Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Ghost Story Series: Entry 5

Saskatchewan's Mental Hospitals

North Battleford

Called the North Battleford Hospital, this is a mental hospital that back in the early 1900′s was totally self sufficient. All staff and patients lived and died on the grounds.  This building was the first mental facility in the province.

Being the location is on the edge of northern forest, the hospital’s backdrop looks onto a wonderful area of the province.  Which over the years has become incredibly haunted.
North Battleford

By 1929, with approximately 1,000 patients in each institution, the overcrowding became deplorable. Patients were deteriorated and unclean. The only clothing they wore were strong dresses made of canvas. They slept on beds sometimes two to a bed, sometimes the odd one under a bed.

There is an old cemetery hidden away in over grown brush that on many nights lights and sounds are seen and heard.  Whispers can be heard from behind the gravestones but when you look behind the stone nobody is there.

There was also a wing of the hospital that burned down in the early 1930′s and one of the patients was badly burned in the fire. She died a few days later and her ghost can be seen wandering the burned out wing at night.

The hospital is also connected to all the buildings on the grounds via underground tunnels that many staff have mentioned passing by people in these tunnels who simply vanish once you pass them.

It’s been said that those who go to the hospital are left with chills running up and down their spine.  Especially at night.  You never know who may be watching you!

Weyburn Hospital


The next hospital in Saskatchewan we’ll take a look at is in Weyburn.  Weyburn rests on the banks of the Souris River in south eastern Saskatchewan.

Weyburn
The building is the second oldest mental institution in Saskatchewan.  Opened in 1921, it was, at the time, the largest building in the British Empire.  It’s construction was directly affected by overcrowding in the hospital in North Battleford.

During the 1930′s an investigation into patient care took place.  What was discovered was the practices used by the doctors were inhumane and cruel. However, the mental institution remained open.
When the facility first opened, mental illness was poorly understood and the primary methods of treatment consisted of ‘work and water.’ A lot of them worked at the laundry and in the kitchen and in the gardens. They were just glad to have things to do.

One of the favored treatments of the 1860′s was the Water Cure, in which a patient would be immersed naked into a tub of icy water and then taken to a tub of scalding water after their body temperature had sufficiently lowered. In addition, female patients, received a cold water douche, administered with a hose and then they were wrapped tightly in wet sheets to squeeze the blood vessels shut. This was followed by vigorous rubbing to restore circulation. The “treatments” were administered several times each week but not surprisingly, such techniques brought little success and most of the patients never got better.

Other treatments used at the hospital were not so benign. In an attempt to control and treat patients, methods such as insulin therapy, electroshock and lobotomies were practiced.

Although invasive, these methods were driven by a desperate need to help patients who were often a danger to themselves and others. Later, other therapies came into practice.

The fourth floor is sealed off, but people still hear voices from there, and some have said to have seen a woman in the fourth floor window.  She walks back and forth, back and forth, all night.

The building is in the very middle of thick trees. At night it has been reported that people have heard voices in the trees.

Currently, the hospital is scheduled for demolition.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Ghost Story Series: Entry 4

Elizabeth Bathory – The Blood Countess

The Blood Countess
Cachtice castle stands in ruins today, thought in the 16th century, it stood tall and proud. Within the walls of this castle, legends and rumours began. Stories that would lead one countess to be titled The Blood Countess.

Elizabeth Bathory or Erzsébet Báthory as she was known in Hungarian, became famous for her murders of young girls over twenty years.

Bathory was born in 1560, married when she was only twelve years of age to Ferenc Nádasdy. It was Ferenc who gave her Cachtice castle as a wedding gift. Of course as most marriages were for political gain, this one was no different.

Bathory was schooled in Greek, Latin, and Hungarian and as everything but illiterate. It was said that she was a great beauty, thought no one would speak openly about the daughter of one of the most influential families in Hungary.

In 1578, her husband became chief commander of Hungarian troops. Elizabeth was in charge of the estates and business affairs of the lands, later she was also given the power to defend the estates. She intervened on behalf of women who were destitute, including a woman who’s husband was kidnapped by the Turks and her daughter who was raped and impregnated.

Ruins of the Countess' castle
One would think that with a kind heart like Elizabeth’s that nothing grim and gruesome would be going on behind the walls of the castle. She was considered a doting mother to all of her children. It might have even been her husband who turned her on to the idea of torturing her servants for her own pleasure. The real reason why she did it isn’t completely known.

