Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Anonymous
Anonymous asked in Arts & HumanitiesHistory · 1 decade ago

Is there some where online i can find the letter written by the man who murdered Lucky Keyes?

I watched a movie about the legend of Lucy Keyes.I have alway been fascinated by this type of story. It is based off a true story. I went on the sites website where I found out someinfo

The following story is true:

Robert Keyes and his family moved to Princeton, Massachusetts in 1751. They purchased a large tract of land, some 200 acres, on the South-Eastern slope of Wachusett Mountain.

On April 14, 1755, Keyes's daughter Lucy, who was 4 years old at the time, followed her sisters to fetch some sand from Wachusett Lake. Lucy never returned from the lake. She vanished in the woods that day never to be heard from again.

The towns-people made every effort to find the girl. Search parties combed the woods, the lake was dragged, all to no avail. Martha Keyes, Lucy's mother, was pushed to the edge of insanity by her grief over losing her daughter. Every evening she searched the woods calling her daughter's name.

Martha died in 1786. She never found Lucy.

Several years after the deaths of both Martha and Robert Keyes, a letter was found describing, in gruesome detail, the murder of little Lucy Keyes. The letter was from Tilly Littlejohn, the Keyes's hermit-like neighbor, who was furious over a property line quarrel with Keyes. To cleanse his dying soul he admitted on his deathbed that he found the girl, Lucy, in the woods and killed her by hitting her on the head with a rock. He then stuffed her body in a hollow log and waited until nightfall to return and bury her body under an uprooted tree.

Many people believe that Martha Keyes has every reason to haunt the wooded hillsides of Wachusett Mountain calling, "Lu - cy, Lu - cy", since she never learned the grim fate of her daughter. And witnesses still experience the spirits of both Martha and Lucy Keyes to this day.

is there some where i can find this letter online to read.Sorry this is so long.

Thanks xoxo <3

7 Answers

Relevance
  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    I, Tilly Littlejohn, am now an old man, hard on to ninety. Six weeks I have been sick, and three days I have been dying. The doctor gave me up day before yesterday; but I cannot die till I tell the true story of Lucy Keyes.

    I once had a farm in Westminster, east of Wachusett, and Robert Keyes’s joined mine. We quarrelled about the line fence, and the referees decided against me. After that I hated Keyes, and would have nothing to do with him. He had a happy family; and from my home I could hear their shouts of laughter; and Keyes was happy. This made me hate him the more; for I was unmarried and alone. To this I trace the ruin of that family and of my life. If I had boldly sought and wed—before she chose another—the girl whom in my youth I loved! But I cannot tell that story—I am too far gone. I only wish the young to be warned by me. My desolate way of living made me a terror to all children. I hated them, and they feared me.

    One summer afternoon, in the year 1755, or thereabouts, I was crossing the path to the lake, near Keyes’s field, when I saw the child, Lucy. She saw me, and appeared frightened, as if I were a wild beast. She began to run away. My anger was aroused. The injury Keyes had done me, in robbing me of part of my land; his prosperity and his happiness, with wife and children, and their loathing of me—all this rushed into my mind, and made me a demon of hate. I gave vent to my spite in a heavy cuff on the side of the child’s head. I did not mean to kill her. I was mad, and did not know how hard I struck. She fell, quivering, at my feet, and without a groan. Then I thought: “Here is more trouble for me on account of that hateful Keyes. If she lives, they will know it all, and I shall be punished; and she may not live for she now lay still at my feet. I will despatch her.” Mad with hate and fear, I struck her three heavy blows on the head with a stone. I then hid the body in a hollow log, and went to my house. That night Mr. Keyes came to ask me to help search for the child. I did so, to prevent suspicion; but I told him that I had seen a band of Indians the day before on the mountain, and that they had probably stolen her. When I saw how earnest and thorough they were in the search, I knew the body would be found; so I took it from the log and buried it near the roots of a fallen tree, scraping the earth from the roots into the hollow, and piling stones and rotted leaves with the earth above the body. This was late in the evening. I then built a fire above the grave, to conceal the place where earth had been moved.

    While I was piling wood on the fire, the family all came; and, before long, men came from Princeton and Westminster; and, the next day, from Lancaster. When the first ones came, I thought they had found me out; but I kept on adding wood to the fire, and said nothing. I was so busy with burying the child and concealing the evidence of it, that I did not think that the bonfire would call people together, though this was always the signal— so much was I beside myself. But when Mr. Keyes took my silence as the natural thing for me, and asked me where the child was found, I saw that no one suspected me; and their faces filled me with terror, lest the truth should be discovered. I, therefore, told them she was not found; and I made plans for a more thorough search. I kept them searching till they all thought that the Indians had, without doubt, stolen the child. My fears were then at rest.

    It was a natural thing for Indians to steal a child. Nobody suspected me; and I was safe. Then I went home, feeling free once more. But at sunset I heard the cry of Mrs. Keyes, calling for Lucy; and “Lucy!” “Lucy!” would be repeated from the mountain, and then from the hill, and then again and again from farther and farther away. It seemed as if all the spirits of the air were calling on me for Lucy. And then at night I would dream that Lucy was under my feet, and when I went to step upon her, in hate of her father, I would fall into a deep pit. This would awaken me; and as the misty light streamed through the trees, or into the room, I would seem to see her before my eyes as she looked after that first blow. And every night at sundown I used to hear the frantic mother calling for her little girl; and the echoes answered back the call. The nights were made hideous by my dreams.

    I could not stand it. And so, disposing of my farm, I travelled to the Far West, and took land on the Mohawk river, in the State of New York. The shadow of my dark deed has hung over me. The sunset-cry of Mrs. Keyes, calling for Lucy, has been in my ears; and in dreams the child has appeared to me, here, with the sad, stunned face. I have longed for death to take me; but death would not come. Even with the weight of ninety years upon me, he will not take me with this burden of guilt upon my soul. I want this story to be told to Robert Keyes~ that I may die and be free from the apparition of this innocent child, and

    Source(s): I looked it up =]
  • 4 years ago

    Man Who Murdered Lucky Keyes

  • 6 years ago

    This Site Might Help You.

    RE:

    Is there some where online i can find the letter written by the man who murdered Lucky Keyes?

    I watched a movie about the legend of Lucy Keyes.I have alway been fascinated by this type of story. It is based off a true story. I went on the sites website where I found out someinfo

    The following story is true:

    Robert Keyes and his family moved to Princeton, Massachusetts in 1751. They...

    Source(s): online find letter written man murdered lucky keyes: https://biturl.im/eeMyF
  • fermo
    Lv 4
    5 years ago

    The Legend Of Lucy Keyes

  • How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
  • Anonymous
    7 years ago

    I'm reading a book (online) called "Lucy Keyes, the lost child of Wachusett Mountain" & acc'd to this book there was no written confession by Tilly Littlejohn. A Mrs. Anderson reportedly witnessed the confession & told it to a Mrs. Whitmore who told it to either Mrs. Hager or her sister Ms/Mrs. Cornelia B. K. Brown who told it to Prof. Erastus Everett.

    Also acc'd to this book Tilly Littlejohn couldn't have possibly killed Lucy - the main reason being he didn't live there when Lucy went missing therefore couldn't have fought w/ the Keyes' over property lines.

    Source(s): Lucy Keyes, the lost child of Wachusett Mountain
  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    I am sorry for your loss and pain. I am not clear why you are concerned about getting your letter back? Can you use the address of the prison as a return address? Or use the address of a local police station.

  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    Interesting discussion!

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.