Monday, August 4, 2025

Mailed from Montgomery in 1944

You just never know what will turn up in old newspapers. In going through our parents' house in Huntsville in 2023 and 2024, we found a large cache of World War II issues of the Gadsden Times. Our paternal grandmother had apparently saved hundreds of front pages from that publication. Thus what we found was that page and three others of each day's issue. She didn't bother to detach the front page from the larger sheet. Dad brought these papers back to Huntsville when he cleaned out his mother's home in Gadsden after her death in 1997. 

The war news day-by-day is fascinating, but a lot of interesting local and state items pop up as well. This post has one of them, from the Times issue of January 25, 1944. That headline grabbed me right away. Apparently postal authorities in Memphis on January 18 opened an unclaimed parcel post package mailed from Montgomery on January 8. Inside was the infant's body, wrapped in a January 7 Montgomery newspaper, a towel from a hotel in the city and some brown wrapping paper. 

Two women in Montgomery were being questioned by Temple Seibels, Circuit Solicitor. No charges have been brought as yet, but Seibels vowed to prosecute if evidence from the state toxicologist indicated murder or "birth by unnatural means". 

Seibels is the only person named in this article. His Find-A-Grave entry identifies him as William Temple Seibels [1873-1960]. He apparently held the office a long time; the 1923 Alabama official register lists him as the Solicitor of the 15th Judicial Circuit in Montgomery County. A circuit solicitor was responsible for the prosecution of criminal cases within a judicial circuit. 

I wonder how this event played out. In 1989 I published a book entitled Criminal Activity in the Deep South, 1700-1930: An Annotated Bibliography. In putting that book together I came across some really bizarre crimes and criminals, but I don't remember anything quite like this one--assuming a crime was indeed committed. Further research in Montgomery newspapers or court records might give an answer. 








That 25 cents seen on the lower right was the cost of a weekly subscription delivered by carrier, not a daily issue. 



Source: Find-A-Grave

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