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Village Squire, 1980-03, Page 19'THE DON NH%LLY HUMES7`EAD. The Donnellys 100 years later New book reprints clippings on the 1880 murders The ghost of the Donnelly tragedy continues to haunt the Lucan area 100 years after the murder of the Donnelly family. As this is the centennial year of that historic event, it would seem like a good time to put out a book on the subject and two London area men have done just that, in a book which compiles old newspaper clippings on the Biddulph tragedy. Called The Donnelly Tragedy, 1880-1980, the book has a foreword by James Reaney who wrote his own dramatization of the Donnelly events. In his foreword, Mr. Reaney says. "Reader, pretend that it is a hundred years ago. In Canada, what story would have just broken in every newspaper from St. John to Victoria? THE BIDDULPH TRAGEDY! For almost a year from 4 February 1880 onward. not a day went by without :,ome new and startling development in the search tor just who had murdered five members of the Donnelly family in the middle of the night and why. Was the 14 year old boy who hid under the four-poster bed in James Donnelly's room and saw the mob enter the house to be believed or. . If at the time you were lucky enough to live within a hundred miles of London, where the circus -like trials took place, two local papers. one Grit and the other Tory, one called the ADVERTISER, the other called the FREE PRESS could have slaked your thirst for reports on Biddulph, the Donnellys and their troubles and tribula- tions. So intense was the curiosity of the time that the files of the London Free Press for the crucial year of 1880 have completely disappeared except for bits and pieces in old scrapbooks. So, apparently, had the pamphlet the Free Press published some weeks after the murders; it contained unique interviews with friends of both the Donellys and their enemies, Again all copies seemed to have been "read to pieces". A few copies of a similar publication by the Advertisier survived." Donald L. Cosens, a St. Thomas auctioneer and historian and Ed Phelps of London found the missing clippings and VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH 1980 PG. 17