Frozen Time: The Mystery of the Insane Swede
While chopping wood near the Southwick-Granby town line on March 7, 1913, a man in Peter T. Malone's employ found a man's skeleton frozen in ice and snow. Near the skeleton, he saw remnants of clothing (a black shirt and dark trousers) but no shoes or hat. The woodchopper reported his findings to police officers in Connecticut. They determined that the skeleton was in neighboring Southwick, Massachusetts, and notified selectmen there since it was out of their jurisdiction. Southwick Selecman H. L. Miller and Dr. Edward Smith, a medical examiner from Westfield, Massachusetts, were among those who viewed the skeletal remains. While searching the woods for clues, they found a skull with the lower jaw bone missing some distance away. They also found pieces of a suspender shaped like a noose and fragments of a handkerchief. And, looking up at the tree above the skeleton, they saw pieces of the same handkerchief hanging off a branch. They also saw other pieces of a suspender dangling