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Gina's blog: "Spooky stories"

created on 08/12/2007  |  http://fubar.com/spooky-stories/b114738

Crescent Hotel

The Crescent Hotel and Spa, sometimes called “The Grand Old Lady of the Ozarks” is located in Eureka Springs, near Beaver Lake in northwestern Arkansas. Designed by architect Isaac L. Taylor, the hotel was built atop West Mountain between 1884 and 1886. Eureka Springs was well known for the “healing waters” that flowed from the nearby mountain springs. It became so popular that in the late 1880’s, the Frisco Railroad built a special line to it. The Crescent Hotel was built to accommodate the many visitors to the area. Billed as “America’s most luxurious resort hotel,” it was built with all the finest modern conveniences. While the hotel was under construction, “Michael,” an Irish stonemason fell from the roof and died from his injuries. His body landed right on the spot where room 218 was being built. Room 218 soon became one of the “hot spots” of paranormal activity. Guests of the Crescent Hotel have called it, “the most haunted place in the Ozark Mountain region.” The hotel prospered greatly in the early 1900’s but as time passed the waters of Eureka Springs lost their “healing” notoriety. The hotel continued to lose revenue and was unable to keep its creditors happy. By the end of 1907, the hotel was struggling to keep its doors open. In 1908, the hotel became the Crescent College and Conservatory for Young Women. It also served as an exclusive academy for the wealthy ladies of Eureka Springs. The conservatory closed in 1924 and the once glorious structure sat sadly vacant. In 1930, the hotel reopened as a junior college and remained active until 1934. In 1937, Norman Baker leased the hotel and converted it into a hospital and “health resort.” Baker claimed that he had found “miracle cures” for cancer and brain tumors. He was found later to be a crazy quack, performing torturous experiments “on both the dead and the living.” His so called “miracle” medicine was proved to be nothing more than crushed up watermelon seeds mixed with spring water. He administered the potion directly to the tumor after first cutting open the body. It was reported that he would “peel back the patient’s scalp exposing the brain and then pour the mixture directly onto it.” Many of the patients awoke screaming madly in agonizing pain. Driven to insanity by the severe pain they were assigned rooms on the fourth floor which Baker had converted into a makeshift “asylum.” After their deaths, Dr. Baker would hide the bodies until they could be burned later in the hotel’s incinerator. It will never be known how many patients died each month from cancer or from the “cure.” Baker was finally convicted of fraud in 1940 and he was sentenced to four years in Leavenworth State Prison. The dastardly deeds of Dr. Baker have left their lasting impression on the Crescent Hotel. Many believe the haunting of the hotel started immediately thereafter. Baker himself has been seen in the basement recreation hall and is said to plays phone pranks on the clerks at the front desk Legend has it that when the hotel was being remodeled, dozens of human remains were found in several secret chambers. It is also said that, supposedly hidden somewhere, there are jars containing preserved body parts, although they have never been found. Several guests and employees have described strange events in room 424. The door has slammed shut and strange sounds and sensations have been experienced in this room. In July 1987, a guest claimed that she, “saw a nurse pushing a gurney down the hallway in the middle of the night. The nurse reached the wall and then vanished.” Others have reported seeing the same exact thing outside room 424. Another resident of the fourth floor is reported to be the ghost of a woman who calls herself “Theodora.” “Most often seen by housekeepers in Room 419, Theodora courteously introduces herself as a cancer patient, before quickly vanishing.” One night a salesman was asleep in Room 218, when he was awakened as he was shaken violently back and forth by his shoulder. He reportedly heard footsteps scurry quickly across the floor, but he saw no one in the room. Another ghost has been seen sitting in the Victorian style lobby and bar of the hotel. He is, “a distinguished-looking man with a mustache and beard and who dresses in old- fashioned, formal clothing.” People often see him sitting alone at the bar. When they try to talk to him, he vanishes into thin air. Two young girls reported seeing “a man carrying a tray of butter and dressed in a uniform similar to the waiters' uniforms. He followed them out of an elevator and towards their third floor room, where he seemed to disappear.” Another person opened the door of her room and saw the man staring directly at the two young girls. The ghost of a young female who once attended the Crescent College and Conservatory for Young Women has also been seen at the hotel. The story is that the young girl either jumped from, or was pushed from a balcony to her death. Today, guests report, “hearing her screams as she falls.” Some tell of a gentleman in 19th century attire, sitting at a table near the window. When approached, he says, "I saw the most beautiful woman here last night and I am waiting for her to return." Others have seen large groups of dancers in similar style dress, gliding across the dining room floor. The Crescent Hotel and Spa provides ghost hunters with a smorgasbord of paranormal activity to experience. If you have the ghost-hunting bug, the Crescent Hotel just might have the “miracle cure.” borrowed from: http://www.angelsghosts.com/ghost_story_stories.html

