Showing posts with label Ghosts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ghosts. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Orbs and Such on an Autumn Night in Moncks Corner, SC

Today I am longing for Autumn, my favorite time of the year.  This has led me to remember a party at my brother, Tom's house and property back in the Autumn of 2013. 

That particular party seemed to have uninvited guests in attendance.  Here are some photos I took that night.  What do you think?


No.  The fire was NOT burning high like that when I took this picture.  


Strange orbs in this photo.


This one looks like damage to the film, which would explain it if I had been using film.  This was taken with an electronic camera.  No.  This crazy tunnel of light was not there when I took the photo. 

What do you think?  Do you believe in ghosts?

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

House Hunting and Haints

As most of you know by now, I plan to move as soon as I can sell my house and retire.  It is a process and it is taking forever.  -sigh-

In the meantime I've done a lot of looking at houses that I may want to buy in several different towns in the hill country of SC and the mountains of NC.  Who knows where I will end up??

Now.  Let me tell you, all houses are NOT created equal. 

Take this house for instance:



Maybe it is just me, but generally speaking, I would say the porch should be built over the front door. I don't know. Maybe it is just me.

Yes.  This is a real house and it is for sale right now.

Aw...this house doesn't really bother me so much.  It is the houses with previous tenants who refuse to move out that really bother me.  You know...the tenants who lived there back in the 50s and 60s before they died.

Yup.  The haints.  The ghosts.  The things that go bump in the night.

You can feel them.

They wring their hands as people traipse through the houses.  The young ones giggle and run through the house in anticipation of new playmates.

You do not want to be their playmates.

Those are the houses to avoid.  

How do you recognize those houses?  It's not always easy, but some clues are:
  • The house has "cold spots" that make you shudder as you walk past or through them.
  • You hear footsteps in the next room thinking another realtor is showing the house too, but there is no one there.
  • You could have sworn that cabinet door was closed....
  • Hmm...what could possibly be making that shadow?
  • What's that smell?  Is something on fire?  No smoke....
  • That stray cat sure was acting weird when we drove up.  I wonder what she saw through that window?
  • What did I trip over?  There's nothing there!!!
  • The hair suddenly stands up on the back of your neck.
  • Goosebumps appear on your arms for no reason.
I could go on.

I'm trying to pay attention and not end up buying a haunted house.  Seriously.  That would be bad.

The biggest clue that the house is haunted is the price.  If the house's Zestimate is $300,000.00, but the house is listed for $125,000.00.  That is another big clue something is wrong.  

Just sayin....

Unless you come across something like this listing in Cayce, SC.  





Click HERE to read the listing, but basically the worst part says:  
Upstairs apartment cannot be shown under any circumstances. Buyer assumes responsibility for the month-to-month tenancy in the upstairs apartment. Occupant has never paid, and no security deposit is being held, but there is a lease in place. (Yes, it does not make sense, please don't bother asking.)

Makes you wonder, doesn't it???  That is a BIG CLUE something is very wrong.
 
You don't believe in haunted houses???  Really???  That is okay.  The ghosts believe in you.

Wish me good luck that I find something very good at a reasonable price in a great place with excellent neighbors.  Is that asking too much??  I never know.  Stay tuned.

Saturday, January 28, 2017

Visitations

This is a story.  Just like any other story.  Some of it is true.

It started when I was very young.  They'd come.  Confused.  I'd see them out of the corner of my eye.  Standing there wanting.  Wondering.  Anxious.

There'd be some sort of accident.  A car would crash.  A log would fall at the saw mill.  A house would burn.  They'd come.  Drawn to the energy that is me.

Mama knew I was different.  She tried to beat the different out of me, but it stayed anyway.  I left her house as soon as I could.  Sooner than I should have, but I felt I had no choice.  

It is true that the outside scars always healed soon enough, but the inside scars never heal.  They weep instead.  They hurt.  They scream in rage.  They are immortal, like the ones who come.

She could see them too.  My Mama.  She didn't want to look.  She denied it long past my youth, but she knew.  Mama always knew things she shouldn't know.  Had no right to know.  She just knew.  I suspect her Mama tried to beat it out of her too.  That never works, of course.  You can't stop their coming.  You can't stop the knowing.  

