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My article is LIVE on Paranormal Daily News! Haunted McNabs Island )O(

 

Merry meet all,

Today’s post tells the story of the haunted McNabs Island. So grab a coffee and get settled for a spooky read. 

Haunted McNabs Island

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McNabs Island, located in the Canadian harbour of Halifax, Nova Scotia, is rife with ghost stories, legends of hidden treasure and hanged men. Settle in for a ghost story that will give you chills. The island boasts” “three abandoned military forts, a cholera quarantine in an old potters field, ruins of old family homes… a family burial plot, a former soda pop factory that ran bootleg booze during prohibition, a shipwreck cove, a beach where English redcoats hung navy deserters during the Napoleonic Wars, a forgotten lighthouse, a former Edwardian fairground, and the remnants of a cultivated Victorian botanical garden.” (Atlas Obscura)

​McNabs Island is believed to be haunted. People have reported hearing strange sounds and someone found a hole with five marker stones near Finlay. The nearby Oak Island is famous for possessing buried treasure, and only the truly foolish would risk life and limb to find it.

The Maugher Beach Lighthouse was built in 1941 near the Sherbrooke Tower site. “The other island lighthouse, McNabs Island Rear Range Lighthouse built in 1903, was replaced by skeleton towers in 1979. The waters surrounding the island became the graveyard for many ships. In 1797, HMS Tribune struck Thrumcap Shoal and sank off Herring Cove with the loss of 228 lives. Over the centuries, numerous ships were scuttled around the island. Wrecks in Ives and Wreck coves are still visible.” (Messy Nessy Chic)

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Before European colonization, the local Mi’qmaq people used the island to hunt and fish. In 1794, Colonel Edward Cornwallis resided there and began a long-term military presence that would last for two hundred years. Settlers on the island found life challenging. They grew their own food or had to go to the mainland for provisions. There was no electricity except by battery and no nearby stores or services.

The European settlers brought illness with them. In 1746, France sent a fleet of 3,000 men under the command of Doc D’Anville to ally with the M’iqmaq against the British. Typhus broke out on the ship, killing 1200 men at sea. The Frenchmen were never quarantined. They set up camp and suffered through the typhus illness. The last of the fleet were left to die unburied on the rocky coastline. More settlers came from Europe, bringing infectious diseases such as typhus or smallpox with them, which infected the M’iqmaq.

In 1866, a cholera outbreak spread throughout the island. An English steamship, the SS England, was ordered to lay anchor off the island because the ship’s crew and passengers were infected with cholera. Eight hundred infected people lived on the island in tents, and food was sent to them from the mainland. The crew and the passengers were forced to remain there until the disease had run its course. There is a sad energy where the unfortunate victims of the cholera outbreak are buried, and people report a sense of being watched. (Uncomfortably Dark)

Dr. John Slayter reported that the illness was fast and brutal. The strong would survive, and the weak would perish. Two hundred people were buried in two mass graves on the island. The bodies buried at Little Thrum Cere washed out to sea, but the bodies buried at Hugonin Point remain.

McNabs Island shipwrecks and hapless victims

Shipwrecks also surround McNabs Island. Halifax Harbour is often overcast, foggy and dark. Treacherous shoals and thick fog have caused many maritime disasters. Wreck Cove is believed to have the highest number of shipwrecks in Nova Scotia. The loss of HMS Tribune in 1797 claimed two hundred lives. The ship is now in pieces, with “rusted fittings, skeletal hulls and exposed timbers”, eerie remnants of the ship’s history. People believe that the ghosts of sailors still haunt the area, doomed never to find peace. (Ghostwatch)

Peter McNab settled on the island on December 25, 1782 and his descendants lived on the island until 1935. According to Uncomfortably Dark, Peter McNab was alive and well when the gallows were still present on the island. The sound of the clanging chains that supported the dead bodies of the hapless victims of the gallows often kept him awake at night. The sound annoyed him so badly that he gathered his best mates, and they tore down the corpses and gallows with their bare hands.

McNabs Island played an important role in the defense of Halifax from the 1800s to the Cold War of the 1950s. The first fortification was Sherbrooke Tower, a Martello tower constructed in the early 1800s which was later converted to a lighthouse where Abraham Gesner tested his kerosene invention in 1851. In the 1860s, the British built Fort Ives, followed by Fort McNab in the 1880s, and Hugonin Battery in 1899. The Canadian military built Strawberry Battery, which is not accessible to visitors, during the Second World War.

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https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:NS-08551_-_Maugher_Beach_Lighthouse_(50079026768).j

McNab’s Island was significant in terms of its strategic location of the defence of Halifax. During the Napoleonic wars and other wars, the island was garrisoned, ready to guard the harbour. The military presence waned after the Second World War, but the relics of gun emplacements, pillboxes and underground stores remain, bestowing an eerie atmosphere to the island.

