By Brad Smith
I decided to repost some earlier Rogue Free Press Halloween-themed articles. I hope you enjoy.
It’s October, almost Hallowe'en, so it’s to revisit earlier
articles about all things spooky and paranormal.
Let's get started.
Ghosts haunt Ashland and the surrounding area – it’s a place
rich in paranormal lore.
Sometimes.
Southern Oregon University has a few stories. From the
Ghosts and Critters website, here’s a rundown of its most notable stories:
Southern Oregon University’s Plunkett Center has been put
to many uses since the University acquired the old building in 1966. It has
been alumni and development offices on its second floor and the first floor is
used as museum displays by the local historical society. This building is also
known as the Swedenburg House, taken from its former tenant, Dr. F. Swedenburg.
Swedenburg was a prominent local physician who lived in the house from 1919
until he died in 1937.
Since the University purchased the property there have
been ghost stories surrounding it. Some skeptics believe the stories get more
elaborate year after year. Believers who counter this opinion included a
University professor and the head of campus security.
Joey Ngan began his experiences with the Swedenburg house
when he was a junior campus security guard. Ngan had the graveyard shift when
he started out working for security. He always felt as if he was being watched
when he went onto the second floor. He would announce himself and explain that
he was just there to check out the building. If he did not do this he always
felt as if something did not want him there.
The house was restored in the early 1980s and a new
security system was installed. Ngan and another officer had just finished
checking the building and ensuring that the alarm system was operational. Later
they drove by the house and saw a woman illumined by the porch light. She was
sitting beside a window in a first-floor office. They saw her for a second and
then she was gone. They entered the building and searched it for her. The door
was locked and the building was empty.
Political Science Professor Bill Muelemans came to the
University in the early 1970s and collected several of the stories over the
years. In 1973 the building was closed down and the electricity was turned off.
Muelemans, a security guard and three students decided to hold a vigil in the
house. They went to one of the second story rooms with candles, flashlights and
a Ouija board. The board spelled out messages, including a statement that one
of the students had tried to commit suicide in the past. This was true, though
no one besides the student knew this. The board began moving and seemed to jump
in the air about 18 inches.
At that point they ran out of the building. The security
guard was the last one out. As he was locking the door he felt as if his hand
was frozen to the doorknob for about 30 seconds before he could break free.
Many visitors have seen another specter. A young girl dressed in an
old-fashioned pinafore dress with her hair in pigtails has been seen by many
unrelated visitors. She is usually seen out of the corner of the visitor's eyes
and only for a few seconds. There are rumors of burglar alarms going off and
glowing apparitions seen by students late at night. It is hard to pin them down
to a definite location.
There are a few other stories, buildings haunted by long dead
janitors, teachers and students. Universities and colleges have those kinds of
stories, ranging from botched hazings to distraught students dying by suicide.
And, some of them are urban legends: The same basic story transferred from one
school to another, with some details changed to fit local history or what have
you.
Think about it: How many hotels or other places have stories
of the jilted bride who killed herself? Yes, at some point, it happened . . . .
And then a slightly altered version of the story found its way attached to
another hotel or well-known resort. Then, it spreads from there.
Then, you have some local folklore altered into a ghost
story.
Tunnel 13 is a good example.
It was called the last great train robbery of the American
West. On Oct. 11, 1923, the DeAutremont brothers – twins Roy and Ray along with
their younger brother Hugh – robbed the Oregon–California Express as it was on
its way to San Francisco. During the robbery, four men were killed and the
brothers fled empty handed. Thanks to the efforts of a Berkeley chemistry
professor named Edward Oscar Heinrich and his forensic skills, the
DeAutremont brothers were eventually captured and sentenced to prison.
Since then, many have claimed Tunnel 13 is haunted. People
claim to have felt cold spots as they walk through the tunnel – well, it’s a
tunnel. It’s a tunnel with a violent past and it’s like the funhouse effect, as
some of us paranormal investigators call it. It’s like when people look at a
spooky old building and think it’s haunted.
Why?
Because it looks spooky.
It’s the same with Tunnel 13. It has the right perquisites
for a haunted location. Remote, foreboding, violent history and – most
importantly – it has the number 13.
It has to be haunted.
I love history, crime stories and forensics; so the Tunnel
13 story has plenty of hooks for me as it is. And, yes, as a paranormal
investigator, I’d love to check it out but I feel that there isn’t enough
documentation to say there’s any paranormal activity at the location. There’s a
lot to assume and the YouTube videos I’ve seen . . . well, I’m not impressed.
Anecdotal evidence might be an interesting hook but it’s not real evidence.
