a privy worth digging. if found

jeff of pa

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the confession of John Caldwell Colt


John Caldwell Colt (March 1, 1810 – November 18, 1842),the brother of Samuel Colt of Colt firearm fame, was an American fur trader, bookkeeper, law clerk, and teacher.

In 1842 Colt was convicted of the murder of a printer named Samuel Adams, to whom Colt owed money over the publication of a bookkeeping textbook. Colt killed Adams with a hatchet the previous year in what he claimed was self-defense, but he had afterwards covered up the crime by disposing of the body. When the body was discovered, Colt was the first suspect. The trial became a sensation in the New York press, because of his family connections, the manner of disposal, and Colt's somewhat arrogant demeanor in the courtroom. Colt was found guilty and sentenced to hang in 1842, but committed suicide on the morning of his execution.

Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.), 09 Feb. 1842. 1.jpg

Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, February 09, 1842, Image 1 « Chronicling America « Library of Congress
 

ARC

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Arrrg... I will leave that dig for you :P
 

dts52

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Hmmm. How much money are we talking about? It just might be worth my while. LOL
HH
dts
 

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jeff of pa

jeff of pa

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Digging 175 year old Privy's without the Money are worth it to those
with the health, Energy & Knowledge.
the possible 175 to 200 year old coins , add historically relevant
relics from a somewhat famous event would be a Bonus
 

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jeff of pa

jeff of pa

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lol although, I can't say for sure ,
I believe the murder was in New York somewhere .
 

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jeff of pa

jeff of pa

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sadly it appears it was somewhere along Broadway

I'm not sure if any ground exists there any more

1.jpg

2.jpg





According to R. M. Devens in a work published in 1876, the victim, Samuel Adams, was “a highly respected printer” to whom Colt had “for some time owed … a bill for printing, which he was unprepared to pay. The final call made by Adams, at Colt’s room on Broadway, for a settlement of the account, resulted in a tragedy rarely equaled in the annals of crime.”5
Devens does not say just how the killing was done but gives a detailed account of how it was discovered.

John Caldwell Colt: A Notorious Accountant
 

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