Bachelors Grove Cemetary

Bachelor’s Grove Cemetery, located near Midlothian and Oak Forest, Illinois, is one of the hottest spots of paranormal activity in the country. The small, abandoned cemetery formerly known as Everdon’s lies near the Rubio Woods Forest Preserve just outside the Chicago city limits. The cemetery was established in the late 1830’s and its last resident was buried there in 1989. Many of the individuals were German immigrants who were hired to build the Illinois Michigan Canal. Many of the workers were single men as the backbreaking, dirty work and the long hours made married life a true hardship. So many of them died and were buried there that the cemetery was renamed Bachelor’s Grove. Although the graves are no longer attended and nearly forgotten, there is no shortage of activity around them. The cemetery is well known as a place where unusual sights and sounds are experienced. More than 100 tales of glowing balls of light, apparitions, and unexplained noises have been reported. One of the strangest and mysterious sightings is that of a “phantom white farmhouse that appears and disappears along the gravel trail leading to the cemetery. Many people have seen this old farmhouse in several different places along the trail and it has been seen during the day and also at night”. Also seen, is a monk dressed in a long robe, a man with a yellowish glow, and a ghost known as the “White Lady”. Many believe she is the ghost of a young woman that is buried close to her infant son. These ghosts have been photographed by several different people. Strange noises, such as horses, crackling sounds, growls, creaking metal gates, and human voices are reported frequently at Bachelor’s Grove. Mysterious lights, very strange mists and dramatic shifts in temperature have also been reported. Legend has it that the gravestones in Bachelor’s Grove “move on their own”. The cemetery has been frequently desecrated and some of the gravestones have been stolen. What it is not certain is how the robbers were able to remove the grave markers and what is just as uncertain is how the markers manage to get back to the graveyard, but they somehow do. Another area that is said to be haunted is a small lagoon just beyond the graveyard. In prohibition years, the lagoon was allegedly a favorite spot for Chicago gangsters to dump the bodies and cars of the victims of their rivals. Bodies have been seen floating in the lagoon and then mysteriously vanish beneath the water. Phantom headlights are often seen shining just beneath the surface and then slowly growing dim and finally going out. People have reported seeing “a two-headed monster and a farmer with a horse drawn wagon near the lagoon.” What “singles” out Bachelor’s Grove Cemetery from other sites are the numbers of different types of haunting phenomena on display in one geographical location. The cemetery is a ghost hunter's dream and a skeptic’s nightmare. What ever your forte', a visit here sounds like “an offer you can’t refuse.” borrowed from: http://www.angelsghosts.com/ghost_story_stories.html

