Ok, I know it's a long time until Thursday but I want to tell you my ghost story! Grab a cupa cider and pull up a chair. Comfy? Here goes:
It was a gloomy fall day when I had my first encounter.
In the early 1970s, I volunteered as a tour guide at the old fort in our town. The fort was built to help keep peace between the settlers and the Indians. The city was restoring the fort and had the old hospital and one of the officers quarters open for visitors. I was in the officers quarters known as the Swords House.
The last group of tourists had left and I was alone; I thought. The house has 3 levels. The bedrooms and 2 closets are on the top level. The parlor and dining room are in the middle level with the kitchen and servants quarters on the bottom floor. I was in the hall of the middle level.
CREAK, SQUEAK, CREAK, SQUEAK - the sound of footsteps on the over one hundered year old floor over head, got my attention. I went upstairs - nothing!
I had just returned to the middle hall when I heard more light footsteps upstairs followed by the slamming of one of the closet doors. Since it was almost closing time I locked up after one more check to make sure someone wasn't hiding trying to scare me.
As I walked across the parade ground to the hospital building, I glanced over my shoulder. I could swear the curtain in the parlor moved.
At the hospital, which also housed the reception center, I mentioned what had happened to the supervisor.
"Oh, that's probably Mrs. Turrett," she said.
"The Turretts lived in the Swords house at one time. One day while Mrs. Turrett was on the veranda, her husband, the Captain, came riding up and saw her. He decided to show off so made his horse rear up. As he dismounted with a flourish, the horse's reigns got wrapped around the trigger of his gun and he shot himself. He died and was buried on the parade grounds until Mrs. Turrett decided to go back east. She dug him up and took him with her. For some reason, she seems to haunt that house. Several people have actually seen her sad little face peeking out the parlor window, watching forever for her captain to come riding home."![]()
Bookmarks