It pops into your head when you least expect it, and you just know.  The baby will die.  The man will get the job.  The couple will marry, but it won't last.  You learn to block it eventually.  It's not good to look for it.  There is a price.  There is always a price.

The night this story happened was cooler than usual.  Bright with stars and moonlight.  Smelling of the cool clear air of home.  The sirens woke me up.  Tearing though the early morning hours with an urgency you could just feel.  The dogs wailed at their passing.  A warning in the night.  Then suddenly they stopped.  The sirens. Abruptly they stopped.  Dreadfully they stopped making the hair stand up on my arms and tears come to my eyes.

The air in the room was suddenly cold.  I could see my breath in the dim light the streetlight spread through my room.  I turned over in bed shivering at what I did not know, when I heard it, and I knew.  I was not alone.

Both my dogs got up and went into my kitchen where the cups he made with his own hands hung above my sink.  The dogs' tails were wagging.  They did not bark.  They recognized him.  

The entity in my kitchen felt male and panicked. I knew the dogs would comfort him, and I'm sure they did.  I didn't know who it was, but I knew someone had passed away that my dogs knew, but my dogs know many people.  I thought maybe it was one of our elderly neighbors down the street.  Passing through to say good-bye and give the dogs one last pat on their way to heaven.  It had happened before.  I was not surprised, but this time, I was wrong.  

The next day I heard the sad news.  The dogs did indeed know their visitor.  I knew him too, and I was heartbroken to hear of his passing.  I've been weighted with grief this past week, but the grief suddenly lifted today.  He is calm now.  More settled.  More accepting.  He will be okay.  He stayed as long as he could.  Perhaps longer than he should, but he had no choice.  

Do not concern yourself.  Life never ends.  Only the body dies.  We will all meet again.  One fine day.  That is my advice to you.

Yes.  This is a story.  Just like any other story.  Some of it is true.

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

An Unexplainable Thing

New Years Day 2017 started like most Sundays.  I got up and rushed around the house getting ready for church.  After church I ate lunch, walked the dogs and did normal Sunday afternoon things.  Then, later that night, I decided to take myself to see a movie I'd been wanting to see.

When I got to the movie theater, everything was normal.  There were a lot of people already seated.  All the seats in the middle of the theater were taken, but there were seats in the front and back, so I decided to sit in the middle of the back row.  It was theater seating. I climbed the stairs, found a seat and settled myself.  More people came into the theater, so that others were on the back row too, far to my right.  The theater was about 3/4 or more full, I'd say.

The movie was excellent!  About two hours into it a young boy came up the stairs to my left and I thought to myself, "I should probably stand up so he can get by," but I'm slow standing up these days.  My back has been threatening me. There wasn't much room, but he didn't even slow down, so I didn't have time to stand.  That boy just passed by my legs like there was room.  He never touched me or even acknowledged me at all, but I felt him pass.  He looked to be about eight or nine years old, I'd say.  Short dark hair. 

I thought to myself, "That is odd. A boy that age should not be in a theater alone. Especially this late at night!" and I looked to my right as he sat down between me and the other people sitting at the end of the row.  The people looked back at me.  No one spoke to the boy.  

As I said, the movie was good, so I went back to watching it.  When the scene changed again, I glanced down the row in the direction of the young boy, still wondering why he was alone.

The boy wasn't there!!!  I kid you not.  

He did not go back past me, and the only way out from the other direction would have been to go down those stairs and cross in front of the theater.  I would have seen him.  I scanned the crowd to see if he was sitting someplace else, but there were no children in the theater at all that night.  That boy just disappeared!

Maybe he left and I didn't see him.  Maybe there was really nothing odd about the boy at all.  Maybe I was just imagining things, but the hair stood up on the back of my neck and I can tell you I was spooked.  

This was two nights ago and I'm still wondering how a boy of eight or nine can simply disappear!  Was he a ghost?  Where did he go?  Did I hallucinate him? Am I crazier than I thought?

It was a rainy, dreary, drizzly night.  The perfect night for ghosts to be out roaming the world, but in a movie theater?  Why? Why? Why?

