GARVIN, Thomas
GARVIN
Posted By: Mona Knight <mknight5@ctc.net>
Date: 9/5/2009 at 14:36:24
Centerville, Iowa, The Appanoose Times, January 6, 1881.
A HORRIBLE DEED. A Man Murdered by His own Family, and Concealed in a Coal Pit. Coroner Shontz was summoned last Saturday to Caldwell township to hold an inquest over the body of Thomas GARVIN, who had been murdered and thrown into an abandoned coal shaft. The evidence at the inquest and the preliminary examination of the murdered man's wife brought out the following statements in regard to his deth: It seems that Garvin was addicted to strong drink and had abused his wife during the day that he met his death, having cursed and beaten her, while she was returning from the house of a neighbor. She had gone on home and was cutting some wood when he came up to her and told her to put down the ax, as he was going to kill her and the children; at this she started to run, and he followed her around the house until she sprang into a door and partly closed it. Garvin was trying to force the door open when his son, a lad about eleven years old, struck him on the side of the head with an ax, knocking him down and repeating the blow after he was down with the blade of the ax. The above is substantially the statements of both the woman and the boy. She further stated that she and the boy, after they found that they had committed a murder, consulted as to what they would do with the body, and finally decided to throw it into an abandoned coal shaft which the man himself had dug, and in which there was some ten feet of water standing. She further states that the murder was committed on the 22d of December, but as Garvin was away from home most of the time, no one ever missed him. It might never have been known how the man came to his death or that he was dead at all if his wife had not told it to one of her neighbors who in turn told her husband, who at once told other men and they went to the house and accused Mrs. Garvin of the deed, whereupon she confessed the whole matter as given above. The woman and boy and a small child are now in the jail here awaiting the sitting of Court; the other children, four in number, have been taken to the County Farm. The woman is a wretched looking object and seems completely broken down with the weight of crime and grief that she is carrying. There are many rumors of late that would lead to the supposition that the man was murdered in bed and that some one else was implicated, but the above is the story of the woman herself corroborated fully by the statements of the boy. Parties from this city who were present and saw the body after it had been dragged out of the shaft, say it was a horrible and ghastly sight. The man's head had been crushed by the blow of the ax and the face and chin were split open in three or four places. The body was perfectly naked when taken from the shaft, which would indicate that they had stripped him of his clothing before throwing him in.
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