Baldoon Castle

The ruins of Baldoon Castle are located just outside Bladnoch, Scotland near Wigtown. Traveling down the only street in the one horse town of Bladnoch, visitors cross the river bridge. They take the first road to the left and travel only a short distance to the gateway of Baldoon Mains. The ivy-covered ruins of Baldoon Castle lay just beyond the old gate. This historic castle was owned by the Dunbars of Westfield from 1530 to 1800. Although the ruins are now deserted, you can still feel a heaviness of heart as you walk onto the castle grounds. The ghost of Janet Dalrymple Dunbar is reported to haunt the castle. In the mid 1600’s, Janet, the eldest daughter of Sir James Dalrymple was betrothed to David Dunbar, heir of Sir David Dunbar of Baldoon. As was the custom, the marriage was arranged by her parents but Janet’s heart wasn’t in it. She loved Archibald, third Lord Rutherford, even though his family was virtually penniless. Janet’s parents had no use for poor Archibald. They forbid the relationship, insisting that she marry David. Out of duty to the tradition, Janet married David in the church of Old Luce, two miles from her home at Carsecleugh Castle. It was a hot summer day, but her brothers both recollect that Janet’s hands were “cold as ice,” as she walked down the aisle. “I don’t want to be with him,” Janet said to them. No one is quite sure what happened later that night in the bridal chamber. There are several versions of the events that occurred. In the first, “the bride stabs her bridegroom in the bridal chamber and dies insane.” The second, “disappointed, Archibald conceals himself in the chamber, stabs the bridegroom and escapes through the window into the garden.” Local tradition adds a third version “it was the Devil who nearly killed Dunbar and who tormented poor Janet until she was demented.” Sir Walter Scott describes his version of the events in his book, The Bride of Lammermoor. “The door of the bridal chamber was broken down after hideous shrieks were heard from within and the bridegroom was found lying across the threshold, dreadfully wounded and streaming with blood. The bride crouched in a chimney corner, her white nightgown splashed with blood, grinning and muttering and quite insane.” Legend says that Janet never recovered and died shortly afterwards, on September 12th 1669. David Dunbar is said to have recovered from his injuries and would not talk about the events of the dreadful night. In time, he married a daughter of the seventh Earl of Eglinton and eventually died after falling from his horse in 1682. Archibald, Janet’s true love, never married and died in 1685. Whatever happened that fateful night in the 17th century has left its impression on Baldoon Castle. On several occasions, visitors have claimed they have seen the ghost of Janet Dalrymple Dunbar roaming the castle ruins, usually on the anniversary of her death. Still wearing her blood-stained night clothes, she wanders sadly, head hung low as if she is filled with deep regret. Is it the burden of guilt or the memories of un-requited love that still haunt Baldoon Castle. Perhaps, only Janet’s ghost knows for sure and she’s not about to tell. borrowed from: http://www.angelsghosts.com/ghost_story_stories.html
I received my monthly Psychologists magazine which contained a large article describing “those sick people who go on ghost walks”. Psychology has as many views on the paranormal, as there are psychologists. And many see the paranormal as psychologies biggest area of failure.Britain has had so many new laws brought in over the past few years that they often take a while to filter through. One of the most intriguing is the property disclosure act, this means if your house is haunted you have to tell the buyer.In the past establishing just what constitutes a haunting has been open to various interpretations, and a particular problem area is council housing, where different boroughs in the past had very different policies. As overseas buyers come to London to invest in property, they often bring with them Feng Shui practitioners, while one recent Japanese businessman pulled out of a deal when he found that the building was built on the site of a house where a family had died in W.W.II. In one case highlighted by Rosie Millard in the British Sunday Times newspaper of Jan 7th 2007 a Victorian school in Clerkenwell, was built on a 19th century house of detention which housed 10,000 prisoners a year, including children, although demolished in 1890 the cells all remained below the playground, and occult phenomena was reported. The classic case is the house where mass murderer Donald Neilson killed a series of men he brought home, and afterwards the new house owner claimed the estate agent did not inform him of the house history, or the type of morbid sightseer he would get. The new legislation means he would have to be told. With China now a big exporter of goods to Britain, London is on the list for Chinese people to own a second home, and knowledge of past history is vital for their culture, where they revere their family ancestors. Failure to disclose could mean being sued, and heavy damages payable. Most prisons are haunted and the new inmate in cell number D336, child killer Roy Whiting, claims mass murder Dr Harold Shipman who hung himself there, makes his life absolutely miserable. These new legal rules, brought in by Matrix chambers, Cherie Blair’s law firm to make more work for her team, mean his human rights may be abused if he is not moved as he asks. The English civil war battle site at Naseby in particular, is a place where shouting voices are still heard, with the clash of metal upon metal.The blood spilt on the land makes it an eerie place, from what I have seen.I know I would certainly not buy one of the houses being built there. One proposal is for estate agents to have access to an exorcist in order to give certification of spiritual hygiene, within the health and safety legislature. Nevertheless, the prospective buyers will have to be told of the site history, and I have a feeling we may see many more court cases in the future. Where that leaves the extremist denial school of psychology, who deny life after death I cant quite see. I may offer to take them on one of my ghost walks! (borrowed from: www.trueghoststories.co.uk )

Lemp Mansion

Lemp Mansion is believed to be one of the most haunted places in St. Louis City, and in the top 10 of most haunted in North America. Located at 3322 De Menil Pl., across Highway 55, across from the Anheuser-Busch Brewery in the Soulard Area.

The Lemp Family seemed to be cursed with death and depression.

It is believed the curse of the Lemp Family started with William Lemp Sr.'s son, Fredrick Lemp. Frederick's death, believed to have been a heart attack from being over worked, caused William Sr. to fall into a deep depression, leading to him committing suicide in his bed room by shooting himself, and killing his dog.

The next to commit suicide was Frederick's sister, Elsa. Though not in the Lemp Mansion when she killed herself, her home is believed to be haunted as well.

William Jr. later married Lillian Hadlan. She was a beautiful young woman. Her favorite color was Lavender and that is all she wore, thus her being nicknamed "The Lavender Lady" (There is a beauty shop 2 blocks away from Lemp Mansion called "The Lavender Lady"). They eventually divorce causing a great scandal all of St. Louis would talk about causing Lillian to go into seclusion.

There is a rumor that there was a child born around this time (possibly from an affair William Jr. had with a servant) supposedly this child was mentally retarded, and deformed in some way, causing the family to keep him a secret to avoid humiliation or disgrace. They only know the child by the name of Monkey Boy. There is no record of a child like this being born to the Lemp's, but he has let himself to be known by psychics that have toured the home.

William Jr. eventually joined the rest of his family by shooting himself in the chest with a revolver, in the Office on the first floor of Lemp Mansion, now a dinning room!

In the 1970's the mansion was sold to Dick Pointer who started renovations on the mansion. Many of the workers started complaining of being watched by unseen, unwelcoming eyes, disappearing tools, apparitions of a gentleman in black, and eerie, unexplained sounds.

Many of these workers left never to return to the site.

Now Lemp Mansion is a bed and breakfast where many employees and guest report sightings of the Lavender Lady, a phantom dog barking, cold spots, the feelings of being watched, disembodied voices, even glasses being picked up from off the bar by unseen hands.