If he is a ghost, I wonder if anyone else has seen him?  

What an odd start to my year.  I wonder what other experiences this year holds?  I wonder....



Saturday, December 10, 2016

Our Christmas Ghost: A True Ghost Story

It was Christmastime in 1977. I had two young sons and was expecting my third.  My husband was working late that night.  My sons were finally asleep, and I was in the living room, a new addition to our home, when it happened.

That year we had a HUGE Christmas tree.  It was too big for a regular stand, so we had it secured in a large container of water and literally wired to the studs in the walls in the corner of the living room.  It was beautiful.

There was no earthquake that year.  No wind inside the house.  No inside cats or dogs to make the tree do that, but I promise you, this happened.

As I was watching the television, I saw that Christmas tree shudder out of the corner of my eye.  I shrugged it off thinking that could NOT have happened, but then it shook!  It stood there and shook of its own accord with nobody touching it.

I stood up and took about two steps, when SNAP!  Something popped LOUD, and that tree fell, just as pretty as you please.  Glass ornaments shattered everywhere.

My first thought was to run and make sure the boys were still asleep in their beds.  I knew it would upset them terribly to see the tree down like that, and they might cut themselves on all that glass.

I checked on them and they were sleeping soundly, which made no sense as the tree falling was LOUD, but there they lay.  Sound asleep.  Thankfully.

I grabbed the broom and started the clean-up.

By the time my husband got home, I had most of the debris cleaned, but I was fairly pregnant and unable to pick up that big tree by myself, so he had to help me with that.  Together we stood the tree back up and he examined the wires that had secured the tree to the walls.  He had at first told me he thought a wire probably just somehow came undone, but that was not the case.  The wire looked like it had been cut.  One end was still attached to the wall and the other was still attached to the tree, but the wire was cut in two right in the middle.

My husband said, "Why did you cut the wire?"  Which, of course, I did NOT do.  He said there is no way that could have happened.  I agreed but reminded him that it did happen.

We proceeded to re-secure and re-decorate the Christmas tree, so our sons would not see it broken.

That was the first crazy thing that happened in that living room at Christmastime.  It was NOT the last.

You see, that living room was built from salvaged lumber from an old house that was torn down in Grover, North Carolina about that time.  My husband got the lumber for free and built the room himself.  He was handy like that.  We thought it was a good deal until the strange things started.  Luckily they only happened around the holidays, so most of the time the room was fine.

The next year my husband lost a favorite glove.  It was very cold that winter.  We looked EVERYWHERE, and I do mean everywhere.  Under furniture.  In drawers.  In closets.  In cabinets.  In the boys' toy box.  Everywhere.  Nope.  The glove was not to be found.

The next morning after we tore the whole house apart searching for the glove, I walked into the living room and there it lay in the middle of the floor.  Totally covered in mud.  All the doors were locked.  All the windows were closed and locked.  No animals in the house.  No clue how the glove got there, but my husband was sure glad to see it.

The hairs stood up on the back of my neck and I had goosebumps all over my body when I saw that glove.  There is NO WAY that could have happened.

In 1980 we built a new house on our property, and our old living room became a storage building.

Then one night in the waning of the year that building burned down.  We lost everything we had stored there in the fire.  Baby furniture.  Bicycles. Tricycles. Tools. Clothing. Toys. Etc etc etc.  They were never able to figure out what started the fire.  It went up in such a blaze!  That room was very near the forest.  There were trees within feet of it.  None of the trees burned.  It was the oddest thing.

Years later we heard tales of how that old house in Grover, NC was haunted.  How somebody died there around Christmastime.  Now, whether or not that is true, I do not know, but I do know that strange things happened in that room that was built from the lumber of that old Grover house.

Haunted?  Did the ghost follow all that was left of its home?  You decide.  I don't much like to think about it.  -shudder-

NOTE:  I had already moved most of the gifts to get to the glass bits, and swept up all the broken glass I could find before I thought of snapping a photo, but you can see how the tree fell.  Almost all of the glass ornaments fell off of it.  What a mess!!!

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Haunted House - Sanford, North Carolina: A True Story

Many years ago we were looking at houses in and around Sanford, North Carolina.  Some of the houses felt like such happy places where you'd love to live.  Others were much less happy.

