Rome News-Tribune

Disturbing secret suddenly revealed as family farmstead changes hands

- JEANNE PHILLIPS DEAR ABBY

Dear Abby: I need a second opinion. My grandfathe­r sold me an old farmstead that has been in the family for 200 years. Last week, he showed me a wooded area behind the barn with a human skull. He told me that when his father died more than 50 years ago, he was curious about how long it would take a body to decompose, so he left his body in the woods to keep track of its progress. He has 50 years’ worth of pictures and notes. He told the rest of the family that Great-grandpa had been cremated, and apparently no one questioned him about the ashes.

At this point, the skull is all that’s left. I checked with a lawyer, who tells me that in my state no laws were broken. That said, I don’t want my great-grandfathe­r’s skull sitting in the woods behind my barn! My husband says I should quietly bury it, burn the pictures and the notes and forget about it. That just doesn’t feel right to me.

It feels like I’m helping my grandfathe­r get away with something and it feels “icky.” Should I tell the rest of the family, or continue allowing them to believe that Great-granddad was cremated? I’m resenting my grandfathe­r for putting me in the middle of this, and any advice you have would be greatly appreciate­d.

— Bought More Than I

Bargained For

Dear Bargained: Your letter is a first. Why do

I get the impression that your grandfathe­r must have HATED his father to have treated his remains so disrespect­fully? The farmstead and everything that goes with it is yours now to keep or dispose of.

What you need to do is decide whether to donate your great-grandfathe­r’s skull to a school, place it in a columbariu­m or bury it on your property. As to whether to tell the rest of the family, what positive thing would be accomplish­ed by sharing this unpleasant­ness?

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