Sabre from American Revolution found in Guysborough wall
CBC News | Posted: October 1, 2014 10:30 PM | Last Updated: October 2, 2014
Weapon linked to 1829 murder of a Nova Scotia doctor
Fabian Gerrior and his wife were hardly expecting to become a part of a murder mystery more than 175 years in the making when they bought a beautiful yellow house on the main drag of Guysborough in Nova Scotia.
The story picks up after Gerrior hired some workers to renovate his home. While they were at work upstairs, they alerted him of an unexpected find.
"One of them hollered down to me, 'Fabian, come look what I found!' So I went upstairs and he passed me this sword," says Gerrior.
"It's actually not a sword, it's a sabre — a cavalry sabre," explains Mark Haynes, president of the Guysborough Historical Society. A sword is straight, whereas a sabre is curved.
Gerrior showed it to a historian, who sent photos of the sabre to the Army Museum at Citadel Hill in Halifax. The museum identified it as a sabre used by the British cavalry during the American Revolution.
"They dated it around 1780," Gerrior says.
Link to unsolved murder of a doctor
Haynes says the weapon likely belonged to Capt. Joseph Marshall, with the Carolina Rangers, who made his way to Guysborough as a Loyalist after serving in the only British cavalry regiment in the American Revolution.
"Officers and soldiers were allowed to keep their weapons," says Haynes.
This is where, as they say, the plot thickens.
In 1829, a local doctor — who was not well liked and had allegedly stolen property from his wife — was found dead after being stabbed by what was believed to be a sword numerous times.
One of Marshall's sons, along with three others, were charged with murder of the doctor, but the charges were eventually dropped.
Haynes says the sword would likely have been kept in the sheriff's lock-up.
But then curiously, Gerrior's house was built in 1939 by a retired sheriff, Haynes explains. "He must have taken the sword [sabre] home as a bit of a souvenir."
That souvenir was then hidden away for decades.
"I don't know what I want to do with it," Gerrior says. "To take the sword to the museum would be nice, but the museum is only open three months of the year."
He thinks that the best option might be to put it on display in his bakery and antique shop, Days Gone By.