It is an odd thing, but when I go in houses, especially empty houses, they tend to make me feel one way or another.  Like the houses themselves soak up energy from their occupants and keep it in the walls and floors.

One such house made me so sad when I went inside that I could not stay in there.  The realtor admitted the couple who were selling that house were divorcing after many years of loud fights and neighborhood disruptions.  He asked me how I knew.  I said, "This is the saddest house I have ever entered."

I fear that realtor thought me crazy.

There was another house in Sanford, NC back then that I refused to enter.  It was a lovely house.  Big old white two-story house.  It would have been perfect for us had it not been haunted.

Even my sons felt it.  I told the realtor there was something evil in that house.  My eldest son said, "Yes.  It is behind the room on the left," and I agreed.

The realtor actually stepped back and looked at us with something akin to fear.  He said, "You know, that is strange that you say that because that area is exactly where we found an insect infestation.  The exterminators are having a time eliminating all of them.  They keep coming back, but we can't figure out where they are coming from."

I said, "The evil is attracting them.  We need to leave.  Now," and we did.


It was only two days or so later that the realtor called me at my home and told me that beautiful old two-story white house burned to the ground the night before.

I asked him what started the fire, and he said, "No one knows, but it started in the area behind that room where the insects were.  I thought you'd want to know."

I thanked him for calling and told him I was not surprised.  Evil and hatred attract all manner of bad things.

We never did move to Sanford, and that's okay with me. I figure that fire either purged or released that evil.  I'd rather not take the chance of being anywhere around in case it was the latter.  -shudder-

How many of you have had such experiences?  I'm betting more than a few....

Friday, October 28, 2016

The Haunted Woods - Near Boiling Springs, NC - A True Story (As Told to Me)

When I was a little girl my Mama told me this story about her Uncle Pink (Pinckney).  She swore it was true.  You decide.

Mama said:

Back in the 1920s when I was just a girl, Uncle Pink would sometimes walk to the neighbor's house to help the family or check on them.  To get there he'd have to walk about a mile through the woods near his house which was not far from Boiling Springs, North Carolina and not far from Mooresboro, North Carolina.  Way out in the country.  Uncle Pink always tried his best to go and come in daylight, but many times it would be after dark before he could leave to come back home.

There was a well-marked path that he followed.  He said every time he'd start back home around dusk dark, a little white dog would appear and walk with him.  The dog would never let him touch it, but it stayed by his side all the way through the wood.  Then, as suddenly as it appeared, it would just disappear!  Poof!  Gone!

There were stranger things happening in those woods the darker it would get.  Uncle Pink said there would be what looked like fireballs rolling across the path or hovering in the forest in front of him and to the sides of him, but nothing ever caught fire.  He figured they were just will-o'-the-wisps, so he learned to ignore them. 

Then one night he heard voices and he snuck off the path to see who it was.  The little white dog did not leave the path.  It just stood there and waited making not a sound.  

Uncle Pink said as he drew closer to the voices, he saw a group of men with hoods on their heads around a fire.  He said he couldn't see exactly what they were doing, but the hair stood up on the back of his neck and he gave in to the need to run that night.  He ran back to the path as quick and quiet as he could and got home lickety split. 

The men never followed.  They never stopped what they were doing.  They never acted like they heard him at all.

The next day he started asking around about that group of men in the wood.  The stories he heard turned his stomach.  Everybody said those men did meet in those woods, but not for 50 years or so.  They told him tales of murder and cremations in those woods.  Beheadings.  People seeing a headless man walking through those woods like a chicken with its head cut off.  Bad bad things.  Too bad to say out loud, and there was a killing of a gentle little white dog that belonged to one of the murder victims. 

This made Uncle Pink shudder and cold chills run up his spine.

Uncle Pink decided he'd only visit the neighbors first thing in the morning after that, so he'd always get home no later than mid-day. 

Now they say, even today, if you happen on those woods as the sun hangs low and dusk falls across the land, a sweet and faithful little white dog will appear and stay by your side 'til you're safe through the trees, and people round about still swear the fireballs can be seen now and then of a night, eerily passing through those woods making their unearthly light. 

