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Chance33_98 and LadyShallott ^

Posted on 10/30/2003 8:23:40 PM PST by chance33_98

In total there were roughly two thousand people interred in the Athens State Hospital burialgrounds before 1972, when the burials ended with Female #847 and Male #1117. Since men and women were numbered separately, there are two gravestones for each number through 847.

Apparently Ohio University also buried the cadavers used in its medical classes here.

The Ridges asylum cemetery is also definitely reputed to be haunted. Most of the stories center around the weird circle of graves which takes up one corner of an otherwise military-style tombstone layout. Maybe there was a center stone at one time, but now it's just a barely-distinguishable ring of graves. The legends say that witches use this as a circle of power (or something like that) to hold seances in.

Camp Chase Prison

Until Nov. 1861, Camp Chase, named for Sec. of the Treasury and former Ohio governor Salmon P. Chase, was a training camp for Union volunteers, housing a few political and military prisoners from Kentucky and western Virginia. Built on the western outskirts of Columbus, Ohio, the camp received its first large influx of captured Confederates from western campaigns, including enlisted men, officers, and a few of the latter's black servants. On oath of honor, Confederate officers were permitted to wander through Columbus, register in hotels, and receive gifts of money and food; a few attended sessions of the state senate. The public paid for camp tours, and Chase became a tourist attraction. Complaints over such lax discipline and the camp's state administration provoked investigation, and the situation changed.

Food supplies of poor quality resulted in the commissary officer's dismissal from service. After an influx of captured officers from Island No. 10, officers' privileges were cut, then officers were transferred to the Johnson's Island prison on Lake Erie. The camp's state volunteers and the camp commander were found to have "scant acquaintance" with military practice and were transferred, the camp passing into Federal government control. Under the new administration, rules were tightened, visitors prohibited, and mail censored. Prisoners were allowed limited amounts of money to supplement supplies with purchases from approved vendors and sutlers, the latter further restricted when they were discovered to be smuggling liquor to the inmates.

As the war wore on, conditions became worse. Shoddy barracks, low muddy ground, open latrines, aboveground open cisterns, and a brief smallpox outbreak excited U.S. Sanitary Commission agents who were already demanding reform. Original facilities for 3,500-4,000 men were jammed with close to 7,000. Since parole strictures prohibited service against the Confederacy, many Federals had surrendered believing they would be paroled and sent home.

Some parolees, assigned to guard duty at Federal prison camps, were bitter, and rumors increased of maltreatment of prisoners at Camp Chase and elsewhere.

Before the end of hostilities, Union parolee guards were transferred to service in the Indian Wars, some sewage modifications were made, and prisoners were put to work improving barracks and facilities. Prisoner laborers also built larger, stronger fences for their own confinement, a questionable assignment under international law governing prisoners of war.

Barracks rebuilt for 7,000 soon overflowed, and crowding and health conditions were never resolved. As many s 10,000 prisoners were reputedly confined there by the time of the Confederate surrender.

Source: "Historical Times Encyclopedia of the Civil War

2260 Confederate prisoners of war were buried at Camp Chase Cemetery. A melancholy ghost haunts the rows at Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery, 2900 Sullivant Avenue, on Columbus's west side. Her name, according to some, is Louisiana Rainsburgh Briggs, but she's better known as the Lady in Grey. She weeps quietly over the grave of one Benjamin F. Allen, a private in the 50th Tennessee Regiment, Company D. Allen's grave is number 233 out of 2,260 Confederate soldiers laid to rest in this two-acre plot in the capital city of a very Northern state.

The Buxton Inn in Granville, Ohio was built in 1812 by Orrin Granger, founder of Granville. He had originally lived in Granville, Massachusetts. The building was originally used as a post office and stagecoach stop, and it is currently Ohio's oldest operating inn still using its original building. Major Buxton operated it as an inn from 1865-1905, and that is for whom it is named.

Orrin Granger's ghost was the earliest documented sighting. Sometime in the late 1920's, a son of one of the owner's encountered Orrin in the kitchen and caught him eating the last piece of pie. Orrin's ghost has been seen many times since then, especially sitting by the fire. He is almost always described as a gray-haired man wearing knee britches.

Major Buxton's ghost is described as being a shadowy figure. He has been seen all throughout the house, but he seems to be seen mostly in the dining room. He is easily identified by the guests because a big portrait of him hangs in the Inn.

In 1972 Orville and Audrey Orr, who began to restore the building, purchased the inn. This seems to have stirred the spirit of yet another former owner, Ethel "Bonnie" Bounell. She was the innkeeper from 1934 to 1960. The workers were startled one day by a ghostly woman in blue, who then began appearing regularly at 6:00 p.m. After the renovated inn opened in 1974, and right up to today, she has been seen in numerous places. She has been encountered on the upper balcony, in the ballroom, and on the stairway. The best places to see her, though, seem to be room 7 and in room 9, which is the room in which she died. She startled a cook in the late 1970's by occupying the bed in room 7 when he went to go to sleep. In 1991 she appeared in room 9. A nurse was awakened to find a woman sitting on the foot of her bed. The woman asked, "Are you sleeping well?" The nurse replied the only way anyone could, "No, I'm not!"

