Andrew Jackson Marsh |
Carson City, N. T. , Monday, Nov. 24, 1862
my husband Richard, not Con Mason |
These facts I do know, however: That about one o'clock this morning a pistol shot was fired in the street; that a few minutes later a man came into the Ormsby House and stated that he had just stumbled over a dead man; that in company with several men and a lantern I went to the spot, three or four squares west of the Ormsby House, and there found a well-dressed, youngish looking man lying stiff and stark on his back, his hat on his breast, his chestnut hair dabbling in a large pool of blood, and his glazed eyes staring upward at the stars of heaven. He was lying in front of a small wooden house with "to let" on the door, and a porch which may have afforded concealment to the lurking assassin. The man appeared to have been shot dead in his tracks, without a word of warning, and to have fallen just as he was found. There was a round hole under his left ear, and a corresponding hole nearly opposite under the right ear, which probably marked the passage of the leaden messenger of death into and out of his head.
You can read the full account HERE; it includes a French love interest, a couple of suspects and a possible motive for the murder.
Hi Caroline this is Tess I left a reveiw on The case of the deadly desperados on the maple class blog I love that book so much love Txx
ReplyDeleteThank you, Tess! :-)
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