I'll not be going there myself to find out if Uncle Pink's story is true, but if you ever go, you let me know.

That's the story as my Mama told it to me. Is it true? You decide. 

Sunday, October 23, 2016

Booger Jim, Cherokee Falls, SC - A True Story (As Told to Me)

If you have ever lived anywhere near Cherokee Falls, South Carolina, you know about Booger Jim.  My Daddy, who was born in December 1900 and lived many years of his life in Cherokee Falls, said he saw Booger Jim the first time when he was about six years old.  He said Booger Jim was standing at the edge of the woods, taller than a normal man and black as soot.

Daddy ran home quick when he saw Booger Jim.  I don't much blame him.

There are all kinds of stories floating around about Booger Jim.  I've heard a few about Booger Jim living under the Cherokee Falls bridge, but I've never really known that to be true.  I did hear a truthful sounding tale of Booger Jim when I was small though.  That is the tale I will tell you now.  The woman who told me swears it is true.

First off, for those of you not fortunate enough to have been born in the Upstate of South Carolina, I'll tell you about Cherokee Falls.

No.  There is not an actual waterfall there that I've ever known, but the Broad River flows through Cherokee Falls, so there may have been a little falls thereabouts probably before they built the cotton mill.

Cherokee Falls was a mill town that grew around the Cherokee Manufacturing Company that was built there on the Broad River.  The people who worked in that mill for the most part lived in mill housing on the "Mill Hill" above the mill. Poverty was rampant there, as the cotton mill did not pay very much money even though the hours were long. The men, women, and children of that little community oftentimes were working in the mill from dawn to dusk. Yes, they used child labor in that mill until it was outlawed, but that is another story.

The woman who told me today's story lived on that Mill Hill in the early days of the 20th century.  This story haunted her even as she spoke it, wide eyed and horrified decades after it happened.  Here's what she said:

I just got supper on the table when my ol' man come running up the hill a'yellin', "OPEN THE DOOR!!! FOR GOD'S SAKE, WOMAN, OPEN THE DOOR!!!" 

I told the children to sit on down for supper, as I hurried to open the front door. 

He was around the bend in the road down the hill when I first went to the porch, but soon I could see him comin'.  He come runnin' faster'n I'd a'thought possible.  He never slowed a bit coming up those porch steps and through that door pushing me inside as he slammed it, bolted it, and pushed a chair under the knob a'fore running for the shotgun.

That thing a'chasin him hit that door so hard the door groaned under the weight, 'bout the time my ol' man got the shotgun loaded.  He shot both barrels point blank at that door.  Blowed a hole in it big enough for me to push my fist through, if I'd been so a'mind. 

Whatever that was on our porch screamed like a Banshee.  High like. Made my blood run cold, that scream.  We heard that thing bolt off the porch and leave, but we never went outside that night, and I didn't sleep much at all.  Took forever to get the children settled. 

The next morning we went out and there were claw marks a inch deep on our front door, and a dark trail going into the wood.  We followed that trail a'ways, but it trickled and ended like the thing was healin' quick as it run.  Darnedest think I ever did see.  Didn't leave narry'a footprint.  Like it was a ghost or somethin' worse.

After that we'd hear it now and then a'screamin' out in the wood.  Always at night.  High pitched like a woman screamin'.  Give you cold chills to hear it.

My ol' man said it was Booger Jim chased him.  He said that thing was near eight feet tall and black as soot. It could put its hands on the ground and run like a beast or walk on two legs like a man. 

They give him an awful hard time about it at work.  They said it were a bear or a panther, but if my ol' man said it was Booger Jim, then it was Booger Jim.  That's all I got to say about it.  That shotgun would'a killed a bear or a panther. 




That's the best of my Booger Jim stories.  It was told to me as true.  You decide.


Cherokee Falls, South Carolina
Cherokee Falls, South Carolina
Cherokee Falls, South Carolina
Broad River in Cherokee Falls, South Carolina

Saturday, October 22, 2016

Southern Ghost Story Videos from SCETV, ETVRoadShow, and Scarey Videos - Enjoy!

I'm still in ghost story mode, and probably will be until after Halloween, so I though I'd share these local hauntings videos with you.

