Every Place Has a Story

The Shaughnessy Murder of Marion Hamilton

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Marion Hamilton, 68 was murdered in her Shaughnessy home in 1975. It’s a creepy story of a once prominent Vancouver family, a run-down old mansion, greed, and the shocking identity of her murderer.

The story of Marion Hamilton’s murder first appeared in my book At Home With History

Marion Coote Hamilton at age 30. Vancouver Sun photo, 1936

When police found the body of Marion Hamilton, 68, in her Nanton Street home in 1975, they assumed it was death by natural causes. The widow suffered from dementia and lived in the decrepit old house since the death of her elderly mother nine months before.

Marion had two guardians, both cousins, appointed to look after her. Olga Young had wanted to put her into a nursing home where she would receive around the clock attention; but Elouise Roads Wilson, Marion’s co-guardian told Young that she didn’t want the estate to be “depleted” by the cost of private care. So the 47-year-old Elouise Wilson left her law practice in Victoria and moved into the Nanton Street house to take care of her cousin.

Vancouver Sun reporter with Elouise Roads Wilson Vancouver Sun, July 1979

Soon afterwards, Marion was dead.

The autopsy found ligature marks around her neck. Either someone had strangled her, or she had either accidentally or intentionally hanged herself with a thin cord or wire.

The story got decidedly creepier. It turned out that Eunice Coote, Marion’s 93-year-old mother had died in the same house several months before. Apparently, she was dead for two to three weeks, lying in the same bed and decomposing and Marion hadn’t noticed.

Show Notes:

Intro:               Mark Dunn

Music:             Background track created by Nico Vettese www.wetalkofdreams.com

Seagulls and crows sound effects:

Sponsor: Forbidden Vancouver Walking Tours

Promo:            Blood, Sweat, and Fear: The Story of Inspector Vance

Sources:

Lazarus, Eve. At Home with History: The Untold Secrets of Vancouvers Heritage Homes. Anvil Press, 2007

McDonald, Glen and John Kirkwood. How Come I’m Dead? Surrey, BC. Hancock House, 1985

Official Report of Debates of the Legislative Assembly, June 7, 1978

Death Certificates

City Directories

Newspapers:

BC News

Nanaimo Daily News

Ottawa Journal

Province

Times Colonist

Vancouver Sun

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