19. The Mary Celeste

Episode 19. The Mary Celeste.

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An 1861 painting of Mary Celeste (named Amazon at the time), by an unknown artist.

Ghost ships, or phantom ships, are vessels that are devoid of crew and life, often found in the ocean. They may have been deserted for any number of reasons, though these reasons are not always clear and the crew cannot always be found. This is the case of the Mary Celeste and the MV Joyita. 

The Mary Celeste was an American merchant brigantine, that is, put very simply, a two-masted ship. Mary Celeste was built in Nova Scotia and launched as Amazon in 1861 before being transferred to American ownership in 1868 and was given her new name.  

As an aside, if, like me, you’re wondering why ships and often also cars or other modes of transport are referred to as she or her, I have a little fun fact for you. Romance languages, stemming originally from Vulgar Latin (meaning common Latin), such as Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, Romanian and Catalan, often refer to ships or “the ship” as a female noun. That tradition since carried over into English, resulting in people referring to ships as she or her. 

The Mary Celeste sailed without fault until her 1872 voyage from New York to Genoa. She was discovered at sea by the Canadian brigantine Dei Gratia, dishevelled but in fine condition, under partial sail (meaning with all sails not in full use) and with her lifeboat missing. The crew was nowhere to be found. The cargo had been left intact, as had the captain and crew’s personal items. None of the crew members would ever be seen or heard from again. 

There were many theories at the hearing following her discovery, including mutiny, piracy, or fraud, though there was no evidence to support any of these as being the cause of the Mary Celeste crew’s demise. As happens with unsolved mysteries, further and possibly less likely theories arose, such as paranormal intervention, attack by giant squid, sea quakes or alcohol fumes from the ships cargo afflicting the crew. 

The Mary Celeste’s life at sea did not end here. She was handed over to new owners and was in service until 1885 when her captain deliberately wrecked her on the coast of Haiti in order to claim insurance. 

Given that the Mary Celeste was a well stocked ship, in great shape, it is hard to imagine why the ship would be abandoned by the entire crew. 

It was theorised at one point that the ship may have been abandoned in order to claim insurance, however at the Gibraltar hearing; there was no evidence to suggest this other than the ship having been over insured. The insurance companies never opened an inquiry into the case. 

During this voyage, there were Riffian pirates active in the area and naturally it was suggested that the ship may have been attacked, however this theory was ruled out on account of the ships cargo and the crew’s personal possessions being left untouched. Pirates would have pilfered the ship and taken anything valuable. The undisturbed items also lends to the idea that whatever caused the crew to flee, it wasn’t necessarily violent. 

This leaves either something natural or entirely unnatural. 

Aboard the ship was a sounding rod, used to alert the crew that the ship was taking on water. It was suggested that this rod may have been triggered by some kind of malfunction, causing the captain and crew to believe that the ship was rapidly taking on water and would have to be abandoned. There was a fair amount of water on the ship when it was found, which could have been the cause of a waterspout, also known as a non-super cell tornado over water.  It is said that this would account for the slightly disheveled state that the ship was found in. It’s not hard to believe that in the wide expanse of the ocean, that a crew who had abandoned ship, could be lost to a watery grave, never to be found.  

As is common in Good Nightmare stories, the facts of the case eventually became intertwined with myth and legend. In 1883, the Los Angeles Times retold the story of the Mary Celeste with some embellishments: 

“Every sail was set, the tiller was lashed fast, not a rope was out of place … The fire was burning in the galley. The dinner was standing untasted and scarcely cold … the log [was] written up to the hour of her discovery.” 

Other reports claimed that the ship was found 2,600km south of its actual location and that there were live chickens on board upon its discovery. 

It was in 1884 that the most memorable retelling was printed by a very familiar name, Arthur Conan Doyle, master of mysteries, himself. 

Doyle renamed the ship Marie Celeste as it is still commonly mistakenly called to this day. He wrote that the voyage took place in 1873 as the ship sailed from Boston to Libson, carrying passengers as well as the crew. He created a character named Septimus Goring who hated the white race and gathered members of the crew to murder their captain, J W Tibbs and steal the ship away to West Africa. Only one other passenger survived the murders, a man known as Jephson, who was only spared because he was in possession of a magical charm. Although this story is clearly fictitious and was never meant to be taken as face, the US Consul in Gibraltar was so intrigued that he inquired into whether any elements of the story may be true. 

