Virginia Macdonald died in 1851 after she had been ill for a long time. After
she was buried, her mother was sure of the fact that Virginia was not dead.
Unfortunately, when the coffin was taken out, it was found that the poor girl’s
hands were bitten and the body showed other traces of having been buried alive.
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Madame Blunden was declared dead in 1896 and was buried under a school. The coffin was opened up after complaints from children about noises and those who were around managed to watch her take her last breath.
In 1886, New York Times carried an article about a young girl named Collins who died suddenly and was then buried. When her body was being shifted, it was discovered that her knees were pulled till her chin, her arm was turned in an unnatural manner and her face was twisted in such a manner that it was obvious she had been through dreadful torture.
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Madame Blunden was declared dead in 1896 and was buried under a school. The coffin was opened up after complaints from children about noises and those who were around managed to watch her take her last breath.
In 1886, New York Times carried an article about a young girl named Collins who died suddenly and was then buried. When her body was being shifted, it was discovered that her knees were pulled till her chin, her arm was turned in an unnatural manner and her face was twisted in such a manner that it was obvious she had been through dreadful torture.
The Daily Telegraph carried an article in 1889 about a man who had been buried
in Grenoble. Because he stayed intoxicated for 20 hours, it was assumed that he
was dead. However, when the sexton was placing the thick coffin in the grave, he
heard loud moans and frantic knocks. By the time he opened it up, the man had
died and his head was badly mutilated.
The Sunday Times carried an article in 1838 about a man in Tonneins who was
buried alive. When the coffin was being lowered into the Earth, the grave-digger
heard loud noises and sure enough, the man had been declared dead prematurely.
The British Medical Journal carried a piece in 1877 about a woman who was buried
because she was thought to be dead when in fact; she was in some sort of a
trance. When the grave was opened a few days later in order to place another
body in, the woman’s body was found to be mutilated.
Miss Hockwalt belonged to the elite section of the society in Dayton during
1884. She was thought to be dead after being found on a chair, looking lifeless
and ‘dead’. She was then buried. The grave was opened up later and the lady’s
hair had been torn out and her skin was bitten.
Mary Norah Best was seventeen years old when she was declared dead in 1871. It
has been believed that many people would have benefited from her death which is
why she was buried. In 1881, it was found that Mary’s skeleton was ‘sitting up’
and the undertaker realized that the poor girl had woken up and managed to break
open the casket.
In 1901, Madame Bobin supposedly contracted yellow fever and was pregnant at the
time. After she was buried, a nurse said that the body was quite warm and that
the muscles were not rigid. The coffin was opened up and found that she had
given birth to her baby in the coffin who had also suffocated to death.
The New York Times article carried an article on a man from Asheville who was
declared dead after being sick for several months. When the coffin was being
moved, it was opened up and much to the horror of the man’s relatives, his hair
was pulled out.
Courtesy: www.arabia.msn.com
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