Anyone is welcomed to decide for themselves. The next time you're in St. Louis, Maybe you might want to check out Lemp Mansion. You can even reserve the room that William Lemp Sr. Killed himself in!

Borrowed from: www.theshadowlands.net

Lizzie Bordon House

Now a bed and breakfast located in Fall River Massachutes. As children we all heard the poem. Lizzie Borden took an ax, She gave her mother 40 whacks, When she seen what she had done, She gave her father 41. Of course Elizabeth Borden was the prime suspect in the murder of her father and step-mother. But she had a good lawyer and was aqquitted. Her house now turned Bed and Breakfast is very active with spirits. The marriage between Andrew Borden and Abbey Durfee Gray was not exactly a love match, but one of convenience. Andrew needed a housekeeper and mother for his girls Lizzie and Emma. And Abby's prospects for a husband were dwindling and although a miser, Andrew was a rich catch. There was no love lost between the girls and Abbey, before the murders the grown girls had been referring to Abbey as Mrs. Borden, and refusing to be a family. They basically lived all together in the same house as strangers, the girls secluding themselves behind locked doors. The day of the murders the only people around the house were Lizzie, Andrew, Abbey and the maid, who was outside washing windows and gossiping with the neighboring maid. Lizzie claimed to be outside also, eating pears underneath the pear tree during the time of the murders. Abbey was killed in the guest bedroom while changing sheets on the bed. Andrew was killed about 90 minutes later in the sitting/living room while napping on the couch. Lizzie was later seen by the maid burning a dress in the back-yard. Much controversy surrounds the murders and many different theories are out there about the murders. Is it any wonder the house is reportedly haunted. Cold spots are felt in many of the rooms. Abbey has been known to climb into the guests beds sometimes with them, other times in plain view. She also has been seen dusting and making the beds in many of the houses rooms. People who work in the house say they hear voices and opening and closing of doors. Other people have heard arguements between two female voices, and women crying. While still others tell of unexplained footsteps. The history and mystery of the house would certainly make this house a prime candidate for a haunting.

Haunted Alcatraz

Welcome to HAUNTED ALCATRAZ!---or Hellcatraz as it was called by some inmates. The history does not begin or end with the use of Alcatraz as a prison and penitentiary, for it was known to Native Americans, and avoided as a place that contained evil sprits. The energy of those who came to "The Rock" and never left, still remains for visitors from around the world to see, feel, and even hear. Alcatraz is a portal to another dimension, where unexplainable events continue to occur. Whoever, or whatever lurks in the shadows can be heard, seen, and felt. As parapsychologists suggest, where so much trauma and negative emotion have occurred, there is bound to be residual energy---and Alcatraz has the feel of an immense haunted house, complete with fog, and restless spirits. Although the candle may have burned out for Alcatraz long ago, its legend never did.

Prior to its discovery by Europeans, Alcatraz was viewed as a barren white rock---white because it was covered with pelican droppings--thus receiving the name of La Isla de los Alcatraces or "The Island of the Pelicans," by the Spanish. However, it wasn't until the 1850s, that the importance of this tiny island as a defensive position was realized. Finally, the military decided to build a fortress in case an unfriendly ship might decide to enter the Golden Gate. The Army Corps of Engineers began to construct an impenetrable and imposing structure in 1854. The original construction estimates of $300,000 did not take into account the wind, rain, fog, strong ocean currents, lack of water, lack of vegetation, and the fact that there was only one possible spot to land equipment and supplies.

Construction began with the erection of a temporary wharf for supplies. This was followed by wooden shops, storehouses, barracks and offices. Those who couldn't make it in the gold fields, became reluctant laborers on Alcatraz. The labor force carved out roadways and other features as the fortress slowly took shape. It was only a matter of time before Alcatraz began taking human life. During 1857, while a crew was excavating along the roadway between the wharf and the guard-house, a 7,000 cubic-yard rock landslide buried a team of laborers: Daniel Pewter, age 50, of Ireland and Jacob Unger, 25, of Germany were the first known deaths on Alcatraz. On a cold December day in 1859, the Third Artillery arrived on Alcatraz with a group of eleven anonymous soldiers of Company H---the first prisoners to be incarcerated in irons in the basement cellroom of the guardhouse for crimes not recorded in the army files. Alcatraz was now a fully operational fortress and prison. By Aug. 27, 1861, Alcatraz was designated as the official military prison for the entire Department of the Pacific. Living conditions were grim. Men slept side-by-side, head-to-toe, lying on the stone floors. There was no running water or heat in the cells, sanitary facilities were almost non-existent, and disease was rampant.

