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Haunted History, Urban Legends and Tall Tales
Up & Coming Magazine ^ | 20 Oct 04 | JONELLE TOMBSON

Posted on 10/20/2004 8:19:00 PM PDT by CurlyBill

Haunted History, Urban Legends and Tall Tales

JONELLE TOMBSON October 20, 2004

Tall tales of the macabre are always fun, but when they are centered around local places, events or people, they are even more exciting. Compiled from old folk lore and books, here is a collection of Fayetteville legends that are sure to make your hair stand on end.

Heart-pounding, spine-tingling, bone-chilling ghost stories and scary urban legends that have been passed down from generation to generation are as much a part of Halloween as candy, black cats and costume parties. Tall tales of the macabre are always fun, but when they are centered around local places, events or people, they are even more exciting. Compiled from old folk lore and books, here is a collection of Fayetteville legends that are sure to make your hair stand on end.

THE HANGMAN'S HOUSE
Near the community of Spring Lake, an old house is rumored to have claimed the lives of the people who have lived there. On three different occassions, three different men met odd ends. Nobody knows why these men were driven to early graves, but everyone knows that the circumstances surrounding their deaths are far beyond the realm of the normal.

Construction on the house began in 1910, and the strange occurrences first plagued the house as it was being built. The first contractor mysteriously disappeared. Finally, a second contractor was hired and the job was finished. The owner rented the building to a tenant, but the house was not his home for long. Less than six months after he moved in, the tenant hanged himself from a rafter in attic for unknown reasons.

After the unexplained suicide, the house stood empty for a while. When a few months had passed, a family from Virginia came to settle in North Carolina and bought the house, not knowing of the gruesome event that had occured on the top floor. Six weeks later, the man of the family hanged himself in the attic on the very same rafter where the first owner had met his untimely death. Now the site of two grisly suicides, the house became a completely undesirable location. It stood vacant for many years, making it suspectible to the ravages of age and environment. The dark, weather-beaten facade was an ominous sight, and no one would live there. In desperation, the owner finally offered the house rent-free to anyone with the nerve to live in it and keep it repair. A Fort Bragg soldier from Boston took the owner up on his offer.

The soldier and his wife moved in and tried their best to make the creepy old house into a suitable living area. However, the plague was not over. Strange happenings disturbed the house and its owners. Alarm clocks rang inexplicably at the wrong hour in the middle of the night. Closed books opened up on their own, and locked doors unlocked themselves.

When news of the house's many curiosities spread throughout town, visitors began showing up at the house. Sometimes, more than 40 people per day would knock on the doors and inquire about the supernatural phenomena. Finally, the dubious publicity struck the young soldier's last nerve. One day, his wife found him dead, hanging from a rafter in the attic-a rafter that was worn with a smooth groove where two other ropes had been looped before.


THE VANDER LIGHT
On a dark and solemn night in the tiny community of Vander, railroad switchman Archer Matthews was alone at the train station. While he awaited the next train to pass by the depot, he lit his lantern and stepped outside onto the platform to smoke a cigarette. A misty rain began to fall. In the distance, an unexplained noise pierced the darkness. Startled, Matthews leaned over the edge of the platform to investigate the source of the sound, but he lost his balance and fell onto the tracks below, knocking him unconscious.

Finally, the lonesome, crying whistle from the incoming train sounded. As the train barrelled toward the station, the conductor saw no one waiting to board at the Vander station. He did, however, see a faint glimmer on the horizon. When the conductor finally realized that the glimmer belonged to a lantern, he caught a glimpse of Matthews' body sprawled across the tracks. The conductor slammed on his brakes, but it was too late. Matthews was killed instantly.

Now, one can allegedly see a flickering light above the train tracks where Vander Station used to stand. The light floatover the tracks for a few seconds and then disappears. Watch your back, though. Eyewitnesses have claimed that if you get too close to the light, it will indeed disappear...only to reappear a few seconds later behind you.

Legend has it that the flicker is the flame from the old switchman's lantern, swinging back and forth from Matthews' ghostly hand. Naysayers may claim that the light is merely phosphorescent swamp gas, known as will o' the wisp. In marshy areas, such as the area where the Vander station was, natural gas is known to escape from the ground and glow as it rises. Skeptics might believe this story, but anyone who has actually seen the Vander Light holds firm to the idea that the light indicates the spirit of Archer Matthews, still waiting on the train that never comes and searching for the sound that literally scared him to death.


THE WOMAN IN BLACK
Now the home of the Women's Club of Fayetteville, the Sanford House on Dick St. is rumored to also be the home of a ghostly presence. Eyewitnesses have seen the spectre of a woman in black. The spirit has been known to slowly descend the staircase and then forlornly ascend to the landing and disappear. Who is this phantom lady? There are a couple of possibilties.

