Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Twisted Roots
Search
Search
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
George Vail Snodgrass
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
== Testimony == George Vail Snodgrass, was the first witness called. (The witnes is a young man not over 25 years of age, of youthful appearance): I have resided her, with Mrs. Cunningham, in the middle of November last; I didn't come here to agree for board, I was invited by Mrs. Cunningham to come here as a friend; I have been intimate with all the family - that is Mrs. Cunningham and her two daughters; was not intimate with Eckel; I knew him by sight; have not been in the habit of sitting in Mrs. Cunningham's bedroom with Mr. Eckel, but have done so; never saw Mr. Burdell sitting in Mrs. Cunningham's bedroom while Eckel was in the there. never saw him in the room at any time; never observed any close intimacy between Mr. Burdell and Mrs. C., but I suspected ii; I suspected that they had been married; Mrs. Cunningham never told me that she was not married to Mr. Burdell, or that she accused him of breach of promise of marriage; I heard that they had a difficulty in consequence of Mr. B's not fulfilling a promise of marriage to Mrs. C; I heard it from Miss Helen Cunningham Mrs. Cunningham never told me anything regarding the breach of promise; did not know that Mr. Burdell had accused Mrs. Cunningham of stealing papers otu of his secretary; I have been constantly in the house during the principal portions of the day; Mr. Burdell used to leave the house about 8 or 8:30 o'clock in the morning; I do not know at what hour he dined; never saw him dine in the house; I do not know at what hour he usually came in at night; on some occasions I have let him in at 12 and 2 o'clock; I let him in on Thursday as late as two o'clock; the door can be opened with a night key; the door was locked on Thursday night, but not bolted. Never knew the hall door to be bolted at night; I last saw Mr. Burdell on Friday morning between 8 and half-past 8 o'clock; did not see him after that during the day, or until after his death; I was eating my dinner at 7 o'clock on Friday evening in this house; Mrs. Cunningham, her daughers, her son Geroge dined with me; I met Eckel on the stairs as I was going up; suppose he went out. After dinner I went up stairs into the drawing room; there was nobody in the room at the time; I remained in the room about twenty minutes, after which I went up stairs, I believe; I came down again; I think Mrs. Cunningham came down with me; I then went out with Miss Helen Cunningham; it was then abotu 7:30 o'clock; Mrs. Cunnignahm and her other daughter were in the parlor when we left; I was out about three-quarters of an hour; when I returned I found George and Willie Cunningham were in the back parlor; Miss Cunningham and I went into the parlor and remained there from about twenty minutes to half an hour; I then went up stairs to Mrs. Cunningham's room; it was then about 9 o'clock; Miss Augusta Cunningham was in the room, but no other person was there; Mr. Eckel was not there; cannot state positively that Mrs. Cunningham was up stairs at the time; did not see her; I remained an hour and a half up there; I then went down into the kitchen; saw nobody in the kitchen; I went down for a pitcher of water, and intended to get some cider; got only a pitcher of water; did not observe the hall doors when I passed; when I returned to Mrs. C's bed room, Mrs. C., her two daughters, Mr. Eckel, and I think her two sons, were in the room at the time; do not know what they were talking about; Mrs. C's daughter said something abotu going to school; I remained in the room from ten to fifteen minutes, after which I retired to bed; it was then near eleven o'clock; I am positive that I left Mrs. C. and her two daughters in the room; think Eckel left before I did; I went direct to bed; I sleep in the 4th story; did not go down stairs again that night; heard no noise in the house; cannot swear that Eckel went to bed before me; The first notice I received of the murder was at 9 o'clock the next morning; when the cook informed me of it I went immediately up stairs to inform the family; Mrs. Cunningham appeared ot be much affected and began to rave and pull her hair, and it was as much as I could do to hold her; I then wnet out for Dr. Roberts, at Mrs. Cunningham's request; he is a friend of the family; when Dr. R. came Mrs. Cunningham commenced raving; Dr. R. tried to soothe her; Mr. Eckel did not breakfast with the family that morning; I did not hear at what time Eckel left the house; he left before the usual breakfast hour we were all in the habit of breakfasting. Mrs. Cunningham told me that Eckel had gone out that morning very early. Q: Are you not aware that a short time after Eckel lef the house Mrs. C. left the house in a carriage? A: I am pretty sure that she did not. I was in her company from the time of the alarm during the whole morning. I did not hear that she left the hosue that morning. The evening before when Mrs. C. and I retired, I saw a note lying on the table in the parlor, requesting Eckel to be the store of a gentleman down town, precisely at 8 o'clock on the following Saturday Morning to settle up some accounts, which might account for his absence. [The witness here stated that the shirt found in the store room marked "I. G. Ketchum" was one that had been lent him by his brother-in-law; I sleep in a room on the 4th floor, adjoining the store room; do not sleep with the bed room door open; do not lock the door; on Fridnight night the door was open; after I had put the light out I saw that it was open, but did not care about getting out to shut it. Both Mrs. Cunningham's sons slept with me that night.]
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Twisted Roots may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Twisted Roots:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Toggle limited content width