After the Civil War, confederate sympathizers caught celebrating the death of President Lincoln were sent to Alcatraz. In 1868, the Army designated Alcatraz Island as a prison for military convicts and malcontents of society. By the late 1800s-early 1900s, Indian chiefs and tribal leaders of Arizona and Alaska were incarcerated along with some of the worst thieves, deserters, rapists, and repeated escapees from the Army. Alcatraz again became a disciplinary barracks for U.S. Army military incorrigibles, as well as a health resort when soldiers returning from the Spanish American war convalesced there.

On the morning of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Alcatraz shook, but sustained little damage. That same year, four prisoners tried to paddle to the mainland on a butter vat, only to have strong currents bring them back. Driftwood was used during escape attempts in 1912, 1916, 1927 and a ladder was used during a escape attempt in 1929. All of the men were captured or surrendered, victims of the cruel currents, and cold water. In 1911, Alcatraz was officially named the United States Disciplinary Barracks---an official Army Prison which included both U.S. Army prisoners as well as German seamen who became prisoners of war.

The social upheaval of the 1920's and 30s, and rampant crime sweeping American provided Alcatraz with new life. Daring escapes, gang-related murders and mass rioting were a menace to an orderly prison. Attorney General Homer Cummings supported J. Edgar Hoover in creating a facility which would instill fear in would-be criminals by creating a place where prisoners could be safely controlled and could not escape. In 1933, the prison facility was formally turned over to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. During 1934, Alcatraz became a an escape-proof, maximum security prison, where only the most hardened convicts were brought.

The first residents of newly created Alcatraz, received numbers 1- 32, with Frank Bolt having the distinction of being Federal Prisoner #l while serving a five-year sentence for sodomy. He was followed by Charles Copp (Robbery and Attempted Assault), Leon Gregory (Robbery, Assault, and AWOL), Joseph Harrison (sodomy), Forrest Henry (Robbery and Assault), Clyde Hicks (Sodomy), Ralph Hills (Robbery and Assault), Albert Hoke (Robbery), Alan Hood (Sodomy), and Frederick Holme (Sodomy and False Enlistment) to round out the first ten inmates. AL Capone was the first celebrity on the first train to Alcatraz, arriving in August 1934---He was given the number 85.

Guards armed with machine guns, ensured that there were no escapes. Many convicts found Alcatraz the end of their career in crime, as well as the end of their lives. For twenty- nine years, the fog-enshrouded island, with its damp, cold winds, and isolation made Alcatraz one of America's safest prisons. The shell of steel and reinforced concrete confined ruthless men to a life of deprivation, rules, and routines that proved almost intolerable. When one adds the fact that the convicts could hear party boats pass by, and see the San Francisco city lights, it is little wonder that some preferred death to this kind of isolation. Failure to acquiesce to prison rules resulted in confinement in "D" Block, the treatment unit. Here, men could leave their four- by-eight-foot cells only once in seven days for a brief ten-minute shower. Life was hard on Alcatraz, just the way Warden Johnston envisioned it. His motto was, "Take each day of your sentence, one day at a time. Don't think how far you have to go, but how far you've come." For many prisoners, Alcatraz became synonymous with hell.

There were a number of escape attempts from Alcatraz, but the bloodiest occurred on May 2, 1946 involving, Bernard Coy, Joseph Cretzer, Sam Shockley, Clarence Carnes, Marvin Hubbard, and Miran Thompson. It cost the lives of three inmates and two guards, with 17 guards and one prisoner wounded. The trial afterward, resulted in the execution of two more convicts who took part in the aborted escape.

Attorney General Robert Kennedy officially closed the doors of Alcatraz on March 21 , 1963. From 1963 until 1969, the prison was unoccupied. Today it is maintained by the Golden Gate National Recreation Area where almost a million visitors per year pay to see "The Rock". To get there, take a seat aboard the Red & White Fleet ferry service. Reservations can be obtained by contacting (800) 229-2784.

The reputation of Alcatraz, like the solid ground it was built on, represents a lasting reminder, that no man is above the law, and for some, it is an eternal payback for their crimes against humanity---kind of an paranormal prison. Here are some of the stories.

During a Sightings visit in 1992, several of the Park Service staff confirmed the haunted history of Alcatraz. Many rangers had experienced unexplainable crashing sounds, cell doors mysteriously closing, unearthly screams, and intense feelings of being watched. Sightings called on psychic investigator Peter James to walk through portions of the abandoned prison to get his impressions. James began to pick up on the voices of the tortured souls driven mad since it's inception as a prison. He also sensed unusual vibrations of abuse, mistreatment, fear, and pain. His overall impression of Alcatraz was, that it had an energy like no other he had ever experienced---a persistent and overwhelming intensity that engulfed the island.

Some of the more haunted locations on Alcatraz appear to be the Warden's House, the hospital, the laundry room, and Cell Block C utility door where convicts Coy, Cretzer and Hubbard died during their escape attempt in 1946. The most haunted area on Alcatraz, is the "D" cell block, or solitary, as it was often called. To most who go there, a feeling of sudden intensity pervades the cells and corridor. Some rangers refuse to go there alone. It is intensely cold in certain cells, far colder than normal---especially cell 14-D. This cell is oftentimes so cold, that wearing a jacket barely helps---even though the surrounding area is twenty degrees warmer. It is no wonder the area was called "The Hole."

