While some traditional paths still maintain the name, in more recent generations "lovers' lanes" are often found in cultures built around the automobile—lovers often make out in a car or van for privacy.
Crime
Due to the typically isolated location of most lovers' lanes, they have occasionally been the setting for violent crime.[3] For example:
Three couples were attacked at a remote lovers' lane in Duck Island, New Jersey between 1938 and 1942. Clarence Hill confessed and was convicted of the murders two years later.[6]
A series of unsolved murders and violent crimes in 1946, dubbed the Texarkana Moonlight Murders, began with two attacks which targeted couples at lovers' lanes in the Texarkana area.[7]
In Palos Verdes, California, a gang of teens robbed multiple cars on a lovers' lane in October 1955, and were caught raping a thirteen-year-old girl.[8]
In 1963, a lovers' lane site at Fuller's Bridge, Sydney became notorious as the location of the bodies of CSIRO scientist Dr. Gilbert Stanley Bogle and Margaret Olive Chandler, the wife of one of his colleagues. The cause of death, while indicative of poisoning, could not be definitively determined, and apart from Mrs. Chandler's husband, Geoffrey, who was considered the prime suspect by the New South Wales Police, no one to-date has been charged. The Bogle-Chandler case has baffled law enforcement and forensic experts up to present day.[9][10]
In 1971, Patricia Mann and Jesse McBane were kidnapped from one lover's lane and murdered at another. The next year, another couple narrowly escaped a similar kidnapping from a lover's lane.[13][14]
Several attacks perpetrated by the Son of Sam serial killer also took place in such settings.[15]
Three couples were shot with a .38 caliber pistol by an unidentified perpetrator in the Atlanta Lover's Lane Murders of 1977, resulting in three deaths.[16]
Two Mercer University students were killed by Andy Cook at a lovers' lane location in Georgia on January 2, 1995.[17]
^Newton, Michael (2013). The Texarkana Moonlight Murders: The Unsolved Case of the 1946 Phantom Killer. McFarland. ISBN978-1-476-60578-4.
^Cross, Gary S. (2018). Machines of youth : America's car obsession. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. p. 87. ISBN9780226341644. OCLC1004264026.