Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2012

Phantom Cat of Fairport Harbor Lighthouse - Fairport Harbor, Ohio

In the 1870s, the Fairport Harbor Lighthouse in Ohio was manned by Captain Joseph Babcock.  He lived there for in the keeper's quarters for a decade along with his wife Mary and children Hattie and Robbie.  However, tragedy would strike the Babcock family early on.  A family pet would console them during hardship and many say this unlikely soul still haunts the lighthouse to this day.


The original Fairport Harbor Lighthouse now the Fairport Harbor Marine Museum in Ohio
The original Fairport Harbor Lighthouse now the Fairport Harbor Marine Museum in Ohio

When Robbie Babcock was five years old, he became stricken with illness and passed away.  Mrs. Babcock took the loss very hard and became ill and bedridden herself.  Joseph in an attempt to cheer bright up his wife, brought on some cats which Mary became very fond of.  There was one cat in particular though that she was especially attached to which was a grey cat that stayed by her side always.

When Mary passed away, all of the cats left the lighthouse except for the grey one which was Mary's favorite.  Eventually, that cat too disappeared.  After Mary's death, Joseph left the lighthouse only to return a decade later and manned it for another ten years.  After that, his son took over for a time until 1925.

Over the years some of the trustees who look after the lighthouse which is now restored as the Fairport Harbor Marine Museum, had caught a glimpse of a cat scurrying here or there inside the keepers house.  Some claimed that the cat had taken the form of a wisp of grey smoke or haze.  There had been times where people staying in the house actually felt contact on them from unseen force that felt much like a cat jumping on them.  This ghost cat was given the name "Sentinel".

Some years later in 2001, some work was being done on the the air conditioning system in the museum.  One of the workers was working in a crawl space in the basement and stumbled upon the mummified remains of a cat.  A grey one to be exact!  Since "Sentinel" is somewhat a resident of the lighthouse, it's remains are kept on the premises and are on display in the museum for all to see.  The ghost cat's spirit will continue to live on at the Fairport Harbor Lighthouse.


The mummified remains of 'Sentinel' the ghost cat was found in the Fairport Harbor Lighthouse in 2001
The mummified remains of 'Sentinel' the ghost cat was found in the Fairport Harbor Lighthouse in 2001

For hours and location, visit the Fairport Harbor Marine Museum website: http://www.ncweb.com/org/fhlh/
To visit the ghost cat page specifically visit: http://www.ncweb.com/org/fhlh/ghostcat.htm

Monday, October 24, 2011

Ghosts of the Ashtabula River Bridge Disaster - Ashtabula, Ohio

It was December 29, 1876 during a bustling holiday travel season that the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Train No. 5, the Pacific Express left Erie, Pennsylvania bound for Cleveland, Ohio.  The express consisted of two locomotives pulling several passenger cars loaded with over 150 holiday travelers as it plowed it's way through a winter storm coming in off of Lake Erie.  The train and many of it's passengers would never make it to Cleveland. 


Artist's depiction of the Ashtabula River Bridge disaster in 1876

At around 7:28 the train crossed the Ashtabula River Bridge as it neared the Ashtabula station, suddenly the bridge began to buckle and collapse under the weight of the locomotives and the full passenger cars.  The entire train except for the first locomotive which had reached the other side, plunged 75 feet into the icy river below.  Incredibly, most of the passengers and crew had survived the fall with the exception of a few.  



Photo of the Ashtabula River Bridge before the collapse

Things immediately got worse for the passengers, the stoves that kept them warm during the cold winter trip became their worst enemy as flames broke out among the passenger cars.  Even though most passengers had survived the initial crash, they were trapped in the cars because they were sandwiched on top of one another in a pile of debris.  The shiny wooden cars all covered in varnish, quickly became ablaze and the fire spread quickly. The broken oil lamps that had not already ignited added even more fuel to the fire. Those who managed to crawl out of the mayhem found themselves in the icy waters of the Ashabula River and within minutes succumbed to hypothermia and perished.  In all, almost one hundred were died in the disaster including some who died from their injuries days later.  Most of the dead were unrecognizable and could not be identified.  They were taken to the nearby Chestnut Grove Cemetery and interred in a mass grave.

Photo of the Ashtabula River Bridge after the collapse
Remains of the locomotive that plunged 75ft into the Ashtabula River after the bridge it was crossing collapsed

Upon investigation of the accident it is said that the bridge was poorly constructed and contained flaws.  Even after there were reports by workers on the bridge of strange popping and creaking noises, the bridge was allowed to remain open.  After testifying at a trial, two of the men held partially responsible for the disaster ended up dead.  Charles Collins was found with fatal gunshot would the day after he testified.  Initially they thought he had committed suicide, however years later a forensic investigation of his remains would reveal that he was actually murdered as a result of his testimony.  By whom, we may never know.  The other individual held responsible, Amasa Stone, could not deal with the guilt of having killed all of those people and took his own life.



A monument in the Chestnut Grove Cemetery in Ashtabula, Ohio marks the mass grave of the unidentified victims of the Ashtabula Bridge disaster

Over the years many visitors to the Ashtabula Bridge disaster site claim to be able to hear the screams and moans of people carrying on the wind.  Many also say that they can faintly smell burning varnish in the air.  The mass grave in Chestnut Grove Cemetery is today marked with a large monument that honors the unknown dead of the Ashtabula disaster. Some who have visited the site claim they have seen a few people gathering and strolling near the monument dressed in late 1800s attire as if they were attending a picnic or were attending a church social.  When approached, these strange visitors would disappear.  Many believe that these are the passengers of the Pacific Express who perished that fateful night back in 1876 and whose bodies lie in that spot unclaimed and unknown.



Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Ghost of Esther Hale - Beaver Creek State Park near East Liverpool, Ohio (Hambleton Mill Ghost)

In the late 1830s, in a former town called Sprucevale, Ohio located along the banks of Beaver Creek, lived a young woman name Esther Hale. She had a small cottage near the Hambleton mill by the creek. Esther fell in love with a local man and was engaged to be married to him one summer afternoon.  As the wedding date came, at the ceremony Esther waited patiently for her groom to arrive.  However, after hours passed, he never showed.  After a few people went looking for him to determine where he was, it was obvious that he had fled, leaving Esther waiting at the alter.


Although this is not the ghost of Esther Hale, this is how she may appear if you encounter her along the banks of Beaver Creek

Esther was so distraught over the loss of her love, she locked herself in her cottage bedroom.  As days went by, she did not eat, she did not remove the party settings put in place for the wedding reception, she did not even emerge from her room, and she did not change her clothes.  When people would approach her to offer her help or to encourage her to eat something, she would attack like a possessed demon.  She had gone insane.