The town of Fulton is left reeling from the resolution of the Amos Bellamy affair, which began with a bloody handprint and a cryptic letter and has ended in tragedy.
Category: From the Archives
Mail Pranks Pt 2 – 1924 Fulton Gazette Article on Dun Maylock
“I swear, it isn’t me!” he declared at a town meeting last Thursday. “I would never wear that ridiculous fedora they had on!”
Mail Pranks Pt 1 – 1924 Fulton Gazette Article on Dun Maylock
Other reports followed: a bundle of twigs left for Mr. Clayton Hargrove, an empty box addressed to “The Honorable Dog of this Residence” at the Warner household, and, most curiously, a hand-painted postcard of a rooster sent to the Widow Abernathy, who keeps no poultry.
CWH response to Combs – 2022 Daily Fulton Article Somewhat Related to the Dun Maylock
Does a bird sing because it works for the trees? Does a fire burn because it is loyal to the wood?
Combs response to CHW – 2022 Article on the Dun Maylock
C.W.H. remains a ghost, a name with no face. Why? What is he afraid of? Is he hiding from the Dun Maylock—or hiding his connection to them?
Nohoda Odsada Press Release RE: Fulton County Advisor Article on the Dun Maylock
The baseless suggestion that the Nohoda Odsada or Yak Tak Nuhk peoples could be connected to the violent actions of the Dun Maylock is not only unfounded but perpetuates dangerous stereotypes and fosters unnecessary division in our community.
Cult Theories in Response to Combs – 2022 Daily Fulton Article on Dun Maylock
where did this group come from, and what could possibly drive their actions?
CWH Direct Response to Thorn – Daily Fulton Article on the Dun Maylock
Their actions weren’t cries for liberation but calculated moves to dominate.
Thorn’s Rebuttal to CWH – 2021 Hiller Hammer Article on the Dun Maylock
Nearly fifty years later, an internet-age conspiracy theorist, C.W.H., [is] dredging up my words to fit his own narrative of terror and control.
CWH Criticism of Thorn – 2021 Daily Fulton Article on the Dun Maylock
I’m no stranger to hearing people try to rewrite history to fit their own comforting narratives, but Jamie Thorn’s 1975 article in The Hiller Hammer might take the cake.