Now, if someone has a different view or even evidence –
please, let me know. As Mulder’s poster so famously says, I want to
believe.
Ashland is home to a number of ghosts and here are few of
their stories.
Spanning more than 90 acres, Ashland’s Lithia Park is the
city’s largest park, with famed landscape architect John McLaren overseeing a
number of improvements. One of the park’s most well-known ghosts is the Blue
Lady or Blue Girl. According to the accounts, back in the 1880s, a young woman
was sexually assaulted and murdered. Since then, many witnesses have reported a
mysterious blue light – or a glowing mist – floating throughout the park,
particularly the duck ponds.
Always at night, of course.
The Blue Lady, in her mist form, has been known to move out
in front of moving vehicles or seemingly appear out of thin air. In these
accounts, as the vehicles pass through the blue mists, the occupants are hit
with a cold chill.
Then, the cold goes away along with the mist.
Another story has it that a logger was killed during an
accident. According to some accounts, the ill-fated logger used a drinking jug
as a musical instrument . . . witnesses claim to hear strange musical sounds as
they walk through the park at night.
Where the Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s Black Swan Theatre
now stands, nearly a hundred years ago, there was a large parking lot (an
automobile dealership would later take its place). During the day, a young man
– called Dog Boy or Dog-Faced Boy due to an accident that scarred his face –
would sell pencils out of a tin cup; at night, he would break into parked cars
or burglarized nearby businesses. However, local vigilantes, according to one
story, caught Dog Boy in the act and beat him to death.
Ever since, Dog Boy has been seen the in the area, looking
for another vehicle to rob or maybe even seeking shelter from vigilantes.
Famed stage and film actor Charles Laughton went to the OSF
in the early 1960s and enjoyed the shows he saw. It’s been said Laughton had
always wanted to play King Lear at the OSF and, supposedly, the deal was made.
However, Laughton died . . . stories have it that whenever Lear is produced at
the OSF, Laughton or some shadowy figure can be seen in the audience during
rehearsals or his footsteps can be heard backstage.
In the town’s old railroad district, what’s now the Peerless
Hotel was once a boarding house for railway workers and is rumored to be
haunted by a ghost prostitute who visited the men.
It should be noted that these stories are based on various
accounts and urban legends. Each story probably has several different versions
– that’s the nature of folklore.
A few miles west of Gold Hill, Ore., right off of Rogue
River Highway, is Rock Point Cemetery.
According to locals and a number of paranormal
investigators, it’s haunted.
There was once a small community call Rock Point and it had
a post office along with a train station. Some buildings reportedly still stand
but the cemetery remains. Rock Point Cemetery is more that 26 acres in size and
has an Independent Order of Odd Fellows section and the rest, in the past, has
been called the Pioneer Cemetery. IOOF members maintained their section while
the rest of it fell into a state of disarray. Eventually, Gold Hill citizens
banded together and started cleaning the cemetery.
Over the years, a number of stories about paranormal
activity have swirled around the cemetery, even to the point that paranormal
investigators and curiosity seekers from all over the state have come to visit.
One of the most well-known accounts is about a hooded
figure, carrying a lantern and sometimes bathed in green light, that roams the
cemetery. When people approach the hooded figure, it vanishes into the night.
There are a pair of crypts located in the cemetery and there are stories of
both surrounded by green mists or even green fire. Strange lights, eerie sounds
and – again – that green mists were experienced by nighttime visitors . . .
typically, local young people who went to the cemetery as a dare or even for
teenaged romantic escapades.
As I was working on my first Rock Point article, I
discovered that a common dare was for someone to lie across one of the crypts
and wait for the green fog or flames to happen. Some stories have it that as
young people drove through the cemetery, their car windows would crack or
shatter due to an unseen force.
Both sextons and members of the Gold Hill Historical Society
claim that people wearing Victorian era clothing have been seen wandering the
cemetery – then disappearing. One such spectral figure, a woman, is usually
accompanied by the strong fragrance of lilacs.
It is a beautiful place during the fall and spring, thanks
to the local cleanup efforts. A number of the gravesites are fenced off and
have been decorated with ornaments and toys.
As I researched Rock Point’s history, I discovered who the
hooded figure was.
At some point in the late 19th Century, a
Civil War veteran moved to the Gold Hill area. On some nights, he would put on
his military longcoat, grab a lantern and go to the cemetery. He would visit
the gravesites of other veterans, checking on them and even talking, as if
having a conversation with the dead.
Many years after his death, it appears that the old veteran
still patrols the cemetery grounds.
Happy Hallowe’en . . . .
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