Bonlac Foods Stanhope
George Weichmann discovered Kasper. His feet were bleeding from many blisters and it appeared they had never been walked on. His skin was exceedingly pale, appearing as if he had never been in the sun. His pockets contained an old worn-out key, some religious writings and a folded paper with a small amount of gold dust, used in German folk medicine as cures for tics, which the boy exhibited. Some mistakenly thought he was a feral child.
Kasper Hauser's Mysterious Letters
The boy gave George two letters intended for the captain of the 4th Squadron, 6th Cavalry Regiment. George took Kasper to Captain Wessenig who confined him in a cell in the Luginsland tower. Kasper tried to touch a flame, was terrified of a grandfather clock and ate only bread and water.
The unsigned letters were enigmatic. The first said the boy wanted to serve his king in the Army and that his mother brought him to the note’s writer on 10/7/1812. He was never allowed to go outside. The second letter said the child was baptized. His name was Kasper. He had no surname. When the boy is seventeen, he was to be taken to Nuremberg’s 6th Calvary regiment where his father was a soldier. Kasper was born on 4/30/1812. The writer said she was a poor girl, unable to care for him and his father was dead. While the contents of the letters make it appear they were written by two different people, handwriting analysis revealed they were created by one.
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