ATProto Browser

ATProto Browser

Experimental browser for the Atmosphere

Post

Apr 18, 2025, 3:27 PM

Record data

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          "alt": "You can listen to the full version of the stories anywhere you find podcasts. Just search for Conspiracy of Cartographers.\n\nSusan Cargill's death in 1883 might not have been important enough for local paper, the St. Paul, Nebraska Phonograph, but she her loss certainly had an affect on her family.\n\nSusan and Robert had ten children together, all of whom were still alive when she passed on at the young age of 43.\n\nIn 1902, her daughter Margaret died by suicide. The April 9, 1902 issue of the newspaper told all. She had \"committed suicide yesterday afternoon by shooting herself through the head with a 22-calibre rife. The deed was done during the absence of her family and was evidently the result of deliberately laid plans.\"\n\n",
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          "alt": "Margaret had two young children, and sent them \"to a neighbor's with instructions not to return for an hour and a half.\" It's unsaid, but presumed that it was her children who found her body.\n\nThe paper printed the note she left her husband, explained where she aimed the gun, and what she was wearing. \"No motive for the rash deed is known,\" concluded the paper, she \"had always enjoyed fairly good health.\"\n\nMargaret's brother, Lewis, took the news the hardest. At 33, he was unmarried and living alone. According to the headline in the May 18th issue of the same newspaper: Louis Cargill Insane.\n\n\"It seems that nothing could be done to remove the effect of the sad termination of his sister's life,\" read the article. He was taken to an insane asylum in Lincoln.\n\nHe died on May 26, 1902. A June issue related the news, telling that \"his health had failed rapidly as a result of his mental affliction and death came quickly to his relief.\"",
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