Not that this has anything to do with modeling, but I thought it was interesting.
From the pages of The Macon Telegraph…
"On Leap Year night in 1896, two trains plunged into the dark waters of Stone Creek in Twiggs County, about 8 miles southeast of Macon (Georgia). Three men were killed and 39 passengers injured. The story was newsworthy enough to be carried on the pages of The New York Times .
The arrest of the two men charged with sabotaging the tracks became one of Middle Georgia’s most celebrated court trials of the late 19th century.
An unfaithful husband. A sinsister plot. A heinous crime.
The two men, Thomas Shaw and Warren Cresswell were arrested 10 days later. They were tried, found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
Under the cover of darkness they had pulled the spikes from the inside rail of a section along the 600 foot trestle crossing the creek. The Southern Railway passenger train No. 10 left the depot in Macon about 8 pm, bound for Reed’s Station. The wreck occurred just across the Bibb-Twiggs (county) line, not far from the Bond’s Swamp area.
Traveling at 45 mph, with a full head of steam, the engine and six cars plunged into the abyss. A second wreck occurred when a freight train, No. 65, arrived on the same mangled tracks and could not stop.
Thomas Shaw had married his wife, Sally Lee Kitchens, of Jones County, against her parent’s wishes. He later left her and got a job as a farmhand on John Tharpe’s plantation in Bibb County . Although he was still married, he posed as a bachelor and began courting Miss Belle Johnson, a young lady related to Tharpe.
After she rejected him, he returned to his wife and family. On Feb. 29, he bribed his wife with $5 shopping money and suggested she go into Macon with Cresswell’s wife, their neighbor. They were to return that evening on the train.
Shaw and Cresswell plotted to kill their w