Between 30 and 35 years of age and standing somewhere between 5'4 and 5'7. A noticable limp due to a broken thigh bone from a gunshot wound five years prior to his death on Bear Mountain . It was "a nicely healed femoral fracture." said UCSC Forensic Anthropologist, Diana Smay, "The right leg was 2" shorter. The skull disclosed a broken nose." A Harrington & Richardson American (AKA H&R Bulldog) five shot .38calibre double action revolver (produced as early as 1883 one of 850,000) was found laying on the right hand, (hand bones missing.) Carried spectacles for reading and had an 18K gold watch (made between 1875-77) on a solid gold chain (designed for a vest) and possibly in a right hand pocket. (Or was there a waistcoat/vest for the watch?). Suspender parts patented 1888 were found as well. Could have been headed somewhere near Felton to visit someone, or running away from somewhere. Was he transient logger or teamster? (image of Teamster seated on his water wagon in front of the Felton Hotel c1890's). Or had there been an altercation? A smashed bullet was found with the bones and yet there was no trauma that might varify the fatal wound(s).
There was a wooden toothbrush , Diana Smay said, "The teeth are in pretty good shape. A little bit of periodontal disease, which wasn't uncommon, some malalignment, and a cavity, but aside from that, no tooth loss, no abcessing...I've seen MUCH worse teeth, believe me!") May have used the contents of the "Pumpkin Seed" flask (a flat round bottle with a long neck covered in wicker and corked) to ease the pain of a bullet wound (Speculation on my part: running from a gun fight?). Had a few dollars in gold and silver, a pocket knife, and four short .38 calibre rounds in a right hand pocket with possibly other items of paper, which have all become mulch.
Sometime in the winter rains, never getting any further than what is called Bear Mountain today, something happened. Whether awake for a while in that spot (no trauma to any of the bones discovered) or was thrown there in the sprawled position after death to lay there for a century isn't known. The left arm was out stretched and the bottle was near that hand. (hand bones all missing here as well) The right arm was closer to the body with the gun near this right hand, along with all the pocket items mentioned above.
Legend builds! Already some "historians" and media "legend makers" have speculated that "he" was a "violent man" because of the gun. That he had the gun in one hand and the bottle in the other. That he was wealthy because he may have worn a monocle. (Originally they found half of his spectacles and wasn't $18 a lot of money then?!)
Facts (so far): Many folk had pistols in their pockets then. Especially when in the "wilds" of Felton. (That same pistol was available through Sears for around $4.80 in 1908!) May have died with boots on, but they were not found. Carrying some money (only coins survived) that could have been the entire "wealth;" $18+! (Two weeks pay from a nearby logger's camp?) Because of the dates on the coins 1892 or earlier, 1894 or so, is possibly his last year!
May he rest in peace if he was a simple man (as I suspect),
or rot in Hell if he was the killer the media desire!
SOTP gave him a simple marker and one minute of silence,
in either case.
On September 16, 1997 the remains, we have been told, are possibly that of a woman, so said another Forensic Anthropologist at UCSC, Alison Galloway, "This could be a male who is very gracile and with wide hips - or it could be female."
April of 1998, the remains were placed in the Evergreen
Cemetery with grand ceremony via the Clampers!
Shadows attended as color guard:
Dick Staley, Richard Draga, Uncle Sherman, Brian Sorey, & James Kanne,
with chief mourners, Bart, Dr. Eights,
Widows Anderson and Rasmussen.
Coroner Sgt. Tanner had these items on 9/16/97 when I viewed them. (Except those items noted!)