When authors, Richard Winer and Nancy Osborn visited Alcatraz, they ventured down to solitary with a park ranger. As Osborn entered cell 14-D, she immediately felt strong vibrations coming from within. Winer and the ranger followed Osborn, and within seconds, each of them experienced an intense tingling sensation in their hands and arms---they were convinced that something or someone was in there with them. The far corner of the cell where they were standing, and feeling the intense energy, was the exact spot where the naked, shivering prisoners would huddle, night after night, in the unforgiving darkness. Osborn said that she had never felt so much energy before in one spot.

Renowned ghosthunter Richard Senate, and a psychic spent the night on Alcatraz as part of a KGO radio promotion. They chose Al Capone's cell as a place of temporary refuge. According to Senate, emotions seemed to drip from every corner of Alcatraz as the long night progressed. He and the psychic visited the spots where rangers said they heard marching footsteps, and clanking metal; however, nothing happened. Finally, Senate locked himself in cell 12-D, where an evil and persistent ghost is rumored to dwell. As the thick, steel door was closed, Senate immediately felt icy fingers on his neck, and his hair stood on end. He knew he was not alone. Additionally, the psychic picked up on the twisted and dismembered bodies of uniformed men. Both left the island convinced that Alcatraz had its own special energy.

According to Antoinette May, much of the paranormal activity on Alcatraz occurs around areas associated with the penitentiary's worst tragedies. One of them is the Block C utility corridor, Cell Blocks A and B, with the eeriest area centering around cell 14-D---where it is always cold. According to May, gifted psychic Sylvia Brown accompanied by a CBS news team, investigated parts of Alcatraz. As Brown toured the prison hospital she picked up cards and notes tacked up on a wall, and the letter "S." A ranger confirmed that the "S" probably stood for Robert Stroud who spent ten-and-a-half years in the hospital, in the very room they were standing. He also had hundreds of notes and cards tacked up all around him. Brown sensed strong energy in what used to be the therapy room, and the prison laundry room, where at least one prisoner was murdered.

Co-author, Michael Kouri, visited Alcatraz Island in July of 1984 with his uncle. After several preliminary psychic impressions, Kouri reached cell 14-D, and entered. He first felt a "tingling sensation", which began at his fingertips; then, a very intense feeling of cold engulfed him. In a slight trance, he began to communicate with the spirit of a man of small stature; who had his head shaved and was left in "The Hole." The spirit, in obvious pain, "told" a horrifying tale of being beaten, his leg broken by guards, and left in solitary confinement---he had squealed on a fellow inmate---the year was 1939. Kouri then tried to lead the poor soul to the light. [Note: Kouri's other unique experience with a visitor, is truly remarkable, as well as an interview with the wife of an ex-warden---but you'll have wait until the book comes out].

A former guard related his stories about Cell Block D (particularly cells 12 and 14), and the frightening remnant energy lingering in the subterranean portion of the prison. During his stint during the mid-1940, convicts were often confined in one of the 14 cells in "D" Block (cells 9-14 were called "The Hole," because they contained no windows, and only one light which could be turned off by the guards. The darkness made it seem like a hole in the ground---hence the name. On one occasion, an inmate was locked in "The Hole". Within seconds, the inmate began screaming that someone with glowing eyes was in there with him. Tales of a ghostly presence wandering the darkened corridors in clothing from the late 1800,s were a continual source of practical joking among the guards, so the convict's pleas of being "attacked," were ignored.

The man's screaming continued well into the night, until there was silence. The following day, the guards inspected the cell---the convict was dead, a horrible expression etched on his face, and noticeable hand marks around his throat. The autopsy revealed that the strangulation was not self-inflicted. Some say he was strangled by a guard who had enough of the man's screaming---although no guard ever admitted it, even to the other guards. Others believed it was the restless, evil spirit of a former inmate who exacted his vengeance on yet another helpless soul. To add to the mystery, the day after the tragedy, several guards, performing a routine lineup of the convicts, counted one too many people. At the end of the line, the guards witnessed an extra body---that of the recently deceased convict. As everyone looked on in stunned silence, the figure of the ghostly convict vanished into thin air!

A number of guards from 1946 through 1963, experienced something out of the ordinary at one time or another. From the outer rim on the grounds to the deepest caverns, there was constant talk of people sobbing and moaning, horrible smells, cold spots, and seeing the "thing" with glowing eyes. Even groups of phantom prisoners and soldiers have appeared in front of startled guards, guests, and the families who lived on the island.

