Post by Brian on Jul 16, 2009 22:40:26 GMT -5
03/02/07 at 09:56 PM
douglasboulding
If it was not paid off how, could Marion ever had let all those people in there to see the home place?
keneth d boulding
03/02/07 at 10:00 PM
douglasboulding
I hope Maria you can find the deed of sale to that land. It will end all this.
Thanks,
Doug
keneth d boulding
03/03/07 at 05:49 AM
Maria
I will do my best Doug. You have my word on it. And as soon as I find it (provided I do) you will be the first person I let know. You asked how Marion could have let all those people inside the house to take the tours if the house had not been paid for. I've heard that the tours lasted approximately 5 years and I have also heard and read where one of Charlie's brothers lived in the cabin with his family for awhile after the murders. Provided this info is correct as to the number of years the tours went on, then I am pretty much forced to believe that the house was paid off. Or at the very least someone in the family was continuing to keep up the payments on it for that length of time. The house almost HAD to have been paid for. It's been established that when Arthur and Nina got married in the mid 1930's, he built a house for them. You can't build a house without money unless you borrow money from someone or from a bank. In order for a bank to loan you money you have to have SOME money in your account as well as collateral...something of enough value that if you can't fulfill your obligations to the bank they can take whatever that collateral was. The only other way is for someone to co-sign for you. So if the house was not paid for, how was Arthur able to borrow money from the bank. It has also been established that Arthur lost the house when the bank foreclosed on it in or around 1940. I know this to be true because I.M. Gordon bought it from the bank and in 1941 he rented out the house to Hillary and Sadie Hampton who later bought the house. By the way, Sadie Hampton is still alive and so are her children, one of whom I've talked with many times. In my opinion, it was THIS house...the house that Arthur built, not the house where the murders occurred, that Arthur lost due to not making the payments on it. Therefore, I believe Arthur's original home, the cabin owned by his father and where the murders occurred, had to have been paid off in full. But I still want to get the documents showing when it was paid off and by whom so we can settle this one small piece of the story via legal proof.
Maria
douglasboulding
If it was not paid off how, could Marion ever had let all those people in there to see the home place?
keneth d boulding
03/02/07 at 10:00 PM
douglasboulding
I hope Maria you can find the deed of sale to that land. It will end all this.
Thanks,
Doug
keneth d boulding
03/03/07 at 05:49 AM
Maria
I will do my best Doug. You have my word on it. And as soon as I find it (provided I do) you will be the first person I let know. You asked how Marion could have let all those people inside the house to take the tours if the house had not been paid for. I've heard that the tours lasted approximately 5 years and I have also heard and read where one of Charlie's brothers lived in the cabin with his family for awhile after the murders. Provided this info is correct as to the number of years the tours went on, then I am pretty much forced to believe that the house was paid off. Or at the very least someone in the family was continuing to keep up the payments on it for that length of time. The house almost HAD to have been paid for. It's been established that when Arthur and Nina got married in the mid 1930's, he built a house for them. You can't build a house without money unless you borrow money from someone or from a bank. In order for a bank to loan you money you have to have SOME money in your account as well as collateral...something of enough value that if you can't fulfill your obligations to the bank they can take whatever that collateral was. The only other way is for someone to co-sign for you. So if the house was not paid for, how was Arthur able to borrow money from the bank. It has also been established that Arthur lost the house when the bank foreclosed on it in or around 1940. I know this to be true because I.M. Gordon bought it from the bank and in 1941 he rented out the house to Hillary and Sadie Hampton who later bought the house. By the way, Sadie Hampton is still alive and so are her children, one of whom I've talked with many times. In my opinion, it was THIS house...the house that Arthur built, not the house where the murders occurred, that Arthur lost due to not making the payments on it. Therefore, I believe Arthur's original home, the cabin owned by his father and where the murders occurred, had to have been paid off in full. But I still want to get the documents showing when it was paid off and by whom so we can settle this one small piece of the story via legal proof.
Maria