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Many colorful characters lived in and
around the Malad valley in days gone by, and every once in awhile an
unusual story comes to light. I recently heard an interesting tale
pertaining to Benjamin Waldron, a man well known for his abilities as a
businessman in early Samaria, Idaho. However, before Ben became a merchant,
he was a farmer by trade. It seems that when he was about 25 years
old, in the fall of 1878, he was out harvesting with a horse-powered
thresher. Somehow, his leg got caught up in one of the rods in the
machinery and was severely injured. Nat Waldron, a relative, states:
"They hooked up a team of horses to a wagon and rushed him to Logan
as fast as those horses could run."
For
awhile it seemed doubtful that Ben would live due to the loss of blood and
the severity of his leg injury. Doctors found there was no way to
repair the leg and it was decided to amputate the limb. After the
operation, Ben asked that the leg be buried which was done, according to
his wishes. The burial plot for the leg was marked with its own
tombstone on the east side of the Samaria Cemetery and it bears the
engraving of a leg with the inscription: "B.W. October 30, 1878.
According
to the story, Ben
writhed in pain for weeks following the amputation,
insisting that the leg was twisted in the grave and that this was the
cause for his great discomfort. Finally, the leg was exhumed and
sure enough, the leg was buried in a "twisted" manner. The
leg was straightened and re-buried. Mr. Waldron reportedly was then
able to rest more peacefully and eventually adjusted to his impairment.
When Benjamin Waldron died in April of 1914, his body was laid to rest at
the west end of the Samaria Cemetery, far from his estranged leg. -By
Sue Thomas |