Enjoy!






Friday, October 21, 2016

Whig Hill Cemetery, Gaffney, South Carolina is Haunted: A True Story

The Revolutionary War in the Upstate of South Carolina was more of a Civil War than you think.  The Battle of Kings Mountain, fought in Blacksburg, SC, was mostly Whigs against Tories, neighbor against neighbor, brother against brother.  It was an ugly heartbreaking time that left marks deep enough to span generations.

That war left its ghosts scattered all across the colonies.  They say some still reside in Cherokee County, South Carolina in a place called Whig Hill.

Whig Hill is a graveyard in Cherokee County, SC about 12 miles or so south of Gaffney on Hwy 18 (n34 57.633 , w81 39.317).  There are only about 35 or so graves there (give or take a few), but all of them are old graves and many of the people buried there died violent deaths of betrayal, as you can imagine. 

Back around 1970 my brother, Gene, decided he was interested in tombstone rubbings.  I found that a fine idea, so one bright and beautiful October Saturday morning we headed to Whig Hill with our charcoal and pencils and rubbing paper. 

Oh...we had heard the stories of course, but it was bright daylight, so we thought we were safe from haints.  Besides, we took some other people with us and there is safety in numbers.  Right?  Well...

We drove out to Whig Hill, which was not all that easy to find.  It was way down a dirt road in the absolute middle of nowhere.  There was not even a major highway anywhere around back then. 

We parked the car and walked up the hill to the graves.  What we found was horrifying in itself.  Someone had broken the tombstones.  Desecrated the graves.  The hair stood up on the back of my neck when I saw it.  Every single grave had been disturbed.  There were some above-ground crypts with their heavy cement lids askew.  Grave markers scattered everywhere and even some of the graves themselves disturbed.  If I were Catholic, I would have crossed myself and run! 

My brother, Gene, said the graveyard was full of English sympathizers loyal to the crown (Whigs), and the Patriots' (Tories) descendants obviously still remembered how they killed their kin.  They couldn't take revenge on dead people, so they took their revenge out on their graves. 

I shuddered and wanted to leave, but Gene talked us all into doing just a couple of rubbings before we left, so we started making rubbings of the pieces of the tombstones we could find that still had readable words.

That's when we heard it.  At first it sounded like a car driving too fast down a highway.  I said, "Is there a road behind those trees?" and pointed to the rear of the cemetery.  Gene said, "There's not a road like that for miles."  I started gathering my things.

That's when the sound changed.  It sounded like it was coming from the woods where I pointed, and it sounded like a wolf or a bear growling low and vicious.  It was terrifying!  I screamed, "Back to the car!!!" and I ran as fast as I could, dodging broken pieces of tombstones, as my brother jumped between me and the noise. 

That's when the noise moved to one of the above-ground crypts near Gene.  I stopped and turned and went back for Gene then, just as the lid of that crypt began to shake.  I grabbed Gene's hand and we ran down the hill.  The others already had the car started and turned around.  We jumped inside and raced down that bumpy dirt road as fast as we could.

We kept looking back and one of the people with us said he saw something running in the dust, but I never saw it.  All I know is I never intend to go there again.  Daylight or not.

Now.  We told our story around town back then.  The people laughed and laughed.  They said it was just bootleggers had the place booby trapped to keep people away.  We didn't see how bootleggers could have done that given there was no electricity anywhere around that graveyard, but we let them laugh and talk. 

It was a couple of years before we heard a similar story from some other people, but we did hear it...the car on a highway...the growling in the woods...the shaking above-ground crypt. 

I still am not sure what was down that dirt road or how it got inside that crypt, but I do know it was something.  I heard it with my own ears and saw it with my own eyes. 

In more recent years than 1970, I heard that Whig Hill Cemetery has been restored.  I sure hope that is true.  Maybe now the ghosts can rest.

This is not Whig Hill, but it would look similar to this with the old tombstones restored.
I will never go there again, so I couldn't take a picture of it for you.

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Limestone College Ghost, Gaffney, South Carolina: A True Story

Many years ago when I was attending Limestone College in Gaffney, South Carolina, I did work-study in the Admissions Office in the Curtis Administration Building for about a year. 

