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Re: Colorado humor (no lbc)

To: "conan" <conan@intrex.net>, "Spridgets" <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: Colorado humor (no lbc)
Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2003 23:03:59 -0700
Organization: Morriservice
References: <200307310016.AA1363476802@intrex.net>
----- Original Message -----
From conan <conan at intrex.net>
To: Spridgets <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2003 9:16 PM
Subject: re: Colorado humor (no lbc)


> per Jay...
> >>31. You know who Alfred Packard was.
>
>   Wasn't that Alfred 'Packer'?  :-)
>  Ed in NC (never been to CO)

Alfred Packer!  Read on!  If you're a democrat it might upset you!  From an
internet site----

Paul A


alfred packer the san juan cannibal

The Packer case was the first, and possibly the only incident of cannibalism
tried in the U.S. court system.

He was born in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania in 1842 and migrated west in
1862. There is some confusion about the spelling of his first name. His
tombstone reads "Alferd" and some say he spelled it this way.

In the winter of 1873 he was hired as a guide in Salt Lake City by 20 men
for a prospecting trip into the San Juan mountains of Colorado.

He claimed to have driven an ore wagon in some of the mining camps of
Colorado and that he could lead them to the valuable ore they were looking
for. In truth, he knew very little about this region.

In January 1874 the group stopped over at the village of Chief Ouray and
were warned not to try crossing the mountains until spring. Packer and five
of the group decided to continue on into the mountains.

During early spring the rest of the group traveled across the mountains and
inquired about the Packer party. A search team was then sent out to look for
the missing men.

Two months earlier, Packer had appeared at the Los Pinos Indian Agency
looking fit and well fed. His primary interest was in obtaining some
whiskey, not food, and he had a large roll of money to pay for it.

He first said that he had been left behind by the others due to a leg
injury. His story was to change several times...later being that one of the
men went beserk and killed the others and that he had shot the man in
self-defense.

An Indian guide found strips of human flesh on the trail and Packer was
questioned. In August of 1894 the camp of the five missing men was found
near Slumgullion Pass, 2 miles from Lake City.

Packer was jailed in Saguache and later escaped to Wyoming, and for 9 years
lived under an assumed name until his capture. Packer was returned to Lake
City in 1883 to stand trial.

The verdict was guilty, with death by hanging. The legend was that Judge
Melville B. Gerry, on pronouncing sentencing said..."...There was siven
Dimmycrats in Hinsdale County! But you, yah voracious, main-eatin son of a
bitch, yah et five of them, therefor I sentence ye T' be hanged by the neck
until y're dead, dead, dead!". This was probably not the exact statement
made by the judge as he was a well educated man, but makes for good
story-telling.

Later the sentence was reduced to manslaughter and he was given 40 years to
be served at the prison in Canon City.

A reporter at the Denver Post became interested in the case and a campaign
for Packer's release was started. He was paroled in January 1901 and moved
to Denver where he hung around the Post building as an unofficial security
guard until his death by natural causes in April 1907. Packer was buried at
Littleton's Prince Avenue Cemetery near Denver.

Years later the citizens of Lake City built a monument at the site of the
Packer Massacre and then celebrated the event by throwing a huge fish fry
with all the trimmings for the public.

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