This picture has nothing to do with the story and I'm looking for some help. This postcard says Springhill Greenhouse, Secane Pa. I can not locate where this stood. There was a greenhouse on South Ave. in Ridley Twp. but that was called something else. I'm hoping someone remembers this greenhouse and where it stood. Thanks
Note: This story is interesting and goes way back some 200 years. I hope someone recognizes the picture above. I;m still looking for an overhead scanner I can use to add more maps to my website. Please let me know, keith106@rcn.com
CHESTER TIMES
June 21, 1904
UPPER
DARBY TRAGEDY OF MANY YEARS AGO
Story of a Delaware County Murder as Told by
an Old Almanac
Phillip
B. Green of Edgmont has in his possession a copy of the Piratical and Tragical
Almanac for the year 1847. The book is
in a good state of preservation and contains many interesting things. It contains an account of the murder of
William Bonsall on the evening of May 22, 1824 at his home in Upper Darby
Township, this county. The account of
that murder written at that time is as follows:
Shocking
acts of human depravity are so prevalent, that we are scarcely moved at the
recital of a murder, unless it is characterized by some unusual
circumstances. The following will
necessarily give rise to feelings of no ordinary description.
On
Saturday evening, the 22nd of May, 1824, four men called at the
house of Mrs. Mary Warner in Upper Darby, Delaware County, Pa. and requested to
see the man living in her family. (Mrs.
Warner kept a store in part of the house and the young man referred to Wm.
Bonsall, his wife and child, the latter about 16 months old, constituted the
whole of her family). Mr. Bonsall, who
was in bed at the time, came down and was greeted in a very cordial manner by
his visitors; though he had never in his life seen them before; yet, unwilling
to be inhospitable, he requested them to sit down. In a few minutes, one of the four men
demanded of Bonsall his money. He
replied that he had a dollar and a half, which they might take. At this moment one of the ruffians cut down a
clothes line hanging in the kitchen, and drew it so tight about Bonsall’s neck
as to choke him. Bonsall lifted his hand to his throat to loosen the rope, when
the tallest of the robbers made a pass at his arm with a razor, which laid open
his arm to the bone from the shoulder to the elbow. Bonsall was then thrown into a chair and held
by one of the ruffians, while the other directed Mrs. Warner, after tying her
arms to light him into the store.
While
this man was in the store taking such property as he could most easily carry
off, the other continued with Mr. Bonsall.
Just as Mrs. Warner was leaving the store, the man in the kitchen used
some words to M. Bonsall, and then stabbed him several times in the abdomen
with a shoe knife, much worn. This was
done while sitting in a chair directly in front of him, in attempting to
withdraw it, the blade stuck so strongly that the handle came off, and the
knife was left in the body.
Two of
the men had previously retired to the front door. The two men in the house, discovering Mrs.
Bonsall and perceiving her delicate situation, threatened the most shocking
barbarity, if she did not immediately conduct them to the place where her
husband’s money was kept; they were desired to take any and every article of
property but to spare their lives; they accordingly took the whole of Mr.
Bonsall’s clothes, his military uniforms, excepted, and filled two large
handkerchiefs with goods from the shop, and after insulting the dying Bonsall,
they retired. Bonsall was in a few
minutes a corpse.
It was
noticed by Mrs. Warner that one of the robbers was a very large ill-looking
man, dressed in a Wilmington-stripe roundabout – and from the appearance of his
hands, he was supposed to be a shoemaker; a supposition confirmed by his having
the knife already mentioned. The other
active man was small had sandy hair and whiskers, and wore a brown goatee.
The very
night before this occurrence, a marketman was robbed on the West Chester Road,
and beaten in a most shocking manner; and as soon as the robbers had departed
from Mrs. Warner’s and the alarm was given, not a doubt was entertained that
the men in this deed were the same who had committed the former. The next day (Sunday) at about 12 o’clock
four men crossed the bride at Gray’s Ferry, on their way to Philadelphia, and
were supposed to be the murders. If
anything could go beyond the murder of the husband, it was the brutality of
their threats to the wife. A reward was
at once offered for the apprehension of the murderers.
On the
Saturday following the murder (May 29th) three men were apprehended
near Woodbury, N.J. on suspicion of being concerned in Mr. Bonsall’s dreadful
murder and committed to the jail of that place.
Their names, as given by themselves, were James Wellington, Abraham Buys
and Charles Washington Labbe. They were
recognized as being old convicts.
Wellington had been sentenced to imprisonment for life in New York, but
afterwards pardoned on condition of his leaving the State. Buys was a large man, believed to be the same
that wore the Wilmington-stripe roundabout on the night that the murder was
committed. A silver chain, answering to
the description of that stolen from Mrs. Bonsall, was found on his person. Wellington had clad himself in the clothes of
Mr. Bonsall; but when high constable Hains arrived at Woodbury, he appeared in
a different apparel. He denied having
other garment in his possession, but search being made, the clothes of Mr.
Bonsall were found stuffed in a stove pipe.
Suspicion was at first excited against them by their attempt to pass a
Mexican or Peruvian dollar. Other
circumstances confirmed this suspicion and after they had left the village,
they were pursued by some citizens and taken into custody.
The prisoners
were subsequently tried in Delaware County and Judge Darlington pronounced
sentence upon Michael Monroe, otherwise called James Wellington. (Buys was not convicted, thought there was
much excitement and much disapprobation expressed against the jurors at the
time, in consequence of the verdict which they rendered in regard to both him
and Labbe.)
After
receiving his sentence, Monroe, alias Wellington, was remanded to prison. His death warrant was eventually received by
the sheriff of Delaware, appointing Friday, the 17th day of December
1824, between the hours of ten o’clock A.M. and two P.M. as the time of
execution.
The
prisoner protested his innocence to the last, and previous to execution said,
“I have heard it said that no innocent man was executed in this country, but it
will lose that honor today.
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in the 60s the whole s w corner of South Ave and McDade was a nursery. Our friend had a harrowing experience walking thru it in the dark, even fell in holes.. He called it "dreaded bwannyland." His story was funny. Then they made the McDade Mall. ct
ReplyDeleteThere was greenhouses on Franklin Ave across from Holy Spirit Lutheran Church. I forget what they were called. Huge hedges all along the sidewalk when walking on that side. Maybe this is pic is the greenhouse nursery way before a lot was built up. I walked past it many times living in Secane. Anyone remember?
ReplyDeleteKeith, I recall that in the 1960s, there was a nursery on Green Lane between Oak Ave and Ashland Ave, but I think it was named DiCrecchio's. Maybe Springhill was its former name?
ReplyDeleteAlso, in the 1960s I took piano lessons from a woman who lived in the Springhill Square or Springhill Park apartments on South Avenue in Secane (whichever was on the west side of South Ave). It was near Franklin Ave, but I can't remember if it is north or south of that intersection. Maybe the nursery was near there?