The woman then vanished. The nurse approached the staff about the incident, and when showed a photo, she identified the woman as Bonnie Bounell.

The inn also has the typical markings of a haunted building: footsteps, doors and windows that open by themselves, the feelings of unseen presences. Guests have also seen disembodied hands warming themselves by the fire.

The Buxton Inn is one of Ohio's most famous haunted hot spots!


Click the banner below to visit our website chronicling the hauntings of our civil war era home.



TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: halloween
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Post your photos, Halloween Memories (any weird candy?), ghost stories, etc.

If you know of any particular haunted places in your state list the state and let us know where!

1 posted on 10/30/2003 8:23:40 PM PST by chance33_98
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To: mhking; AnnaZ; Cultural Jihad
Ping
2 posted on 10/30/2003 8:29:09 PM PST by chance33_98 (Check out my Updated Profile Page (and see banners at end, if you want one made let me know!))
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To: rdb3
ping
3 posted on 10/30/2003 8:35:51 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: chance33_98
Was their a Clint Eastwood movie shot at the Buxton Inn?
4 posted on 10/30/2003 8:35:58 PM PST by TheConservator (To what office do I apply to get my tag line back????)
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To: TheConservator
Not sure honestly, will see what I can 'dig' up :)
5 posted on 10/30/2003 8:42:25 PM PST by chance33_98 (Check out my Updated Profile Page (and see banners at end, if you want one made let me know!))
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To: chance33_98
Here's my Halloweeny Links page
if anyone is interested.


6 posted on 10/30/2003 8:47:01 PM PST by happydogdesign
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To: chance33_98
Douglas
The Gadsden Hotel

A Headless ghosts walks the tunnels in the basement, and Sara the elderly ghost inhabits the 4th floor. The basement of the hotel has been noted as the most Haunted portion of the Hotel.


Photo by Jack Dykingstra

The Gadsden is truly a hotel unlike any you'll find elsewhere. Besides a colorful past perhaps most splendid is her architecture. The spaciousmain lobby is majestically set with a solid white Italian marble staircaseand four soaring marble columns. Each capital is decorated in 14K gold leaf-worth $20,000 in 1929. The building is constructed of structural steel and reinforcedconcrete. The finest materials and fixtures were used, even the plumbingis installed with all copper pipes throughout.


Photo by Jack Dykingstra

An authentic Tiffany stained glass mural extends forty-two feet across one wall of the massive mezzanine. An impressive oil paintingby Audley Jean Nichols is just below the window. Vaulted stained glass skylightsrun the full length of the lobby.

7 posted on 10/30/2003 8:56:17 PM PST by HiJinx (God Bless America!)
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To: chance33_98
Two cool stories:

Story Number One: As a teen, I worked in a restaurant which was located in and built up around an old farmhouse. The oldest part of the house was a log cabin which was built in the 1790s by a locally prominent farming family, back in a period when there were still Shawnee raids. In fact, the old family graveyard was ten yards from the grease dumpster - it was overgrown, but some of the graves were still visible, and there were two inscribed Revolutionary War era headstones still legible. All kinds of weird tales were talked about by the staff - dining rooms in older sections set up, but disorderly the next day, and one hardbitten waitress had actually seen an apparition sitting in an empty room at a table, only to disappear (she was still working there at the time I was there). All too frequently, I'd latch up the window over the Pot Sink in the kitchen at night, only to find it wide open the next day. One night, full of the bravado of 17 years, I was standing outside the room where the apparition had been seen (this was in the area of the log cabin), and was talking to another of the waitresses, a 60 year old lady, and mocking the ghost tales. It was empty. I was laughing, and saying they were spreading tales to mess with us, and she was denying it. All of a sudden, we both heard a noise, and looked into the room. A spoon came up off a table 15 feet away from us, and flipped a good 5 feet away from where it started. We both bolted for a room where there were lots of folks. Later, after it was sold and remodeled and I moved on, my folks went to eat there (it was about two weeks after reopening). The waitress was friendly, and without prompting, related how she nearly fell down the stairs with a tray, yet a set of unseen hands caught her - while no one was on the steps with her.

Second story - Last year, I took my family to DisneyHell®. On the drive back, we stopped to stay a night at a very exclusive sport resort at a place called Barnsley Gardens at Adairsville, Georgia, midway between Atlanta and Chattanooga. It was gorgeous. They had built one if the world's great small hotels by laying out cottages around an antebellum ruin - they'd even laid a proper floor in the ruin and lit the fireplaces at night - even though it was open to the sky. We stayed in a refurbished house closest to the ruin, the cottage we stayed in was 2 stories, about 2000 square feet, and was originally built in 1840 as one of the auxiliary homes on the property. That night, we put the kids to bed in the upstairs bedroom (very nicely appointed - this is a 5 star place, with a designer golf course, clay tennis courts, Orvis certified fly fishing, skeet and trap, and a world class restaurant - $750 a night for our room). I lit the fire in our bedroom fireplace, locked the deadbolts, and was closing the bedroom door when my wife and I both heard a loud noise. My wife asked what the noise was, and I said "beer cans shifting in the sink", even though I knew better. She knew I was snowing her, and said "you want to check that out?" I said "no, but I will anyway". I flipped every light switch there was, and went out. Sure enough, both the front and back deadbolts were open - as I knew they would be, since that was the sound I had heard when I locked them. There wasn't a soul out and about - it was 11:30 PM, so nobody had come by to unlock them - not at the same time. I relocked them, came to bed, and all night, we heard noises from the main living area. Luckily, I was tired, so I was able to sleep. The next morning, the kids reported hearing a slam and some noises in the night from inside the house. We talked to the folks at the stable the next morning, who confirmed that there were lots of stories from that cottage. When we got our film back, we had at least one good vortex shot, and at least one "something" that was between the plane of a window and a tree outside.

