downtown Los
Angeles theater. Theatergoers at the time even got to
see Lazarus in person — stuffed and standing proudly behind glass in the lobby.
Lazarus’ whereabouts is a bit
of a mystery today. The last anyone recalled seeing it was shortly before Mrs.
Green died, a decade or so after the rooster died. She was, for quite some
time, a local heroine. People said she kept the stuffed fowl on the mantelpiece
in her home. The people who lived in that house in 1984 knew nothing of
Lazarus’ fate. Several years ago, a demolition crew removed the house.
Other than the 105 Freeway a
half a block north and the townhouses that replaced Mrs. Green’s house, the
neighborhood has not changed that much.
In 1984, just about everybody
that had lived near there for very long had heard something about that local,
legendary story of Lazarus. But the newer neighbors, many of which are Latinos,
know nothing about what happened in 1949.
Walter Pierce, in 1984, was
still intrigued, however.
“I never went to see that
chicken,” he said. “I don’t know why, but I sure am sorry I didn’t.”
13 comments:
Lazarus definitely had a will to live. It's a shame the SPCA and others had to get involved. However, the article refers to Moffat as a judge at times. Stanley Moffat was a card carrying communist and never was appointed a judgeship. He ran for Congress on the Independent Progressive party ticket and lost. I find it divine intervention that such a case wound up in front of his bench !!! Thanks for sharing such an incredible and moving story.
It's an amazing story. Lazarus definitely had a will to live. However, the article refers to Stanley Moffat as a judge at times. The card carrying communist never received a judgeship. He ran for Congress on the Independent Progressive Party ticket but lost by a big margin. It was truly divine intervention that such a case wound up in front of his bench. Thanks for sharing such an incredible story with us.
Very interesting and good read. I hope this gets posted to your blog as you request comments.
Hi Don,
thanks for showing this, especially the photos. I had forgotten about the amazing church flyer. I brought up this story to an unbelieving group at the Lancaster prison, but one inmate my age vaguely remembered hearing about it in So Central.
neal
Don, thank you for saving this amazing story for so many years and bringing it back to life for all of us to read.
Thanks for the great comments. I hope everyone returns to this page so they can watch an actual film of Lazarus and Mrs. Green. Astounding.
I love this story!
That was an interesting story. My husband, Don Ray, told me about it many times. I'm pleased to see a film of Lazarus and to read the interesting story.
Good respond in return of this matter with genuine arguments and explaining all on the topic of that.
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