The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 8, 1978-Page 7 Civil War FRANKLIN, Tenn. (AP) - The Emily C corded his way the coroner had it figured, the the battle murdered man's corpse rested atop others of the Confederate colonel's cast-iron the front b coffin for about a year before it was saw.him a unearthed by trinket-hunting grave with that robbers. The. seemingly bizarre murder THE CH mystery - filled with more suspense Shy to be than Williamson County had seen victim bee since secession - began on Christ- follows lo mas Eve. That was when Mary Christmas Griffith, showing a visitor the hritmds grounds of the antebellum home she sheriff disc the coro and her husband bought to restore, Bass, a noticed that Lt. Col. William Shy's decayed r grave had been disturbed. decayedr "THE GRAVE was dug 3% to four "The gi feet below the ground," she said. "I thought grave-robbers .. .' his bod Coroner Clyde Stephens, 40, though balm inA murder after he and Sheriff Fleming Williams, 50, investigated the grave Christm and found the headless torso of a man thropol wearing what looked like a tuxedo. Stephens theorized that the grave was used to conceal a more recent digging res death, a murder grave-robbers "We w stumbled on. grave and But now William M. Bass, 49, the hand in a state's forensic anthropologist, has "And we f an explanation for the whole affair was some that is neither murderous nor espe- "There u cially mysterious. casket," h whether "THE GUY we have may just be before lo the Civil War colonel," his body knocked a preserved for more than a century happened with embalming fluid and moved on skull had top of its coffin by the Christmas Eve through th plunderers, Bass said. THE LA Shy, who died in 1864 during the foot, was Battle of Nashvill at age 26, was rusty cast buried in one of two graves on the phens said property. His was marked with a thing in it marble headstone. The other is "was so ba unmarked. ly just fel grave Compton, a neighbor, re- demise in a chronicle of "His body with many both armies was laid upon gallery of our home . . . I s he lay so peacefully there cruel hole in his brow." AIN of events that caused mistaken for a murder 3 years after his death ically from Mrs. Griffith's Eve observation. Once the covered the headless body, er sent to Knoxville for specialist in identifying emains. When he arrived, holds mystery knocked into this casket." Said Mrs. Griffith, "It looked like they tried to shove him down in." There was no trace of Shy. "Just dust," Stephens said. "I would have thought there would have been possibly a belt or buttons but we didn't find anything." BASS, examining the remains, con- cluded the burial was at least two months old. The sheriff said five months to a year. Stephens said just over a year. Mrs. Griffith said she knew the grave had not been disturbed from July, when she and her husband Griffith said, "like he'd been to a wedding or was an usher- or some- thing. uy we have may be just the Civil War colonel," BASS discovered the cause of death. Reconstructing the skull, he found a large hole three inches above the right eye. "Whatever hit the guy really hit him with a lot of force," he said. Last Friday the crime lab called Bass with the idea that the body might be Shy's but some questions need to be answered. Bass didn't know whether elastic like that in the shoes was invented by 1864. Refer- ence works show it was, by 1759. When Bass sees what apparently is the colonel's last photo it may explain the clothes. Shy posed in a cutaway with tails and a fancy white shirt. Shy's coffin was the best and embalming was not unusual. The hole above the right eye sounds like "that cruel hole in his brow" Miss Compton mentioned. Bass said he would send some tissue to a Memphis lab this week to have it checked for embalming fluid. "Sometimes," he said. "The truth is stranger than fiction." y preserved for more than a century with em- g fluid and moved on top of its coffin by the ias Eve plunderers, (Tennessee forensic an- ogist) William Bass said. sumed. ent back and redug the found the skull and the left glove," the sheriff said. ound the shoes too. There bones in them. was a hole in the top of the he said. "We don't know someone dug the grave oking for souvenirs and hole in it or whether it this time or what. But the sunk down in the casket e hole." ARGE hole, down at the the single breach in the t-iron casket, which Ste- d "must have been some- s day." He said the body dly decomposed it probab- 1 into the hole that was bought the house, until Dec. 24. Bass tried to trace the man's identity through dental records. The sheriff pored over missing persons reports. The clothes went to the state crime lab in neighboring Nashville. BUT THE man had no dental work. No one was missing in Williamson County. No one missing in Nashville in 1977 fit the description. Still there were the clothes. "It wasn't a tuxedo," the sheriff said, "but it was a flashy-looking suit of clothes." The pleated shirt appeared to be silk. The flared trousers had laces down the leg. The square-toed shoes - a century-old style which enjoyed a resurgence four or five years ago - had elastic in them. "They were dinner clothes, even- ing clothes, they had tails," Mrs. It all adds 'nt ______ ....... Knievel upset by Carter trip; stuntman, flees jail e O SBirth defects are forever. Unless you help. TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN March of Dimes THIS SPACE CON TRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER *"*PROFESSIONAL THEATREJ- PROGRAM P .1)1,) --_- - M- E _U D E ARNOJ L N E A N Y 15 H AA T& H -4- E CRITICS RAVE' "An Amazing Theatrical Creation" - San Francisco Chronicle "Jack Aranson has done it superbly" - Time Magazine "An Extraordinary Experience" - Boston Herald American Advance ticket sale through PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby, Monday through Friday, 10a.m. - 1 p.m.; 2 H- 5 Hp.m. Call 764-0450 for more information. Tickets also available through Hudson's stores. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Motorcycle daredevil Evil Knievel, serving a six- month sentence for beating his former press agent with a baseball bat, was booked yesterday on a new charge of escaping from the county jail. Knievel was about five hours late in Rosenfield, said, "He was very upset over what he considers to be the break- down of moral fiber in this country." KNIEVEL later changed his mind about fleeing the country and a friend brought him back to jail at 2:40 a.m. He was due back at 9:30 p.m. Friday. Upon his return to the jail, Knievel said, "You wouldn't believe the troubles I'm having," according to Lt. George Corbett, who said Knievel cited family problems, but did'not go-into specifics. A hearing will be held in Municipal Court Monday on the escape charge and a sheriff's spokesman said "it would be up to the judge" to decide whether Knievel could resume the work- furlough. He has been spending weekends in jail since he was sentenced two months ago for beating his former press agent with a bat in retaliation for statements made in a book about his drinking habits and relations with his mother. A SHERIFF'S spokesman said: "We gave him the standard three-hour grace period, even though by then we had heard from his probation officer that he did not intend to return. When he didn't show up we listed him as an escaped prisoner and put out an APB on him." Knievel has attracted attention by his practice of having a chauffeured car pick him up each morning from the Hall of Justice jail and return him at night. He sought last week to provide the same limousine service for other pri- soners on work-furlough programs but probation officials put a stop to it. IN THE ASSAULT on author Sheldon Saltman, now a television executive, Knievel pleaded guilty against the ad- vice of his lawyer, saying he wanted to take responsibility for his actions. Saltman helped publicize Knievel during his abortive attempt to rocket over the Snake River Canyon. Knievel has filed a defamation suit against Saltman, alleging he was false- ly portrayed as an immoral drunk, drug addict, bigot and "a man who does not love his mother." r Knievel returning to jail under a work-furlough program and had told his probation of- ficer he planned to leave the country because he was disturbed by news reports of President Carter's trip abroad. "I'M UPSET, MAN," the sheriff's department quoted him as telling his probation officer. "I've been looking at the news on two channels and I don't dig it. I'm leaving the country until it straightens itself out," Knievel wasquoted. His current publicity man, Stan LACROSSE Mass Meeting Tues., Jan. 10-8 p.m. Wines Field Locker Room (So. 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