Sometimes the old lighthouse (long since demolished) appeared out of a dense fog, accompanied by a ghostly whistling sound, and a great flashing light which passed slowly around the entire island, just as if the Lighthouse was still active. The spectacle would then vanish before the startled eyes of guards and visitors. Phantom cannon shots, gun shots, and screams oftentimes sent seasoned guards falling flat on their stomachs thinking that prisoners had escaped and obtained weapons. Each time, there was no explanation. A deserted laundry room would sometimes emanate a strong scent of smoke, as if something was on fire. The sensation of the choking smoke would drive guards out of the room, only to return a few minutes later, the area now completely smoke free---the phantom smoke occurred many times over the years.

Even Warden Johnston, who didn't believe in ghosts, encountered the unmistakable sounds of woman sobbing, as if coming from inside the walls of the dungeon while he accompanied a number of guests on a tour of the facility. As if that weren't enough, an icy, cold gust of wind blew through the group, chilling them to the bone, just as the sobbing stopped.

The now burned-out shell of the Warden's House, has also been a focal point for sightings since the 1940s. During a Christmas Party, several guards witnessed the chilling apparition of a man wearing a gray suit, brimmed cap, and mutton chop side burns. When the men saw the apparition, the room turned deathly cold, the fire in the Ben Franklin stove was extinguished, and after less than a minute, the man vanished.

These are but a few of the "Haunted Alcatraz" stories. When you visit and journey down the now deserted corridors of this world famous penitentiary, keep your wits about you, and all your five senses in tuned, and perhaps your sixth sense will help you encounter some of the many spirits who inhabit Alcatraz. The next story you read in an updated version of this book, maybe yours... Happy haunting!

***From Haunted Alcatraz: A History of La Isla de Los Alcatraces and Guide to Paranormal Activity, by Robert Wlodarski, Anne Wlodarski, and Michael Kouri***

The Bell Witch

The Bell Witch of Tennessee In Robertson County Tennessee, near the Kentucky state line the most extraordinary haunting occurs. The Bell Witch, an entity that first made its appearance in 1817 to John Bell and his family, is still present today although no Bells occupy the area and the farm house where the haunting focused is no longer present. It was burned to the ground by neighbors who witnessed attacks against the Bell family and who feared for their own safety. The true identity of this spirit is unknown but it is felt that The Bell Witch is none other than the moody Kate Batts of Halifax, North Carolina. She was engaged to John Bell until her untimely death sometime in the 1770's. Her lifeless body was found near a well close to her home. The circumstances surrounding her death are mysterious and remain unsolved. John Bell, her future husband, wasted no time mourning the loss of his intended. He married Lucy shortly after Kate's funeral. The newly married couple made Tennessee their home. In 1817 John noticed a doglike creature in his cornfield. Not wishing to have his crops trampled or destroyed, he got his gun and fired upon the animal. The creature disappeared immediately into thin air. This was the beginning of the end for John Bell and his family. Almost immediately they were plagued with sounds of someone wishing to enter their home - scratching, knocking and banging on the front door. Someone or something wanted in. Soon enough, the presence found a way into the home and began to torment all that crossed the threshold. The presence introduced itself as The Bell Witch and while it focused most of its violence on John, the nine Bell children were also frequently attacked. The children were attacked as they tried to sleep by an unseen presence pulling their hair, slapping them, and whispering in their ears. As they would walk to school in the daylight they would be showered with rocks and sticks falling from thin air. The presence especially enjoyed tormenting the twelve-year-old Betsy Bell. Betsy would hear a disembodied voice that would grow closer each day, she would fly into convulsions, and found herself falling into a dead faint as the haunting grew more intense. No one was safe from the evil spirit. Anyone crossing the threshold of the Bell home was fair game. Minister Johnson was asked by John Bell to bless his home and perform an exorcism. This did nothing but anger the spirit who then retaliated against the Minister by her usual use of violence. A family friend, William Porter, came to visit the Bells. The Bell Witch announced to William that she would keep him warm as he slept. Having announced her plans, she proceeded to pull the covers from him. Within moments he felt a snake-like cold chill sliding against him. William quickly decided to capture the spirit within the blanket so that he could toss blanket and spirit upon the flames in the fireplace. However, the presence he captured within the folds of the blanket grew heavier and heavier with each step he took and a foul odor began to emanate from the blanket as well. The weight of the blanket and the foul odor overcame William. He dropped the blanket and fled the house. John Bell, Jr. and Jesse Bell had fought under General Andrew Jackson in the Battle of New Orleans. The two had developed a good rapport with Andrew Jackson so in 1819, when Jackson got word of the disturbances at the Bell home he came calling to assist. General Andrew Jackson brought with him a witch slayer and an entourage of men. The wagon they were using suddenly stopped moving once it came within close proximity of the farm. The horses could not budge the wagon even after the men threw their shoulders into the wagon and began to push. After an hour of cursing and ranting, General Jackson is said to have acknowledged it must be the work of the Bell Witch. At which time, it is reported that The Witch laughed and told Jackson he would be seeing her later that evening. The wagon was then freed and able to move. Upon their arrival to the farm, the witch slayer attempted to contact the Witch. He cursed her, laughed at her and then finally attempted to shoot the Bell Witch with a silver bullet. To his consternation and everyone's amazement, he was slapped, battered and tossed about the room by unseen hands. The witch slayer, Andrew Jackson and his entourage quickly fled. Andrew Jackson is reported to have said he would battle the entire British Army anytime, however, he would not wish to deal with the Bell Witch again. Overtime, the Bell family suffered repeated attacks. When Betsy, John and Lucy's daughter, began to date a young man, Josh Gardner, the Bell Witch did not approve. Betsy was singled out again and tormented to the point that she ended her engagement with Gardner. After that was done, the Witch focused on John Bell once again. John Bell was plagued by several illnesses of which The Bell Witch claimed credit. One attempt she made upon his life was prevented when it was noticed that John's tonic had been switched with poison. However, December 19, 1820 John slipped into a delirium that he never fully recovered from. The Bell Witch is said to have sung at his funeral the next day. After his funeral The Bell Witch declared she would return in seven years. In 1828 she did return but only for a short period where she tried to torment Lucy and two of her sons. While the Witch has returned and continues to torment the Bell family regardless of where they are, it is not nearly the same level of torment she committed upon John Bell. If the Bell Witch was Kate Batts, John's intended this would make the most sense. Whether John had a hand in her death or not, his quick marriage to Lucy implies that Kate was not happy about John being happy and returned to make him suffer. Her body was barely cold before John found a new willing bride. Perhaps, John was Kate's unfinished business. With John's death, Kate's or the Bell Witch's business was finished. There are still reports today that the area known as the Bell Farm is still being haunted not only by the Bell Witch but also by John, Lucy, and perhaps even Betsy Bell. The house is gone but the spirits still linger. Emotions dictate behavior in life so why not in death? Is it possible that Kate was so angry with John at the time of her death that she came back to exact vengeance? The question is not whether or not John had a hand in her death but what did John do to warrant such a vicious haunting? Kate was a violent and spiteful spirit that delighted in others sufferings. Perhaps, this is because she was unable to live her life in happiness as she died before marrying John. Then having the man who professed his undying love for her, seek out and marry another immediately after her funeral! John's behavior seems odd for this day and age, and one would have to assume it was even in the 1770's given the haunting of the Bell Witch. (borrowed from: http://theshadowlands.net )

