Today,
Cathedral Park in north Portland provides a breathtaking view of the towering
St. John’s Bridge, nature, and the east shore of the Willamette River. It is
not uncommon to see families picnicking there on sunny afternoons or the
occasional wedding held beneath the statuesque bridge and the smell of trees
and wildflowers add to the picture-perfect location. It is, indeed, a site one
could spend hours at, taking pictures and contemplating how little the scene
has changed since the construction of the bridge in 1931. But times have
changed and most of the people who walked through Cathedral Park have faded
into the past and are all but forgotten. All, perhaps, except for 15-year-old Thelma
Taylor, who also thought the park was beautiful. Until August 5, 1949, and
since then the park has been haunted by stories of ghostly screams and shadowy
figures.
.....Leland
held Thelma near the river bank throughout the night, well hidden in an area of
thick underbrush. But when morning came, Thelma could hear the workers
switching cars on a nearby railroad track, and her first instinct was to scream
for help. It was then, to avoid detection and certain arrest, that Leland
struck Thelma in head repeatedly with a steel bar. And then, to make sure she
could not possibly scream for help again, he stabbed her, silencing her forever
on that bank nearly eight blocks from Cathedral Park. Leland then threw the
steel pipe and the knife into the river, hoping that the current would carry them
far away, wiped his fingerprints from Thelma’s lunch pail, gathered his
cigarette butts, and buried Thelma in a shallow grave underneath a pile of
driftwood on the riverbank.
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