Legends tell that Elizabeth, would beat her servants with barbed leashes, heavy cudgels and then drag them into snow where they would be doused in ice water until they froze to death. Later it was told that she began to use blood to reduce the aging after discovering this after she struck a servant for pulling her hair. Various eye-witness accounts tell vivid details of her crimes, but none saying that she actually took baths in blood.

In 1610 rumours flew around, and soon could not be ignored by the King. He assigned Juraj Thurzo to seek the truth to these rumours. On December 30th, Thurzo invaded the castle to find a dead girl in the hall, and many more dead, dying or awaiting torture in one of the many cells. At this time only a few of Elizabeth’s personal servants were taken; Helena Jo, Dorothea and Ficzko. The evidence and the confessions, probably tortured out of them was enough to convict them within a few days.
The two women were considered witches and had their fingers dipped in Christian blood then the nails removed with red hot pincers, after this they were burned alive. Ficzko was decapitated and then burned next to the women.

Testimonies of witnesses gave accounts of what happened, most were considered hearsay, but ones that were consistent included:

  • Beatings over long periods of time, often resulting in death
  • mutilation or removal of hands, face and sometimes genitalia
  • biting flesh off their faces, arms or other body parts
  • freezing to death
  • fatal surgeries
  • Sexual abuse

The actual count of victims was around 650, but it unknown if that is the true number. Elizabeth, to save face of the family, was not convicted of any crimes. However, she was considered a menace to her family and their name, and was placed under house arrest. Elizabeth Bathory was walled into her bedroom, which had a slot for air and food to pass through.

Four years later, a guard of Bathory’s room, found her face down, dead.

One thing that is incredibly interesting about the lives of people like Elizabeth Bathory, and like Vlad the Impaler, is when you read about them you find they were incredibly devote Christians.  But over the years, that devotion to the Christian faith is given a wash and more focus placed on the atrocities that they committed.

Were they evil and villinous in their lives?  No question, their techniques in war, such as Vlad, were sickening.  The descriptions of how he staked people were horrifying.  Elizabeth’s life became akin to one of the seven deadly sins.  She was so vain in her appearance, but it is believed that can be attributed to everyone around her saying she was so beautiful.  She wanted to retain that beauty and did whatever she could to keep it.

The views of these two by eastern and western Europe are also very different, especially with Vlad the Impaler.  In Western Europe after Vlad’s death, the west painted him as a maniacal madman who took great pleasure in seeing his enemies suffer.  Whereas in the East, his actions were defended as a prince protecting his people, taking on their sins so they could live life free of sin.  As well, he was heralded as a hero for his actions.  In Germany and Russian, documentation has been recorded about Vlad’s exploits, and while some are very similar in the accounts of the events, they paint an entirely different picture.

Elizabeth wasn’t the warlord that Vlad was.  She wasn’t protecting her properties or her homeland.  Her husband had done that already.  But there was a great deal of political intrigue that surrounded the aspect of Elizabeth, especially with her relations to powerful people in Hungary and Poland.  In Hungary, those in power knew that Bathory was slaughtering innocents for her own pleasure, but they couldn’t really do anything about it due to her political connections in Poland.  No one wanted to start a war over this.  Bathory’s accomplises were eventually tried and executed, but Bathory herself was walled up in her castle.  In some of the accounts, you could almost say there was an amount of sympathy for this woman.

What’s even more incredible about Bathory’s history is that she began as a very kind hearted woman. So, what exactly set her off to become known throughout history as the Blood Countess?  We can only really speculate and offer educated guesses, as medical records were not kept nearly as accurate as they are today.  But it may have been a condition of the mind, and as the mind grows older, the mind can change a great deal.  Was Bathory insane?  I think one merely need examine the accounts of her life after becoming known as the Blood Countess to come to a conclusion.

Vlad and Bathory were just two individuals throughout history that lead very villainous lives.  Sure, there were others, but these two had their stories retold generation after generation.  With the telling of each story details may have been exagerated, twisted or even completely changed to make it seem more horrifying than it really was.  Such as the case with the concept of the vampire becoming prevelent in both Vlad and Bathory.  Which can only stand to reason as they both live in an area of Romania where the populous believed in vampirism so readily.

