четвъртък, 29 ноември 2012 г.
Blennerhassett Island
Haunted island in the Ohio River
near Parkersburg, West Virginia. Blennerhassett Island
was home to a wealthy family who met with tragedy and
ruin. Numerous GHOSTS have been experienced there
since the 19th century.
History
Harman and Margaret Blennerhassett emigrated to the
United States from Ireland in 1796. Unlike most Irish
immigrants, the Blennerhassetts were wealthy aristocrats,
thanks to Harman’s inherited family fortune. They
decided to move to America in order to have privacy:
Harman’s wife was also his niece, a young woman still in
her teens when they wed.
The couple anticipated making a gracious new life in
the New World. But even on the ship across the Atlantic,
a harbinger of bad times occurred. The captain of the
ship fell mysteriously ill and died. He may have been poisoned,
or he may have died of food poisoning. His death
cast a cloud over the rest of the journey.
Once in America, the Blennerhassetts went to Philadelphia,
then Pittsburgh, and then south into the Ohio River
Valley. In 1798 they purchased a small island known as
Backus Island, named after Elijah Backus, who bought it in
1792. The island became known as Blennerhassett Island.
Harman and Margaret set about creating their own “Little
Eden.” They erected an elegant white crescent-shaped
Palladian mansion, importing building materials from
Europe. Construction was completed in 1800 at a cost of
$40,000. The mansion gained fame as a jewel in the Ohio
River. Margaret especially loved her new home and wrote
in her diary about never wanting to leave her paradise.
The couple had three children: a son, Harman, Jr.;
a daughter, Margaret; and an adopted son, Dominic, a
French boy. The fi rst stain on the Blennerhassett paradise
came when little Margaret sickened and died at age two.
Financial troubles set in. The Blennerhassetts squandered
most of their money on their lavish lifestyle. In a
few years, Harman was trying to regain his wealth in risky
schemes. He fell prey to AARON BURR, vice president of the
United States who was to become infamous for treason
and for killing Alexander Hamilton in a duel. Burr had a
scheme to form his own country by buying huge chunks
of land in what is now Louisiana, Florida, and Mexico and
raising an army against Spanish troops in New Orleans.
Harman agreed to be a backer.
Burr set up his headquarters at Blennerhassett Island,
recruiting and training soldiers and raising funds. President
Thomas Jefferson learned of the plans and authorized
the Ohio state government to send in troops. Burr
and Harman escaped. Margaret and the children stayed
behind. Harman was charged with treason and was
imprisoned for a short time. He lost the last of his money
defending himself in court in Richmond, Virginia.
After Harman rejoined his family, the Blennerhassetts
found themselves at the center of shame and scandal and
felt forced to leave their island home. They went to Mississippi
and Canada to start plantations, but these ventures
were not successful. Margaret pined away for her
“Little Eden” island, but she was never to live there again.
Impoverished, the family eventually went to England,
where Harman died in 1831 at age 66. Margaret went to
New York City and died there in 1842.
The mansion fell into disrepair. Soon farmers used the
house to store their hay and hemp. In 1811, thieves in
search of wine accidentally started a fi re that burned the
mansion to the ground in about an hour. Yearly fl oods of
the island covered over the foundation stones.
In 1973, archaeologists uncovered the foundation
stones, and in the 1980s, the mansion was reconstructed.
Blennerhassett Island is now a historical state park and
has a museum devoted to the Blennerhasset family.
Haunting Activity
The most prominent ghost on Blennerhassett Island is Margaret,
who appears as a slim young woman in white with
chestnut-colored hair. SMELLS of perfume and horses—she
was an avid rider—often accompany her APPARITION. During
her life, Margaret often stood on the island’s shore for
long periods of time, waiting for Harman to come home.
Visitors to the island see her ghost along the shoreline.
Once seen, she quickly fades and disappears.
Margaret also has been seen searching for the grave
of her little girl, who likely was buried near the mansion.
The grave has long been lost to the elements, and no
remains of the daughter have ever been found. Margaret’s
remains were moved to the island. Harman requested
burial on an island off the coast of England; the location
of his grave is not known.
The ghost of a tall Indian, carrying a bloody tomahawk,
has been seen on the island. During the excavations
of the 1970s, several Indian skeletons were found,
including that of an exceptionally tall male. It has been
speculated that the Blennerhassetts disturbed an Indian
burial ground by building their mansion and thus may
have activated a standing curse.
Several ghosts are believed to be the slaves of the
Blennerhassetts, including Ransom Reed, one of their
favorites. Reed often rode out with Margaret on horseback;
he has been seen circling the reconstructed mansion.
The slaves’ ghosts have decreased in sightings over
the years, especially since the return of Margaret’s remains
in the early 1990s.
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