The most popular tale tells of a young woman searching for her lost love. As the story goes, a Civil War soldier was killed in the Sanford House and buried in the basement-possibly in the old vault that was used when the house served as a bank in the 1820's. The soldier's sweetheart searched the house for him, not knowing that she would never see him alive again. Devastated by her loss, the young woman mourned for the solider until her own death-a death which some say occurred as a result of her broken heart. Now she haunts the stairs of the house, still searching for her love for all of eternity.

Other stories claim that the spirit may be Margaret Halliday, the daughter of a prominent Fayetteville family and the wife of banker John Cameron. Cameron, who was the cashier of the Bank of Fayetteville, lived on the second floor of the house when it served as the bank's headquarters. Upon his marriage, Cameron bought the house and the family lived there for several years. Incidentally, the Oval Ballroom, which stands next door to the Sanford House, was supposedly built for the Halliday-Cameron wedding.


THE TRIAL OF THE CENTURY
Speaking of the Oval Ballroom, the ornate and oddly-shaped structure has some secrets that lie within its walls. Its story centers around Ann K. Simpson. Her 1850 murder trial was the "trial of the century" in her time-a captivating and controversial tale for a captivating and controversial woman.

On the night of November 8, 1849 Ann's husband Alexander, a wealthy carriage shop owner, died suddenly. Autopsy results revealed that Alexander had been poisoned with arsenic. The only suspect was his wife. A warrant was issued for Anne's arrest, and she was extradited from Havana, Cuba where she had fled to shortly after Alexander's demise.

Anne was the first woman ever tried for murder in Cumberland County and possibly in the state of North Carolina. The testimony presented at her trial was truly sensational: letters alluding to infidelity and Ann's visit to fortune-teller Polly Rising, who predicted that Alexander would be dead within a week. Then, there was the most damning evidence of all. An employee from Samuel J. Hinsdale's drugstore testified that Ann had purchased an ounce of arsenic, supposedly to kill rats, soon before Alexander's death. The prosecution claimed that Ann had used the rat poison to taint her husband's coffee at dinner in the Oval Ballroom on the fateful night.

In his closing statement, defense lawyer D. K. MacRae said, "You cannot give her peace. You cannot restore her joy. But gentlemen, you can let her live." The jury deliberated for three hours and returned with a not guilty verdict.

Did Ann really poison her husband and fool the jury into believing that she was innocent? Or was she the victim of an unusual coincidence? She took the truth to her grave. Only she (and perhaps Alexander) knew whether she had gotten away with murder.


THE KYLE HOUSE PRESENCE
The Kyle House, the grand Greek Revival Style house on Green Street, might be home to a restless spirit of its own. Several witnesses have claimed to hear strange disembodied noises in the house, such as furniture moving on its own or footsteps on an otherwise empty staircase. When one enters the Kyle House, there is definitely a strange vibe radiating from its elegant walls. Maybe its visitors are being watched. The house belonged to family patriarch James Kyle, a merchant and prominent city figure who immigrated to Fayetteville from Scotland. He built the beautiful dwelling around 1855 after his first home was destroyed by the Great Fire of 1831. After Kyle's death, his daughter Annie lived in the house. Annie was a nurse during the Civil War era. She eventually rented the house to borders, and for a while, the Kyle House served as city offices.

The strange atmosphere in the house is most often attributed to the presence of the spirit of old James Kyle. Is he still roaming the hallways, still taking care of his home from beyond the grave? Visit the Kyle House and listen up. Maybe you'll hear him yourself.

Jonelle Tombson
Up & Coming Weekly Staff Writer.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; Philosophy; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: fayetteville; ghost; ghosts; haunt; haunted; haunting; nc; northcarolina
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To: oceanperch

Oceanperch, you must write this story of the Asian cook and your ghost and submit it to a local newspaper, or a magazine or something. This is fascinating and a good read, regardless of whether someone believes in ghosts or not.


21 posted on 10/21/2004 5:15:33 AM PDT by bd476
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To: CurlyBill; Constitution Day; TaxRelief; Helms; 100%FEDUP; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; ~Vor~; ...
Great spooky reading, NC-style:

NC *Ping*

Please FRmail Constitution Day, TaxRelief OR Helms if you want to be added to or removed from this North Carolina ping list.
22 posted on 10/21/2004 6:30:10 AM PDT by TaxRelief
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To: bd476; oceanperch
"Oceanperch, you must write this story of the Asian cook and your ghost and submit it to a local newspaper, or a magazine or something. This is fascinating and a good read, regardless of whether someone believes in ghosts or not."

But, please have somebody review your story for grammar and spelling before you send it off. Seriously, I was having to go back and decipher some of the sentences. It was interesting enough to stick with it, I love this kind of stuff. I have a few little "incidents" of my own that always made me say, "hmmmm...."

23 posted on 10/21/2004 6:48:02 AM PDT by Hatteras (The only plan the Democrats offer is fear, dishonesty and fraud.)
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To: bd476
You know the reason I took KV to this event of the PNW Hauntings by the Author was it was not an exciting event, meaning he would not go into resp. distress as he does if an event is too exciting. This last year we have had to make changes and keep his life quiet to make caring for him humanly possible and that is with a pharmaceutical cocktail BID to control the overflow of rigidity and closing of his bronchial openings ect.