So with these two, no there wasn’t any grim tales of hauntings or any ghostly visits that continue at their castles.  Why do they appear in a list of ghost stories throughout the month of October?  Because their actions in life were equally as horrifying, in most cast moreso, as what ghost stories could ever be told.
One thing I find incredibly interesting about the lives of people like Elizabeth Bathory, and like Vlad the Impaler, is when you read about them you find they were incredibly devote Christians.  But over the years, that devotion to the Christian faith is given a wash and more focus placed on the atrocities that they committed.

Were they evil and villinous in their lives?  No question, their techniques in war, such as Vlad, were sickening.  The descriptions of how he staked people were horrifying.  Elizabeth’s life became akin to one of the seven deadly sins.  She was so vain in her appearance, but it is believed that can be attributed to everyone around her saying she was so beautiful.  She wanted to retain that beauty and did whatever she could to keep it.

The views of these two by eastern and western Europe are also very different, especially with Vlad the Impaler.  In Western Europe after Vlad’s death, the west painted him as a maniacal madman who took great pleasure in seeing his enemies suffer.  Whereas in the East, his actions were defended as a prince protecting his people, taking on their sins so they could live life free of sin.  As well, he was heralded as a hero for his actions.  In Germany and Russian, documentation has been recorded about Vlad’s exploits, and while some are very similar in the accounts of the events, they paint an entirely different picture.

Elizabeth wasn’t the warlord that Vlad was.  She wasn’t protecting her properties or her homeland.  Her husband had done that already.  But there was a great deal of political intrigue that surrounded the aspect of Elizabeth, especially with her relations to powerful people in Hungary and Poland.  In Hungary, those in power knew that Bathory was slaughtering innocents for her own pleasure, but they couldn’t really do anything about it due to her political connections in Poland.  No one wanted to start a war over this.

Bathory’s accomplises were eventually tried and executed, but Bathory herself was walled up in her castle.  In some of the accounts, you could almost say there was an amount of sympathy for this woman.

What’s even more incredible about Bathory’s history is that she began as a very kind hearted woman.So, what exactly set her off to become known throughout history as the Blood Countess?  We can only really speculate and offer educated guesses, as medical records were not kept nearly as accurate as they are today.  But it may have been a condition of the mind, and as the mind grows older, the mind can change a great deal.  Was Bathory insane?  One merely need examine the accounts of her life after becoming known as the Blood Countess to come to a conclusion.

Vlad and Bathory were just two individuals throughout history that lead very villainous lives.  Sure, there were others, but these two had their stories retold generation after generation.  With the telling of each story details may have been exagerated, twisted or even completely changed to make it seem more horrifying than it really was.  Such as the case with the concept of the vampire becoming prevelent in both Vlad and Bathory.  Which can only stand to reason as they both live in an area of Romania where the populous believed in vampirism so readily.

So with these two, no there wasn’t any grim tales of hauntings or any ghostly visits that continue at their castles.  Why do they appear in a list of ghost stories throughout the month of October?  Because their actions in life were equally as horrifying, in most cast moreso, as what ghost stories could ever be told.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Ghost Story Series: Entry 3

Myrtles Plantation

Claimed to be the most haunted house in the world, Myrtles Plantation is located in St. Francesville, Louisiana. The amount of paranormal activity here is quite impressive. Hand prints in the mirrors, footsteps on the stairs, mysterious smells, vanishing objects, death by poison, hangings, murder and gunfire — these are just a few of the things that have occurred supernaturally

The house was built in 1794 by David Bradford, who was leader of the Whiskey Rebellion and said to havea price on his head by President George Washington. After trading his home for 230 barrels of flour, he moved his family down the to plantation house where he lived until 1817
While Bradford was alive, he took students in to learn law, one of which married his daughter Sarah Matilda. His name was Clark Woodruff. It was Woodruff that bought the plantation from his mother-in-law. Woodruff and his wife lived there with their three children.

However tragedy befell the family when Sarah Matilda contracted yellow fever and died shortly after, along with two of their children.

In April 1835, Woodruff sold the house toRuffin Grey Stirling. The Stirling’s were a very wealthy family who owned several plantations on both sides of the Mississippi River. On January 1, Ruffin Grey Stirling and his wife, Mary Catherine Cobb, took over the house, land, buildings and all of the slaves that had been bought from Elizabeth Bradford by her son-in-law.

The house traded hands several times over the years and the stories followed with it.
Woodruff was known for his promiscuity and forced himself on a house servant known only as Chloe. Rather than be sent out to the fields to work, she allowed him his sexual demands.  When Woodruff grew tired of Chloe, she resorted to eavesdropping on the family, listening for her name to come out. It was Woodruff that caught her and punished her by cutting off an ear.

