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A NEW YORK SCANDAL.

The New York correspondent of the ‘ Sydney Morning Herald’ writes ; —“We have just had a terrible scandal in New York,, which strangers would do well to heed. Some few months ago a planter from Bermudas arrived here one hot August morning, at ten o’clock, with 500 dollars mgold in his pocket. Me was a man of considerable social importance, and was, amongst other things, Grand Master of BemudaMasons. At two o clock of the same day the police found him in the street, as they say, delirious with drinking, though more probably, as he had been sober all the way from Nassau, he was simply suffering from sunstroke. They took him to Bellevue Hospital, and then transferred him, as he only had four dollars in his pocket, to the Charity Hospital on Hart’s Island, where he died the next dty. No effort was apparently made to discover his friends, if he bad any, and no notice was given to the Masons. He was simply thrown into a rude coffin and buried as quickly as possible in a trench with six hundred odd other bodies. This was the more shameful, as the man had given his right name and address, and could have been easily identified by the people of the steamship on which he was a passenger. A little while ago, his friends discovered his fate, but were informed that they could not get his body for decent burial, as it would be dangerous to public health to exhutne it. Then the masons interfered and our city fathers arc making ah investigation, which shows already that this poor Mr French was lucky in escaping so wellas he did, and that the wonder was he was not sold to the doctors as a subject. Indeed, it is not certain yet that he was not, as several other coffins, exhumed under similar circumstances, have been found to contain only stones and earth, and no body. Of course, we are now horrified to find that such things are done in a Christian city, and the end of it will be that paupers will have a tolerably decent funeral, and some fortunate political undertakers get rich by burial contracts, I just mention this in passing to warn Australians to be careful on their arrival in this city to keep out of drinking shops, and not get sunstroke, and above all not to die here. It is one of the worst places, apparently, for a dead stranger, in the civilized world.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD18740618.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Evening Star, Issue 3532, 18 June 1874, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
420

A NEW YORK SCANDAL. Evening Star, Issue 3532, 18 June 1874, Page 3

A NEW YORK SCANDAL. Evening Star, Issue 3532, 18 June 1874, Page 3

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