The still unchanged epitaph reads: Farewell, we meet no more On this side of Heaven. Patrick’s, Biddulph, a tombstone that used to be eleven feet tall and is now (because of attracting swarms of sightseers with “murdered”) only two feet tall with “murdered” changed to the less challenging “died.” Still, money and flowers are left on the stone, visitors still chip away souvenirs, and there are signs that the Donnellys are becoming a beloved cult, quite a change from the virulent hatred that generated their massacre. The title of this study of the economic background to the Don nelly story is lifted from the epitaph on their tombstone at St. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. This Side of Heaven: Determining the Don nelly Murders, 1880. One hopes that McGimpsey is still to be found among their number enjoying the kind of panoramic and unobstructed view of the game that Imagining Baseball offers of its many cultural productions. In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:ĭwindling number of diehards making their way to Montreal’s Olympic Stadium.
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