Later she had her revenge when she toss a handful of oleander into a birthday cake for Woodruff. While Woodruff didn’t eat any, his wife and two children did. It is said they supposedly died from oleander poisoning.
Fear of their master, the other slaves, dragged Chloe from the house and hanged her in a tree. They then attached rocks to her feet and tossed her into the river.

It’s believed that Chloe still haunts the grounds. She’s been sighted between two buildings on the land. She’s often been sighted when a child cries, and she responds to the cry or leaning down over a sleeping guest.

While these have been accepted as facts, what really happen no one will know as there was no actual evidence that anything like this had taken place.

A mirror in the house is said to have some of the victims trapped within. Causing handprints on the inside of the glass. Oddly enough, the glass was replaced and still the hand prints came back.
More haunting tales of Myrtles are dealing with probably the only movie that was filmed there that wasn’t of a paranormal nature. The cast and crew of The Long Hot Summer experienced shifting furniture. The crew would move the furniture only to return and find it back in the original places.

There have been many claims for Myrtles Plantation, but with a history that’s muddle, broken and missing in places, it’s hard to pinpoint any one true account. Employees have first hand experience with the supernatural beings of Myrtles Plantation. One man was hired as a gate man to meet and greet people as they came to the Plantation. He opened the gates for a woman dressed in white who didn’t speak a word to him. He quit his job and never returned when she vanished through the front door without opening it.

There is even a piano that is said to start playing music by itself and stop when someone enters the room.
The legends and stories of Myrtles will be around for years to come. It’s amazing how much stuff there is lurking in this house. How many people claim to have had paranormal experiences. Things like this will keep people going back year after year.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Ghost Story Series: Double Feature

Since I missed yesterday's post, Here's a double entry!

St. Louis, Saskatchewan

St. Louis is a small community in central Saskatchewan located 30 kilometers south of the city of Prince Albert. Currently, there are around 431 people that live in the small village. St. Louis saw it’s beginnings in 1880 and 1884, when settlers began coming into the area. In 1885, the Northwest Rebellion in nearby Batoche helped shape the lives of those early settlers. In 1897, the Daughters of Providence Sisters arrived from France and built a convent and boarding house in 1919. In the 1970′s, the boarding house only accepted female borders. That continued until it’s closure. One would think that such a sleepy little village on the banks of the North Saskatchewan River would be ideal for anyone to live. In truth, it is. But there are two events which hold a rather ghostly air to the place.

The Phantom Light

This is an actual photo of the St. Louis Phantom light.
1914, the railroad connected the city of Prince Albert and the town of Watrous. St. Louis was a stopping point on that line. As the years went by, rail service was important. But as the end of the 20th century arrived, both CN and CPR began closing rail lines. This connecting line between Prince Albert and Watrous was just one of many to disappear. But in St. Louis, the train still runs. It’s known as The St. Louis Light or the St. Louis Ghost Train. The paranormal phenomenon reported to be seen in near St. Louis. The phenomenon has been featured on the television series Unsolved Mysteries. The phenomenon entails reports of a strange light that moves up and down along an old but abandoned rail line at night, changing colours and varying in brightness. The rail line is located south of Prince Albert and north of St. Louis. Several origin stories exist to explain light, including that it is a ghost train, or that it is the ghost of a drunk brakeman who lost his head to a passing train and now wanders up and down the tracks with a lantern attempting to find it. Non-paranormal explanations include possible refraction of car headlights. The tracks that the train used to run on have since been removed however this phenomenon still occurs on almost a nightly basis. Scientist have attempted to debunk the light, suggesting that it’s distant headlights from a vehicle, but no road runs parallel with the old line. Even reflections that may bounce off nearby clouds has been suggested, but even those trying to debunk the light have dismissed such stories. What truly happened along the line to cause the train to keep running is unknown. What we do know, is the train keeps going.