A more serious, though equally ludicrous, theory was presented in The Strand Magazine in 1913, where it was told that all people on board were drowned or eaten by sharks after a platform created for a swimming competition collapsed into the sea. 

And most fantastically, in true sea horror story style, it was also suggested that the entire crew was picked off the ship one by one by a giant squid or octopus. Giant squid have been recorded to have reached 15 metres, or 49 feet, in length and have been known to attack ships. Though it’s hard to believe that if this was the way the crew were taken down, that the ship would have been left only slightly disheveled and not one single survivor would be left on board. 

Of course, while there are no solid answers, all theories are equally likely. Kind of like the Schrodinger’s cat of ships. Leaving it just as likely that there may have even been some kind of paranormal intervention, in the style of the Bermuda triangle disappearances or alien abduction. Personally, I’m not sure what to believe or rather, what I would like to believe. 

I do have a movie recommendation for you. Triangle is the 2009 film that follows a group of friends involved in a yachting accident who find refuge on their very own ghost ship. The story has elements of the legend of Sisyphus as well as plenty of thrills. I watched this movie three times and picked up on something new each time.  

 

 

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18. The Boyington Oak

Episode 18. The Boyington Oak.

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Today’s story was recommended by @CynClement  who shared with me an equally beautiful and tragic hometown story. Beautiful if you believe in our suspect’s innocence, that is. 

Spirits can become attached to places, objects or people. The entities that attach themselves are said to be mostly intelligent entities with a strong emotional connection to the object, place or person, though of course with attachment to people, this can be endlessly more complicated. Today’s episode will look at a case of attachment to an object, or landmark. 

A spirit attachment doesn’t necessarily mean that a particular ghost is trapped within an object. Rather, it may mean that the residual energy of a spirit has imprinted itself. This usually occurs in situations that involve volatile or highly emotional experiences, as will be seen in this case. Otherwise, the object may act as a conductor for the spirit which may visit the object in a sense, or interact through it. 

The most common spirit attachments we tend to hear about are where intelligent beings attach themselves to or use dolls as conductors, such as Annabel or Robert, two infamous objects said to have malevolent spirits or entities attached to them. In this case, however, we are looking into a tree. 

The Boyington oak is located in Mobile, Alabama and is said to be haunted by the spirit of Charles R. S. Boyington. 

Mobile was experiencing rapid economic growth in the 1830s, when Charles arrived from Conneticut. He was a printer, operating printing presses and providing printing services to others. He was also a gambler. As we saw with Edgar Allan Poe, gambling rarely ends well in the 1800s. Boyington took up residence in a boarding house in the city. It was here in Mobile that he met Nathaniel Frost. There was some alleged tension between the two as Frost was said to owe Boyington money. On the night that the two were seen on a walk together to the Church Street Graveyard, Frost’s body was found near the cemetery. He had been stabbed to death and robbed. 

Boyington found himself in a very compromising position. Having been with Frost the night of his death, and with rumours of tension between the two, he was a prime suspect for the murder. He was subsequently convicted of the crim and sentenced to death by hanging, to be carried out on February 20, 1935. 

Up until the moment of his death, Boyington protested his innocence. Before hanging, he proclaimed that an oak would grow from his heart in proof of his innocence when his body was buried. Boyington was right. An oak tree did grow from his grave and still stands. The oak tree is located just outside of the cemetery since the brick wall surrounding it was moved back, and can be found on Bayou Street. Visitors claim to have heard voices and sounds of crying around the tree. 

Whether this is a true sign of Boyington’s innocence from beyond the grave or a strange coincidence it’s impossible to tell, I guess it depends on what you do or want to believe. Ultimately, the two men’s spirits would reside in the cemetery they visited as friends for eternity. 

 

 

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10. Myrtles Plantation

Episode 10. Myrtle’s Plantation.

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Bogdan Oporowski 

Myrtles Plantation was a topic recommended to me by my dear friend Abbie. You can find her on Twitter. 

Built in 1796 in Francisville, Louisiana by General David Bradford, Myrtles Plantation is known as one of America’s most haunted homes. 

