Martin DeFoor (September 17, 1805 – July 25, 1879) was an early Atlanta settler.
Background
editIn the 1840s, he moved his family from Franklin County, Georgia to Panthersville. In 1853, he moved to the Bolton area and took over operation of Montgomery ferry and resided at the Montgomery home the rest of his life. It was thereafter known as DeFoor's Ferry. From that time until his death, DeFoor and his family lived in the former Montgomery home, one of the oldest in the county, and located on the west side of what is now Chattahoochee Avenue, just north of Moore's Mill Road. The house was torn down in August 1879, by Thomas Moore, a son-in-law of DeFoor who used the lumber in erecting a barn on his own place just across the road.[1]
Death
editOn July 25, 1879, he and his wife, Susan, were brutally murdered. Both had been attacked with an axe and were found at 6am on July 26 by their grandson.[2]
The killer was never identified, nor a motive established.[3][4] They were not known to have any enemies and nothing was stolen except some promissory notes, despite the couple having cash in plain sight. A search of the house uncovered signs that someone had hidden in their house beforehand and the axe was found in the fireplace.[5]
At one point, newspapers claimed a man named Joe Johnson had confessed to their murders. But his confession proved false.[6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "DeFoor". atlantasupperwestside.com. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
- ^ "DeFoor". atlantasupperwestside.com. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
- ^ "AN AGED COUPLE MURDERED.; FOUND DEAD IN BED WITH THEIR THROATS CUT NO CLUE TO THE CRIMINALS". The New York Times. 1879-07-27. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
- ^ Grey, Orrin (2016-05-03). "The Unsolved DeFoor Family Murder of 1879". HuffPost. Retrieved 2018-02-22.
- ^ "The Brutal Murder of The DeFoor Family Is One of The Oldest Unsolved Mysteries In American History". Ranker. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
- ^ "DeFoor family murder". 22 April 2016. The Lineup Retrieved 31 March 2021