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Exposure: Death in the Longyard

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On the afternoon of November 14, 1911, a grim discovery was made in the Longyard section of Southwick, Massachusetts. A farmer found a man’s body lying on sloping ground near an old cart road, about a quarter mile from Fletcher’s Mill. The man was positioned with his head pointed downhill, his face and one hand covered in blood. Scratches marked his arms, ankles, and shins. At his feet lay a coat bearing the label of Haynes & Co. of Springfield. He wore an outing shirt, Shirley President suspenders, and size six shoes. Fletcher's Gristmill in Southwick was renowned nationwide for its high-quality “Old Mill Brand." An Envelope, Bottles, and Other Finds Scattered belongings surrounded the scene, and the grass was trampled. About thirty feet away, searchers found a pouch of tobacco and a pipe. Forty feet away lay a couple of matches and an empty bottle. Several hundred feet farther, in a plowed field, investigators discovered a black derby hat—made by Chamberlin & Shaughn...

Revealed Fates: The Missing Groom and the Eccentric Inventor

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Chilling Find On the warm afternoon of August 14, 1942, two boys from Otis Street in Westfield set out with rifles in hand. Sixteen-year-old Alexander Grabowski and his friend, fifteen-year-old Frederick Witek, were hunting crows in the fields and woods of neighboring Southwick, Massachusetts. Instead of birds, they stumbled upon a far more chilling discovery: a badly decomposed body lying in a swamp about one hundred feet east of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad tracks. Startled, the boys made their way back toward Westfield. When they came upon a passing police cruiser, they waved it down and reported what they had seen. The patrolmen accompanied them to the site, confirmed the grim discovery, and quickly notified the Massachusetts State Police and the medical examiner. The remains were ordered removed to the undertaking rooms of the Lambson Furniture Company in Westfield, but the hearse became mired in the swamp. Darkness fell before it could be freed, so the body was...

Unfenced: The Hidden Cost of Fire Protection, Granville 1954

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A spring morning in Granville, Massachusetts, turned into heartbreak for the Duris family on May 11, 1954. Two-year-old William A. Duris was playing in the front yard of the family’s home on Beech Hill Road alongside his sisters, three-year-old Deborah and four-year-old Andrea. Beech Hill - Granville, Massachusetts The children’s play was interrupted when the girls suddenly rushed inside to tell their mother, Barbara Duris , that William had fallen into a hole in the backyard. Barbara ran outside, calling out for help to her own mother, who lived nearby. In a frantic rush, she jumped into the water-filled hole and pulled her son out. Though he had only been submerged a short time, William’s small body had already turned blue. The hole, about four to six feet deep, was one of several maintained by the town for fire protection in areas without hydrants. Like others, it had no fence or railing to keep children away. Barbara raced her son to Noble Hospital in Westfield, Massachusetts, as...

Failed Justice: The Avoidable Tragedies of Ricky Olson and Edward Davis

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On the evening of Thursday, January 17, 1980, tragedy struck along Southwick Road in Westfield, Massachusetts. At 7:53 p.m., thirty-four-year-old Louiseann (Danahey) Olson was driving southbound with her three children—Christine, age eleven; Richard Jr. (“Ricky”), age nine; and David, age seven. The family was on their way home when Louise prepared to turn right onto Forest Glen Drive. At that moment, their car was struck with tremendous force. The other driver, twenty-four-year-old Edward A. Davis of Southwick, Massachusetts, had been speeding down the breakdown lane, overtaking several cars on the right. His reckless maneuver placed him directly in the path of the Olson family’s turning vehicle. The impact was catastrophic. The Olson car was hurled some two hundred feet, scattering debris along the roadside. Both cars were destroyed. The violence of the crash decapitated young Ricky, and injured his mother, who was rushed to Noble Hospital with chest and facial injuries. Christine an...

The Mysterious End of “Uncle Frank”

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 *This story was originally titled "Uncle Frank's Last Stumble" On the evening of Saturday, March 24, 1923, a passerby on Riverdale Road in West Springfield came upon a grim sight. An elderly man lay face down in a snowdrift near the tracks of the Holyoke - Springfield trolley line, his face badly cut and bruised and his chest crushed. He wore a brown slouch hat, a short black overcoat, and a brown suit with the initials F. B. on his shirt collar. He had graying hair and sported a gray mustache. His watch had stopped at 7:15. Despite the gathering crowd, he died before medical aid could arrive. Curiosity seekers quickly clogged Riverdale Road, lining it with automobiles and pressing close for a look. One bystander later told police he had encountered the man around 7:00 p.m., stumbling and struggling to walk. Believing him intoxicated, the passerby helped him a short distance, moving him away from the trolley line and leaving him against a tree before going to phone the p...