Bradford born in 1972 was a rebel, a lawyer and deputy attorney-general and a fugitive at different points in his life. He built the first house on South Main Street, Washington, Pennsylvania in 1788 and  later went on to build Myrtles Plantation in 1794, which was then known as Laurel Cove. He was living alone at Myrtles Plantation as he had been on the run from the government for being associated with the Whiskey Rebellion. He was later pardoned and returned to his original home in Pennsylvania to live with his wife and five children. 

While Bradford did move away from the plantation, he didn’t abandon it. When he passed away in 1808, the plantation was left to his wife, Elizabeth, who ran it until 1817 before passing it’s management to Clarke Woodruff, a former law student of Bradford’s and his wife, Elizabeth and Bradford’s daughter, Sarah Mathilda. 

The couple would have three children, however Sarah and two of her babies perished due to yellow fever. 

Elizabeth Bradford passed in 1831. Clarke and his only remaining daughter moved away and left a caretaker to look after the plantation. In 1834 the plantation was sold, including the slaves and land. Stirling and his wife Mary would be the new owners. They undertook a renovation of the house, doubling its size and importing European furniture to fill the new space. They changed the name to The Myrtles after the trees that grew around it. Stirling passed away in 1854 leaving the plantation to his wife, Mary. 

Mary hired William Drew Winter to assist in managing the plantation. Winter married Stirling’s daughter, Sarah, and they had six children together, one of whom passed away at home from typhoid at three years old. 

The family lost their fortune after the war and were forced to sell the plantation in 1868, though they bought it back two years later. 

William Drew Winter was murdered on the porch of the house by alleged suspect E. S. Webber. Mary later died in 1880, leaving the plantation to her son who sold it on in 1889. From here, the home goes from hand to hand, being sold and altered, and accumulating stories of strange occurrences and possible haunting. 

In what would seem like a classic horror story-line, the plantation is rumoured to have been built on an ancient Tunica Indian burial ground. It is apparently home to at least twelve ghosts and while there are reports of at least 10 murders at the house, there is only the murder of William Drew Winter on the porch that has been confirmed.  

Winter, as mentioned, was shot by a stranger while on the porch. He then staggered inside the home and attempted to climb the stairs for help or safety. It was on the 17th stair that he perished. Visitors and employees at the now Bed and Breakfast claim to be able to hear his footsteps as he eternally staggers upstairs for help. Others claim that they have seen his ghost, staggering and crawling up the stairs and collapsing on the 17th step. 

It is claimed that a young girl who died in 1868 in the plantation home still haunts the room in which she died, and often practices voodoo on sleeping people. 

During the Civil War, the house was ransacked. This is confirmed. However the idea that three people were killed in the house during this event, is not. There is apparently a bloodstain in a doorway, the size of a human body that cannot be cleaned or removed. 

And there is one very detailed story and haunting though it is one of the most contested. I’ll let you decide what you believe. 

Chloe was a slave owned by Clark and Sara Woodruff during their ownership of the plantation. It is said that Clark had forced Chloe into becoming his mistress. Chloe would listen at keyholes, apparently, to learn the news of the business and family and when caught one day, either by Sara or Clark, they had one of her ears cut off as punishment. Since that day, she would wear a green turban to hide her scars. 

Chloe apparently baked a cake containing an extract from extremely poisonous oleander leaves. Her motive is unconfirmed, though some believe it was to rid the home of other maids or to poison and then nurse Clark and Sara to regain their favour. Either way, her plan didn’t work. Sara and her two daughters ate the cake and subsequently died of the poisoning. It is said that Chloe was then hanged by other slaves and her body thrown into the Mississippi river. 

The strangest thing about this tale is that no one knows where it came from. The Woodruffs are not recorded to have been slave owners and while there is a claim that Sara and her two daughters were killed, Mary, a supposed victim, actually lived a long life. Sara and her family actually died from yellow fever. Regardless of these unconfirmed rumours, visitors still claim to see a woman in a green turban walking the plantation. In addition, it is rumoured that Sara and her children’s spirits were trapped in a mirror in the house when it was not covered after their deaths. It’s claimed that their hand prints appear on the glass.

 

 

 

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