The question of how the second -century tomb marker of the Roman Nakat entered the New Orleans shotgun home. All this was to reach Erin Scott O’Brien, a previous homeowner for the news story, who sold the house to existing owners in 2018. He is the man who shot in the courtyard, but he had no idea whether it was a 1900 -year -old Roman cemetery, or even ancient.
He was shot from his mother. He belonged to his maternal uncle, Charles Paddock Jr., Master Sergeant Charles e -Paddock was stationed in Italy during World War II. In terms of trade, he was in the special service section of the USO when he met his next wife, Adeel Vincenza Pauli, who was a specialist and an artist. He married almost today (October 14, 1946) in Italy 79 years ago. Paddock took his bride back to the United States and they lived inside New Orleans, where Charles taught the music department at the University of Luola, and worked with local artists, including Legendary Entertainer Chris Oven, known as the Queen of the Latin Quarter.
In a paddock display case in his home in the Gentiley neighborhood, several people were shot. He passed away in 1986, nor nor any of his old relatives knew about the marker of the grave. They did not know that this was a serious sign for the matter. They just thought it was a piece of art.
When O’Brien bought the shotgun house in 2003, his mother gave him a stone inherited with his father. O’Brien and her husband planted a tree in the backyard of the house and kept the slab as a marker to trap the beginning of a new chapter in his life.
No one in his family had any idea of his history. By the time she sold the house in 2018, she had forgotten that she would keep it there.
“I just thought it was a piece of art,” he said.
As far as the Master Sergeant Charles e -Paddock received the sample, this is unknown. It seems that he (or his wife) bought it as a monument during the war or in Italy after the war, but he never talked about what no one remembers, so the whole story may never be told.
				






