on the last day of alice spence’s life, she put on her fine gold necklace and picked out a belt with a flower decoration to compliment her fashionable silk blouse.
maybe she spent time with her young daughter idella, or thought about her family in michigan and minnesota — far away from the home she now shared with her husband charles in saskatoon.
maybe, with the new decade of 1920s on the horizon, she was making plans for the future.
then somebody put her body in a burlap bag, stuffed her in a barrel and threw her down a well.
and for more than a century, that was the end of alice’s story.
then, in june 2006, a saskatoon construction crew was excavating a site at central avenue and 108th street, in the sutherland neighbourhood, when they rediscovered the old well.
saskatoon police display a photo of excavations underway at central avenue and 108th street in 2006, when alice’s remains were found.
michelle berg
/
saskatoon starphoenix
“and the way it was described to me is that a human cranium came out of the well and rolled down the embankment,” recalled
forensic anthropologist ernie walker, who was immediately called to the scene.
walker and his team started the slow, careful process of taking the old well apart board-by-board. it was a “difficult retrieval, no question,” walker recalls: the surrounding site was full of toxic chemicals and contaminated groundwater.