Story Three - Last year, when looking at the ghost cam in the Evansville Library, my oldest daughter pointed out a floating book in an empty area.

8 posted on 10/30/2003 9:13:16 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (Dr. Hasslein was the only human character who had any sense in the "Apes" series)
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To: chance33_98
That was actually three stories.

;)

9 posted on 10/30/2003 9:15:05 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (Dr. Hasslein was the only human character who had any sense in the "Apes" series)
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To: chance33_98

10 posted on 10/30/2003 9:15:14 PM PST by Pro-Bush (Homeland Security + Tom Ridge = Open Borders --> Demand Change!)
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To: chance33_98
Here is the Barnsley link.
11 posted on 10/30/2003 9:18:48 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (Dr. Hasslein was the only human character who had any sense in the "Apes" series)
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To: Code Name Mo; Yankee66; bytor
I shared my most awesome Halloween with you three.... Halloween night '98, just before midnight, at Ft Marcy Park, cannon #2.
12 posted on 10/30/2003 9:19:13 PM PST by LurkerNoMore!
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To: wardaddy; Constitution Day
Pinging for Southern ghost tales.
13 posted on 10/30/2003 9:31:51 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (Dr. Hasslein was the only human character who had any sense in the "Apes" series)
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To: chance33_98
Good thread, thanks! My true "ghost" story is this. In the mid 1970's I was at a seminar for Henry David Thoreau enthusiasts. Staying at the Concord Academy, which as I recall was one of his homes in the town, my room was a very small one on the 4th floor. One morning I woke up and found that the name "Henry", in Thoreau's distinctive handwriting, was clearly written in ink on the palm of my hand. Half awake I looked at it and tried to think how it had gotten there. Maybe I had pressed my hand down on wet ink -then realized it was written forwards, not in reverse. Maybe I wrote it in my sleep, then realized it was written on my right palm (being right-handed, I couldn't write left handed if I tried). I finally wondered if someone snuck into the room and wrote it on my hand as a prank, then realized that the door to the room was still locked from the inside, and no one could get in the fourth floor window in the room. I went downstairs where the other seminar attendees were having breakfast, held up my hand and asked who wrote that. Of course everyone was a little surprised at such an odd question! To this day I can't find a logical reason for it.
14 posted on 10/30/2003 9:36:42 PM PST by Moonmad27
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To: Chancellor Palpatine
I think I felt the real presence mostly in the Jamaican countryside more so than anywhere I have ever been in the world.

But I have yet to see one. I did know someone who had and this person was quite intelligent and lucid...Colombia Phd.

Like they say....I have more live ones to worry about.
15 posted on 10/30/2003 9:43:03 PM PST by wardaddy (...and Yes, I'll be your huckleberry.)
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To: MrConfettiMan
Another huge Halloween Highlight was talking briefly to you outside that museum 5 yrs ago tomorrow....Then later, after you were introduced, realizing I had met THE Mr. ConfettiMan!
16 posted on 10/30/2003 9:45:26 PM PST by LurkerNoMore!
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To: wardaddy
I'm told of some friends of my parents who had a house that was really bad news - one redirected staircase, the dog growling up in the direction of where the landing of the former staircase was, and a husband/wife neurologist couple who won't visit them ever again - and who won't tell of what they experienced.
17 posted on 10/30/2003 9:46:08 PM PST by Chancellor Palpatine (Dr. Hasslein was the only human character who had any sense in the "Apes" series)
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To: LurkerNoMore!; Mia T
I shared my most awesome Halloween with you three.... Halloween night '98, just before midnight, at Ft Marcy Park, cannon #2.

EKKKK....Vince Foster's Ghost. and the 142 more Clintons' victims...are there any more, lately???? :\

18 posted on 10/30/2003 9:46:17 PM PST by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid,doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. :)
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To: wardaddy
I think I felt the real presence mostly in the Jamaican countryside more so than anywhere I have ever been in the world.

A buddy of mine felt that same presence in that same place .......although the local ganja might've had something to do with it ;)

19 posted on 10/30/2003 9:47:53 PM PST by Mr. Mojo
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To: Chancellor Palpatine
I would love to see the pics that you have of the vortex, better yet you can post them on our page as well (shameless plug...I Know) :)


LadyShallott
20 posted on 10/30/2003 9:52:41 PM PST by LadyShallott
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