"Polly Pry's most famous story was about the 'Colorado Cannibal,' Alferd Packer," according to Special Collections And Digital Archives, Denver Public Library.
Legendary Colorado Cannibal Alfred or 'Alferd' Packer, (as guide) and Israel Swan, Shannon Wilson Bell, George Noon,
James Humphrey, and Frank Miller risked the brutal Colorado winter of
1873-74 in search of mineral wealth in the snowy San Juans in southwest
Colorado. After leaving Ouray's camp, nearby present-day Montrose, the
group was buried by blizzard near the present site of Lake City,
Colorado.
Packer was next seen on April 16, 1874, straggling into the Los Pinos
Indian Agency with little more than a rifle and a skinning knife
belonging to members of his party. The story Packer told at that time
was that, once the storm hit, he had set up camp while the others went
forward in search of food. They never returned, and Packer subsequently
headed out for Los Pinos.
After recovering, Packer left for Saguache, Colorado, where by some
accounts he suddenly became a 'big spender' at the local saloon.
Unfortunately for Packer, in Saguache he encountered several men from
the original Provo group who were dubious about his version of the
story.
Indian Agent Charles Adams took Packer back to Los Pinos for questioning
about the matter, and on May 8, 1874, extracted the first of Packard's
two conflicting confessions.
According to Packer, Israel Swan had died and the others, being without
food, had eaten him. Subsequently, three others had died from exposure
and starvation. Then, Packer admitted to killing Shannon Bell, claiming
it was in self-defense.
Packer was transported back to Saguache and jailed outside of town, not
in the town's jail house as some have told. In August, Packer escaped
from custody and wasn't seen again until March, 1883, when Frenchy
Cabazon, one of the original prospecting party, found him quite by
accident in Douglas, Wyoming.
By coincidence, on the day of Packer's escape from Saguache, the ghostly
remains of the missing prospectors were found in a valley overlooking
what is now Lake City, Colorado. There was evidence of a struggle and
foul play.
In March, 1883, Packer was taken to Denver, Colorado, and questioned
again about the incident. In his second confession, Packer stuck with
his original claim of self-defense, but admitted to stealing the rifle
and $70 in cash from the dead men. Packer was charged with the murder
of Israel Swan, the first to die, and was taken to Lake City for trial.
The jury wasted no time in finding Packer guilty of murder, and Judge
Melville B. Gerry suggested he hang.
Packer appealed his conviction to
the Colorado Supreme Court where the verdict was reversed. He was tried
again and this time found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to 40
years in the state penitentiary. After serving only 17 years of his
sentence, Packer's cause was championed by a grass-roots campaign in
Denver. In 1901, Governor Charles S. Thomas granted Packer's parole
request.
Polly Pry helps free "Colorado Cannibal"
"Adventurous newspaper writer, gossip columnist, and social activist who became one of the first women to run her own newspaper, Leonel Ross Campbell was born in 1857 to a wealthy Mississippi family. She went by her nickname, Nell, in everyday life," says Special Collections And Digital Archives, Denver Public Library.
"Many authors and journalists at the time used a pen name instead of their real name. Nell's fellow writers at the New York World nicknamed her Polly Pry because she could pry information from unlikely sources. She decided to use Polly Pry as her pen name, and kept it for the rest of her life."
After beginning her career with New York World, Nell's mother and father moved to Denver in the late 1890s. Nell's father had tuberculosis,
and Denver had some of the best hospitals in the country to treat the
disease. In 1898, Nell took a train from New York to Denver to visit
them. On the train, she happened to meet, and strike up a conversation with one of the owners and publishers of the Denver Post, and soon she was working for the paper.
For her most famous Colorado story:
"Nell originally met Packer in the Cañon City prison while researching
a story about Colorado's prison system. Although Packer had avoided
talking to reporters for years, Nell convinced him to give her an
interview.
This interview led to a series of meetings between Nell and Packer,
in which he shared his side of the story. He told her that his
companions had died in the mountains, and that he had eaten them to keep
from starving to death. But, he said, he had never murdered anyone.
Nell became convinced that Packer was innocent of murder. She argued
that since sailors were legally allowed to eat people if they were lost
at sea, the same rules should apply to people stranded in the mountains.
Nell told her idea to Frederick Bonfils and H.H. Tammen, the owners of The Denver Post.
They agreed to hire a lawyer to help clear Packer's name - partly
because Polly Pry's stories about Packer had gotten many new people to
start reading the Post! They knew a court case would help sell even more newspapers.
Nell was successful. Alferd Packer was released, but was told he
could not leave the state of Colorado ever again. He moved near
Littleton, Colorado, and lived the rest of his life as a vegetarian.
After
Alferd Packer's pardon, Nell found herself making headlines instead of
writing them. Nell and her bosses discovered that the attorney hired by The Denver Post took payment from Alferd Packer as well as from The Post.
Frederick Bonfils and H.H. Tammen called the lawyer into their offices at The Denver Post. Nell and her bosses confronted him about taking double payment, and demanded he return Packer's money.
Frederick BonfilsDuring the confrontation, the attorney, W. W. Anderson, pulled a gun and shot both of the men; as he prepared to shoot again, she jumped in front of Harry Heye Tammen,
trying to shield him. Anderson threatened to shoot her if she didn't
move. However, she stalled him long enough for the police to arrive and
used her skirt to stop the bleeding. Later, rumors began circulating
that her skirts saved her publishers' lives by slowing down bullets from
the gun.
H.H. Tammen "The gunman told her to move or she would be shot as well. Nell
dared him to do so. She was the most popular writer in Colorado, and she
told him he would get the death penalty if he hurt her."
Anderson's portrait from the Colorado Bar Association
Nell stalled the attacker long enough for the police to arrive, and
managed to stop the bleeding of her bosses by using her dress.
"Rumors circulated about Nell catching bullets in her hoop skirts and
tearing the gun out of the would-be murderer's hands. While untrue,
these stories made Nell a bigger legend than ever."
In a story celebrating 125 years of The Denver Post stories, by Dick Kreck The Denver Post, October 15, 2017, tells about one of the paper's most famous and boldest characters, Polly Pry, by name.
"Her real name was Leonel Ross O’Bryan, born into a wealthy family in
Mississippi and known to all as “Nell.” When she was 15, she eloped with
George Anthony, the wealthy president of the Mexican Central Railroad,
but it didn’t last. She grew bored being the wife of a much-older rail
magnate and, two years later, left her husband and went to New York City
for a more exciting life," wrote Kreck about Polly Pry.
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