The Chilling Tale of the Convent

The Daughters of Providence Sisters was one of many groups that arrived in Saskatchewan to create convents and spread the word of the Lord.  The Catholic faith is well entrenched in the province, as many settlers of European decent had Catholic leanings.  Today, churches on the prairies still stand, and some are still in use, of those long gone days.
Not everything in those churches and convents was exactly peaceful.
As the story goes, the convent found one of the sisters became pregnant.  Believing the pregnancy to be the work of the devil himself, the sisters carried the pregnancy full term, and then disposed of the new born baby in a nearby well.  Having believed the evil had been dealt with, the child was forgotten.
The convent has since closed, but chilling tales are being told to this day.  Visitors to the old site have taken a walk around the old grounds and returned to their vehicles to find a dark omen that leaves them feeling unnerved.  Along the lower half of their vehicles tiny hand prints are seen, particularly near the rear of the car.
Whether this tale is true or just legend is unknown, as no information outside of the book Ghost Stories of Saskatchewan has been found. The author of this article even recalls trying to find the convent site after coming back from a vacation to Prince Albert National Park.
He never found it.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Ghost Stories Series

The Winchester Mystery House


Most people know the name surname Winchester, because it was the name on the rifles and other guns the family had created. But what most people don’t know is the dark history that followed the family. In September 1862, during the civil war, William Wirt Winchester married a lovely woman named Sarah Pardee. The wedding was the social event of the season, seeing that Sarah was a well received guest as most social affairs. Having musical, linguistic skill and all around charm.


Almost four years after the couple married, on July 15, 1866, Sarah gave birth to a little girl, whom she named Annie Pardee Winchester. However, the joyous occasion was short lived with the death of Annie. She contracted disease known as Marasmus, an infection that causes the body to simply waste away. Annie died just nine days after birth on July 24.

A distraught Sarah teetered on the brink of madness, withdrawing into herself while she mourned her daughter. For nearly ten year she stayed like this, and she and William never had another child.
Tragedy reared it’s ugly head again when William contracted Pulmonary Tuberculosis and died in 1881, leaving $20 million dollars behind for Sarah. Sarah would also receive nearly fifty percent of the profits the Winchester Repeating Arms Company made and an income of 1000 dollars a day. But the money did nothing to ease the pain of her loss.

Sarah was deeply broken over the loss of her husband, and never fully got over the loss of her child. A friend suggested that she speak to a spiritualist medium to perhaps better deal with the loss. The spiritualist proved to have a message for Sarah from the other side. “Your husband is here,” the medium told her and then went on to provide a description of William Winchester. “He says for me to tell you that there is a curse on your family, which took the life of he and your child. It will soon take you too. It is a curse that has resulted from the terrible weapon created by the Winchester family. Thousands of persons have died because of it and their spirits are now seeking vengeance.”

Sarah sold her property after being told to do so by the medium, and head into the setting sun. She was told her husband would guide her and she would know it when she saw it. Sarah started a new life in hopes of easing her pain and suffering as well as the spirits that haunted her. “You must start a new life,” said the medium, “and build a home for yourself and for the spirits who have fallen from this terrible weapon too. You can never stop building the house. If you continue building, you will live. Stop and you will die.”

Sarah traveled west to California, and settled again in Santa Clara Valley in 1884. There she discovered a six bedroom home that was under construction and paid a hefty sum for the house. While she stayed there, there was construction in the house 24/7 . Sarah hired the best of the local workers, paying them well for them to keep up with her demands of oddities. The house grew to 10 then 26 rooms. She worked close at hand with the overseer, often showing him the plans of the house.

The house eventually became a maze, one which Sarah said would confuse the spirits and perhaps they would leave her alone. But for fear of dying, she never stopped building. Oddities of the house included stairs that lead to ceilings, or to a steep drop to the lawn below, three elevators, forty-seven chimneys. It was also clear that Sarah had an obsession with the number 13. All stair ways except for one contained 13 stairs. The one staircase without 13 stairs contained forty-two steps, which would be enough to take you three stories, unless they were two inches tall.

Year after year construction continued on in this mystery house that Sarah was building. While it didn’t make any sense to outsiders, it made perfect sense for Sarah. The house grew to an alarming seven stories, but an earthquake in 1906 destroyed three of those floors. Still Sarah plodded on with construction, closing off thirty rooms in the front of the house so they would never be completed.
Sarah’s madness came to an end when she retired for the night and passed on in her sleep at the age of eighty-three.

Sightings have been reported of Sarah roaming the halls of her house as well as a vast number of other spirits. Staff and guest alike have heard footsteps, banging doors, glass rattling so hard it breaks.

NOTE: I was inspired to post creepy stories until Halloween by a fellow who did this for a month! Click here to go to his blog if you want to read all of the stories!!

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Meeting minutes and other things....

His arm is a little messed up and his lower legs are a little big, but I don't care. I'm pretty proud of my Donatello.