The Curtis Administration Building and Cooper Hall are really one building.  Cooper Hall is one of ten buildings on the Limestone College campus listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  It was originally constructed around 1835 as the Limestone Springs Hotel and is the oldest building on campus.

When Limestone College was established about ten years later in 1845, the old Limestone Springs Hotel became Cooper Hall, a residence hall.

Some say it is also the most haunted building on campus, but that statement is often argued, as the Winnie Davis Hall of History has its own ghost stories, but I never saw those ghosts as that building was closed during my time at Limestone.

Today's story takes place around 1870 after the War Between the States, during the time Cooper Hall was a residence hall.  Back then Limestone was an all girls Christian high school.  The young ladies would arrive on campus with their servants to care for them.  It wouldn't be proper for a lady of that age or station in life to be left unattended.  Her reputation could be ruined!

I learned all these things and more while I was working in that admissions office.  During that time I also oftentimes had to go into the old Cooper Hall building to get supplies.  

You see, back when I was in college, Cooper Hall was used for storage, and, let me tell you, that building was spooky!  You'd walk down those long door-lined halls with your footsteps echoing behind you each time you took a step on that old dusty wooden floor.  Random creeks and pops would jump out here and there to startle you. I nearly jumped out of my skin many-a-time as I'd make my way down to the admissions office storage room.

Oh yes.  That place scared the liver outta me.  I wish you could have seen it.  The paint on those old walls was peeling in places and there was never enough light to quite see well, so I'd either have to stop and squint to make sure I was at the right place, or I'd have to count the doors as I'd go along.  

That building was built with huge and beautiful windows in the rooms behind all those doors.  It was meant for those windows to be opened for ventilation, as the outside air was fresh and clean back in 1835, but those windows had long since been painted or nailed shut to keep students from finding mischief in the storage rooms, so the air was always a little too warm making it stale and hard to breathe in there.  Even so, you'd pass through cold spots as you walked past some of the doors.  Those cold spots often made the hair stand up on the back of my neck and my arms break out in goosebumps.  

It just didn't feel or look "right" in there.

There was no electricity in the original building, and it seemed like what was added later was just an afterthought.  Bare bulbs here and there on long wires hanging down and old turn switches whose safety was questionable. 

 One day as I was going to the storage room, I noticed someone had left one of the doors open to a room that only contained a rocking chair.  I thought that odd, as all the doors were usually locked, so I walked over to the room intending to close and lock the door with the skeleton key all the doors used, when that rocking chair suddenly started rocking.

I kid you not.

It just started rocking!  

I thought earthquake?  But the dangling light bulbs on their wires were not moving.  Then I thought maybe a loose board I had stepped on made the chair rock, so I retraced my steps as the rocking slowed and stopped.  Nope.  I couldn't make it rock again, so I just decided it was a prank, retrieved my things from storage and went back to work.  

The next day I started asking around about the rocking chair.  Turns out the reason the door was open was some students from Duke University were doing some paranormal  research and had placed the rocker in that room because of a ghost story!!!  They were going to set up more equipment to measure paranormal activity in there.  I was fascinated.

The ghost was supposedly a young girl who came to school there with her nanny around 1870.  One day the girl took sick with a very high fever.  She was fitful.  Tossing and turning and wearing herself out.  She just couldn't sleep.  She couldn't rest.  The only thing her nanny could think to do to comfort her was rock her, so that's what she did.

The girl's nanny held her on her lap in that old wooden rocking chair and rocked her all night that night to comfort her.  On towards morning, as the night faded, in that early morning twilight before dawn, the girl quieted, and still the nanny rocked and sang sweet childhood songs to comfort her, even as her body stiffened. You see, the young beloved girl had died in her nanny's arms. 

This is the legend. There are conflicting stories as to exactly where she did die on campus, but all the stories say she did indeed die on campus. It is a fact that the room I saw that day with the rocking chair was her dorm room where her nanny rocked her when she was so sick. That much is definitely true.
 
Now they say when the air turns cool and the leaves are not long off the trees, if you put a rocking chair anywhere in that particular room, it will rock of its own accord.

I believe it.

I've seen it with my own eyes.