} ee ; A) \ ies i Ze 2 ae) suestpar ae oo ¥, bo ist a aA a ake bacd Steen A | yh Nenad gS oP bur pen Falls Ay she Cordova | . ad oy ASG \ nA o. , , ops, yf Mines Se Nae ( ‘ e / ' AF I) f , Marmora P } ‘ btweed ’ Tamworth é ! pe ra A | ; & 4 t ee ‘ : : 3 ‘ ( sores iy” i “4 sites a 4 "a ff Ss J an Do = | With Melinda in tow, King headed for Melinda’s Aunt Catherine Lh SS! ARS MR ABB 1 AON je ge SaKingston p/ Clayton ar aS | ; ; ‘ . Bray 9. JRC Nn Sain oh 5 os , ge os» Bate's farm in Cape Vincent, New York, opposite Wolfe Island. ke RR © te _ OP ee eel ont Sa 4 ~ |<] Quickly he wrote to his parents telling them where he was. ue sgn 4. olga inn diol wa er ? fey ‘ % On SY, . ‘ . sda. ag WML” Sale ae ) Gps ed Just as quickly Sarah’s family found out and were soon on Ei ce ae Pe SNS “conse son gem Die ye esas their way, revolver in hand and accompanied by a US sae 6 urg he: ae be Winona ackets) Har oF pat) Daa “= 0 o qd . ~ \ ae see “>| Marshall. Dr. King was arrested hiding under the straw in a he LSA Spe ; . oy ase gee hog’s nest in Aunt Catherine’s barn. ] =p) fas : Veg i> Altman * A AC eae SY i ? ° Ww ee Back home, the autopsy revealed there was arsenic in Sarah’s stomach. Incriminating letters were found in Dr. King’s trunk. On Nov. 14, 1858 King was handed over to the Northumberland County Courthouse and Jail in Cobourg where he was indicted for murder. | Dr. King’s trial was a sensation - locally and even Agg eS provincially. It began on April 4, 1859, in the court house just north of Cobourg with “not less than fifteen hundred” attempting to hear the proceedings in a court room that could only accommodate four hundred. The accused appeared confidant of acquittal, he being a man of “about 5 feet 11 inches, of a.pale countenance, dark hair, with sandy whiskers”. His eyes were “penetrating”, and his demeanor suggested “a city gentleman”, rather than someone who was about to be tried for poisoning his wife. But with Judge Robert Easton Burns presiding, Crown Council Thomas Galt established a solid case of arsenic poisoning. The case was strengthened by the expert testimony of Henry Holmes Croft, professor of chemistry at University of Toronto, by King’s own letters to Melinda, and by his flight when an inquest was announced.