Kindly one-legged spinster who rocked on her porch all day kept terrible secret hidden in trunk in her attic

A Philadelphia Museum of Medical Museum, after discovering two unidentified baby skulls in the human remains collection, accidentally dug up a mystery for decades.
The personnel at the Allter Museum said they were surprised to find 6,600 people during the control of 6,600 people in November and were buried in a box in a library. They announced late last week.
In the notes accompanying the bodies, an elderly woman who has had five dead babies between the ceiling.
Accordingly Philadelphia InquirerThe personnel in the Museum sought newspaper archives to discover that an old Spinster, who died in 1980, was linked to a fame of a fame of Spinster.
It turned out that the two skulls were between the five between the ceiling of Williamson, but somehow disappeared in the transit and donated to the museum.
While Williamson often was sitting in his porch, he was known as a kind, silent church actor and a long time ‘Spinster’.
He had a leg due to an amputation of diabetes, and from time to time, the archival newspaper reports said he expected to watch hello and shake his head or to play with one of the children, especially babies.
‘He liked to hold them, kiss, cooing and mock.’
In 1980, the death of 76 -year -old Stella Williamson led to the terrible discovery of the five infant body between the ceiling, but only after knowing that they were there in the bed of death.

In November, it was found that the two skulls belonging to the deceased children of Williamson at the Philadelphia’s Allter Museum, a medical museum that stored more than 6,600 people remains, belonged to their deceased children.
However, while the Williamson community was known as a harmless, silent old woman, he shocked the country after leaving a sad note to the bed of death.
According to an article from the Washington Post in 1980, according to an article quoted by the interrogator, he wrote, orum I want to do things right if something needs to be on me ..
In an old baggage between the ceiling, you will find babies to do [redacted] 30 years [ago] Or more, ‘he read. Certain information, including the name of the father, was corrected.
‘How am I running no, no, I don’t do [sic] But I did this, I don’t want anyone to be accused of anything else they don’t know about anything.
“ This is a reason I can never marry someone else. I had a good sense of life [sic] This is the truth, as God is a judge. If you can, please forgive me. Stella. ‘
Coroners said that the baby’s remnants were badly decomposed, but at least three of them were killed.
Authorities said that they did not believe that the baby’s father was involved, but another note left by Stella implied problematic relationships.
“ Never wanted me, ” he wrote.
‘It’s just something to play, and I was a fool in his hand.’

Williamson lived in Gallitzin for decades for decades, and those who knew him described him as a grandmother who enjoyed playing with the neighborhood children. Over the whole time, the baby’s residues contained it in the ceiling range

The bodies were found wrapped in newspapers in a baggage (in the picture) from 1927 to 1933, and the authorities found at least three drowning, but went too far to make the decomposed residues give many other results

The Mutter Museum (in the picture) said that recent skeletons were stunned to discover that they were linked to the mystery of decades.
After five bodies were found between the ceiling, the remains were helicopted from his home in Pennsylvania, Gallitzin to Philadelphia.
State experts performed tests that give a few results with the decomposed state of the bodies.
The fabric around some baby skulls showed that they might be drowned, and the tests showed that four were only weekly and lived between the fifth nine months and one year.
The exact date of birth could not be established, the newspapers hugged between 1927 and 1933.
“The problem we have here is a period of 50 years between the time it takes place and today.” He said.
Unfortunately it will remain a mystery. There are some things we all want to know, but they are buried with people. ‘
After the terrible case disappeared from the headlines, the authorities buried what they believed to be in a cemetery in 1980 in a closed coffins.
The coffins were never opened and in November, he led to the discovery of two skulls at the Allter Museum.
It is unclear how the skulls end in the property of the museum, with the theories floating with the theories, including potential tomb peeling, accidental donation for medical tests, or only human error for medical tests.
Inquirer said they could be obtained by former judicial pathologist Halbert Fillinger before being transferred to the Archives Museum.
However, the exit said that there was no record of the skulls that the skulls were investigated or exhibited in the museum, that is, they had been mummified in old newspapers for decades until last year.