On January 23, 1897, Zona Heaster Shue of Greenbrier County, West Virginia was found dead inside her home by a neighborhood boy
On January 23, 1897, Zona Heaster Shue of Greenbrier County, West Virginia was found dead inside her home by a neighborhood boy
It was unclear what had caused the young woman's death, especially because her sobbing husband Erasmus "Trout" Shue refused to stop cradling her head and got upset whenever the coroner tried to examine her body. Shue's cause of death was first listed as an "everlasting faint," then switched to childbirth, even though she wasn't actually pregnant — and with that, the case was closed. But about one month after Shue's death, her mother Mary Jane allegedly started receiving a startling nocturnal visitor: the ghost of her daughter.
According to Mary Jane, her daughter's spirit came to her bedside and told her that she had been murdered by her husband, all because she hadn't cooked him what he wanted for supper. Word of Shue's ghost quickly spread through the small town and Mary Jane soon convinced the coroner to conduct a thorough examination of her body — and he found injuries just like the ones that the ghost had described and confirmed that she had indeed been murdered. Continue reading

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