Fascinating & true ghost story and the only known case where a - TopicsExpress



          

Fascinating & true ghost story and the only known case where a ghosts testimony put a man in prison... Do you believe in ghosts? Some folks in Greenbrier County, West Virginia do. In fact, theres a road sign in Greenbrier County that tells how the ghost of Zona Heaster Shue helped convict her murderer. In 1886, Edward Shue and his first wife lived in a cabin on Rock Camp Run, in Pocahontas County, West Virginia. Shue was a young man with a strong, well-built body. He was also a bully who beat his wife. Shues first wife finally divorced him while he was in the penitentiary for stealing a horse. After Shue got out of prison, it wasnt long before he married again and set up housekeeping on the top of Droop Mountain. His second wife died under peculiar and suspicious circumstances. In November 1896, in Greenbrier County, Edward Shue married a third time, to a fifteen-year-old girl named Zona Heaster. Some people said Zona had fallen madly in love with Shue because of his striking appearance. Others said that Shue persuaded Zona to visit her uncle on Droop Mountain, and once he got her away from her parents convinced her to marry him. Edward and Zona set up house in a two-story frame building in Livesays Mill where Shue worked as a blacksmith. In January 1897, two months after the wedding, Shue asked young Anderson Jones to go to his house and do some chores for Mrs. Shue. When Anderson got to the house, all the doors were closed. On the steps, he saw a trail of blood. That scared him, but he knocked, and when no one answered, he opened the door and went in. The trail of blood continued across the kitchen floor to the dining room. That door, too, was closed. Anderson knocked, then he opened the door and went in. He stumbled over Zona Shues body. She was lying on the floor looking up with wide-open eyes. Anderson reached down and shook her and found her stiff and cold. Anderson ran to the blacksmith shop to tell Edward Shue. Shue let out a yell and started for his house, while Anderson went on to get Dr. Knapp. When Anderson and Dr. Knapp reached the house, Shue had placed his wife on the bed and was holding her head in his arms, crying for her to come back. And strangely enough, he had dressed Zona, placing a high, stiff collar around her neck and tying it in place with a large veil, folded several times and tied in a bow under her chin. During Dr. Knapps examination of the body, Shue continued to hold his wifes head in his arms. Dr. Knapp pronounced Mrs. Shue dead of heart failure. During the visits of friends and relatives to view the body, Shue never left the head of his wifes casket. Zona was buried in the cemetery of Soule Chapel Church in Greenbrier County. That was not the end of the story, however. Zonas mother was not satisfied with the account of Zonas death. She lay in bed praying that God would relieve her doubts. When she turned over, there stood her daughter Zona! Zona seemed hesitant to talk to her, however, and did not stay. The next night, Mrs. Heaster again prayed that she might know the truth about Zonas death. Again Zona appeared, and this night she talked to her mother, saying that she would tell her the true story. On the third and fourth nights, Zona told her mother how she had been murdered by her husband, Edward Shue! He came that night from the shop and seemed angry. I told him supper was ready and he then began to chide me because I had prepared no meat. I replied there was plenty, bread and butter, apple sauce, preserves and other things that made a good supper. He flew into a rage, got up and came toward me. When I raised up, he seized each side of my head with his hands and by a sudden wrench dislocated my neck. When Mrs. Heaster told her neighbors of Zonas visits, some believed that she had been visited by a ghost. Others insisted that she had only been dreaming. Mrs. Heaster insisted that these were not dreams, that she had been wide awake. Furthermore, Zona had described her home and other spots around Livesays Mill, places Mrs. Heaster had never seen. When she traveled to Livesays Mill, the places were just as Zona had described them. Mrs. Heaster and her brother-in-law were able to convice John A. Preston, the prosecuting attorney in Lewisburg, of the possibility of foul play in Zonas death. Mr. Preston and Dr. Knapp decided to exhume Zonas body for an autoposy. After a lengthy examination, Dr. Knapp discovered the true cause of Zona Heasters death—she had died of a broken neck. Edward Shue was arrested and charged with murder. The case came to court in Lewisburg on June 30, 1897. The defense attorneys allowed Mrs. Heaster to testify because they believed they could easily demolish her testimony by making her admit that the visitations from her daughters ghost were only dreams. Mrs. Heaster was adamant, however, in insisting that she was wide awake and that the visits were quite real. The jury found Edward Shue guilty of murder, and he was sentenced to life in prison. After a failed lynching attempt by local residents who felt Shue should die as his wife had, of a broken neck, Shue was sent to Moundsville Penitentiary. He died there eight years later. You can read about the case of Edward Shue in old newspapers in Lewisburg. Acording to Cases Comment, a national lawyers magazine, this is the only case in the United States where a man has been convicted of murder on the testimony of a ghost.
Posted on: Mon, 29 Sep 2014 17:04:16 +0000

Trending Topics



ttext" style="margin-left:0px; min-height:30px;"> Opportunity for Lead Artist 3D Title: Lead Artist 3D Location:
Mommas within the middle Georgia area. Target in Macon has a whole

Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015