Shirley Plantation

Gracing the southern Virginian colony and commanding a view of the James River, Shirley Plantation began building in 1723 by Edward Hill III for his daughter, Elizabeth. Hill’s sister, Martha, had left for England to study, leaving behind an unsigned portrait of herself. A strong mouth and deep eyes dominated the painting, almost daring one to ignore its presence in the room. Martha later married an Englishman, Hugh Griffith, and remained in England. Though the portrait is known by the family as “Aunt Pratt,” no one seems to know the source of the name Pratt. In 1858, long after Martha’s death, the family noticed the painting rocking violently against the wall above the mantel in a third story bedroom. Moving the noisy portrait to the attic only intensified its turbulent actions. Knocking was heard around the house and word got out that the plantation was infected with a rather boisterous picture. The Civil War soon surrounded the plantation and the residents of Shirley were caught up in the turmoil of having their home turned into a field hospital as General McClellan transported over 8,000 injured and dying men out of Virginia. With their access to the James River close by, injured men were transferred onto Union ships and the dead were buried in the family cemetery. There is no mention of Pratt’s activity during this time, they probably had more pressing matters to worry about. After peace ensued, the portrait was taken out of storage in the attic and placed on the first floor in a place of honor for the old gal. Though happy for a while, it soon began its rocking and the hunt was on for someplace that the picture would remain quiet. Finally placing the picture in Martha’s second floor bedroom, it remained relatively quiet for the next few years. In 1974, the Virginia Travel Council loaned the portrait with other items associated with psychic phenomena to an exhibit at Rockefeller Plaza in New York. Once placed in a display window, the picture began to rock so vigorously that the seal of Virginia, which was placed beside it, began to swing from side to side in front of spectators. Aunt Pratt made her national television debut on NBC-TV as a reporter on his way to lunch stopped by to see what all the ruckus was about and caught the rocking on tape. It caused such a disturbance that it was removed from the exhibit and crated up. The night shift reported hearing crying and rocking in the storage room. One morning it was found on the floor outside the storage locker, some thought she was making a break for the exit… After being returned to Virginia, the portrait was taken to Linden Galleries in Richmond, Virginia to help repair the damage to the frame. While there, workers would tell of bells ringing, though there were no bells on the property. The portrait was finally placed back at Shirley Plantation and is seemingly happy in it’s second floor bedroom. Tours are available of the mansion though you may have to pay more to see the rocking… ;) (borrowed from: http://theshadowlands.net
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