Well the local paper did a human interest story, waiting for it to be published, on him and his dogs about a month ago which he really needed to lift his spirits and the first event I take him to outside of normal non exciting social visits the guy hosting the event was the journalist who did the human interest story on him and his labs.

So we did share the story with the hauntings author and Terri, the journalist.

Terri thought it was interesting but the author was kinda so what ish.

The few times KV got excited and loudly coughed via his trach the author stopped talking and asked if everything was ok, I yelled down to him "it is normal" then the second time he coughed an elderly lady way up front stood up and shouted about it leaving the presentation. That is to bad as he is not contagious or can control it. Heck he did excellent only letting out three coughs through the hour and a half.

We just ignore reactions from others they don't get it and it is not worth the energy to let it effect us. Kinda like using an ignore button on the Internet.

Regarding the human interest story KV is a practical joker so when his Lab was put down, we expected to do so before this winter he could not walk anymore, he tried to put his Obit in the human section and almost got away with it, Terri who is new to the local paper thought it would make a great human interest story and satisfy KV's remembrance of JC.

When the article is published I has planned to do a vanity thread on the original Obit he submitted and the story published with his antics added.
24 posted on 10/21/2004 6:50:26 AM PDT by oceanperch ( Mt. St. Helens is nothing compared to the stuff Kerry spews.)
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To: JRandomFreeper

fyi


25 posted on 10/21/2004 6:55:19 AM PDT by kayak (Have you prayed for your President today?)
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To: CurlyBill

Add me to your ping list, please!


26 posted on 10/21/2004 6:56:28 AM PDT by Andy'smom
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To: Hatteras

Oh I am sure. I did not get an official education in English and do the best I can.

So that's the best it gets. You should hear me talk if you think my writing is bad.


27 posted on 10/21/2004 6:56:41 AM PDT by oceanperch ( Mt. St. Helens is nothing compared to the stuff Kerry spews.)
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To: Vicki
Several years ago I purchased an older home from a retired judge. It was his parents house and had been vacant (although fully furnished) for years. We "shared custody" as he moved the contents out and I began cleaning and renovations. Not long after we settled in, I ran into an acquaintance who didn't know we had moved. He asked where we lived. When I told him he literally went white and said "That house is haunted!" He would offer no other details and walked away.

I never told this story to my two teenagers, yet I wondered why one of the guest bedrooms had a hook and eye closure on the OUTSIDE. (I removed it before we moved in, yet had no choice but to believe that someone or something was locked in that room at some time.) My teens are always talking about moving their bedrooms further away from each other and I've offered that guest room - it's beautiful with windows on three sides. They look at me like I'm crazy and tell me that one room scares them and they wouldn't spend the night in there much less move into it. I don't know what made them think that and when questioned they have no explanation. Every guest that's ever spent the night survived, what's the big deal? ;-)
28 posted on 10/21/2004 8:26:03 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: CurlyBill

The poetic thing is that where the house where the residents were found hung in the attic, is now the site of a church. It's on Hwy 87 just north of Spring Lake.


29 posted on 10/21/2004 8:52:27 AM PDT by dstarr (Proud widow of a Vietnam War and Korean War veteran)
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To: dstarr

I also live out in Vander. I've never seen the light because I don't know where to go sit and watch for it. I have seen another light down near Wilmington. It used to appear at a little place called Maco along the railroad tracks there. Now that the tracks have been taken up the trees and underbrush have grown up so much that I'm sure it can't be seen. That light was very vivid years ago when I saw it. The light would actually reflect off the metal of the rails.


30 posted on 10/21/2004 8:58:37 AM PDT by dstarr (Proud widow of a Vietnam War and Korean War veteran)
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To: CurlyBill

I have a ghost ping!
Tonight on CMT all new ghost stories here is the link.

CMT.com: Shows: CMT Most Shocking: Ghosts!: About the Episode
Address:http://www.cmt.com/shows/dyn//countrys_most_shocking/86392/episode_about.jhtml Changed:5:22 PM on Friday, October 22, 2004


31 posted on 10/22/2004 5:26:27 PM PDT by oceanperch ( Mt. St. Helens is nothing compared to the stuff Kerry spews.)
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To: Quilla

FYI Tonight on CMT

CMT.com: Shows: CMT Most Shocking: Ghosts!: About the Episode
Address:http://www.cmt.com/shows/dyn//countrys_most_shocking/86392/episode_about.jhtml Changed:5:22 PM on Friday, October 22, 2004


32 posted on 10/22/2004 5:29:00 PM PDT by oceanperch ( Mt. St. Helens is nothing compared to the stuff Kerry spews.)
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To: CurlyBill

Add me to your list as well, please.


33 posted on 10/23/2004 4:45:30 AM PDT by MWS (Errare humanum est, in errore perservare stultum.)
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