Peter McNab’s headless ghost

Peter McNab was a man with a good business sense, but bad luck followed him. He bought an aged fairground with hopes of restoring it and earning a fortune. He hoped to attract attendees, but was unsuccessful. He revived the old merry-go-round and added other games, but it still failed. He erected a soda factory in a barn next to his old house, and in 1908, he brewed flavorful beverages in ceramic bottles. He offered bottles to visitors of the fairgrounds, and threw parties at his dance hall. Perhaps the lack of enthusiasm for his fair waned, because he stopped in 1915. In 1919, the bottle storage cottage burned to the ground, thereby ending his ill-fated fairground and soda pop business. Hundreds of glass and ceramic bottles were lost to the flames as the building burned. Bootleggers used the old place to operate a moonshine still during the prohibition in the 1920s. Avid bottle collectors still search for vintage bottles. In Halifax, my mother found a few blue glass bottles when she was digging in her garden. She cleaned them up and has kept them to this day. (Uncomfortably Dark)

It’s believed that Peter McNab’s headless ghost still haunts the island searching for something. His old soda bottles? One more spectral ride on a merry-go-round? Only time will tell. McNab’s old family home and graveyard are the focal points for these enduring ghost stories.

mcnabs island
Fort McNabs https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:NS-08551_-_Maugher_Beach_Lighthouse_(50079026768).jpg

More spooky phenomena have been reported on McNabs Island, including apparitions and unexplained sounds. There were accounts of a ghostly horse and carriage rattling down the old paths, and sightings of an unknown man who has never been identified. It’s hard to identify a man when he’s dead. Dead men tell no tales.

McNabs Island books

​If you are curious to learn more about McNabs Island, then the following booksmay satisfy your curiosity, such as Bluenose Ghosts written by the celebrated folklore author Helen Creighton, or Steve Vernon’s Haunted Harbours: Ghost Stories from Old Nova Scotia. Both books are sure to give you chills. You will read with the light left on all night! Bruce Scott’s book, The Last Farm on McNabs Island, is a portrait of the island’s spooky history, with anecdotes, photographs and maps. Thomas Raddall’s book Hangman’s Beach portrays the history of McNabs Island.

Here is a short quote from the book Hangman’s Beach: “The other Frenchmen tell me it is hell turned inside out – a torture of cold instead of heat. An eternity of short days and long black nights, with snow to the hips, and an air cold enough to freeze a brass monkey’s double-shot. Why France ever owned or fought for this country I shall never know. It is not for Frenchmen, this, unless one could arrive in April and depart by November. For the rest of the year the Devil can have it – he’s an Englishman, of course.”

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Today, the island remains mostly uninhabited, unless you include the dead. The Friends of McNabs Island is a volunteer, nonprofit, registered charity based in Halifax, Nova Scotia and established in 1990, dedicated to preserving McNabs Island. The island is protected as parkland, preserving its natural beauty and eerie history, promoted as a nature park and outdoor classroom. They host various events on the island, nature tours and a beach clean-up, which I once participated in. The society publishes brochures, guidebooks, posters and newsletters. They host events such as a Fall Foliage Tour, a Heritage Tour, Nature Tour, an Adventure Tour, and a Coastal Shoreline Tour. You can find their website at: https://mcnabsisland.ca/activities for more information.

Be brave, respect the island and respect the dead. There is more to McNabs Island than meets the eye.

Links to the books mentioned above

REFERENCES

REFERENCES

McNabs Island in Halifax
This Canadian island is a veritable garden of decay with countless abandoned structures dotting the landscape.
SlBH 1 Paranormal Daily News

 

Tales of a vanished island community – Saltscapes Magazine
Book review: Exploring the lives of the people who lived on a now uninhabited Halifax Harbour island
Paranormal Daily News

 

Haunted Location: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
The Ghosts of McNab’s IslandWelcome back to another weird Wednesday! I’m enjoying researching haunted locations across the world and have some really great stories, legends, and lore on the docket for our time together. As it turns out, there are many spooky stories that originate in my little province of Nova Scotia, so I will be intertwining my local legends throughout my posts. Today’s Haunted Location brings us to McNab’s Island in the mouth of the Halifax Harbour. As a teenager, I worked su
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The Fascinating Abandoned Island You’ve Never Heard of
On a recent trip to Nova Scotia, Canada to investigate the cemetery where many of the victims of the Titanic were buried, a chance conversation in a bar in Halifax, brought up a fascinating island lying abandoned just in the harbour, called McNabs Island. I was told that this island was home to the
mcnabs island 12 Paranormal Daily News

 

Halifax’s McNabs Island surprises visitors with its beauty, history and stories
If the ghosts on McNabs island could talk theyd tell tales of Hangmans Beach where criminals were left to rot in gibbets. Theyd talk about dying of cholera and lyin…

 

McNabs Island – Ghostwatch
McNabs Island, situated at the mouth of Halifax Harbour, is a place where the natural beauty of Nova Scotia is inextricably intertwined with layers of
ghostwatch.com
Blessings, Spiderwitch

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The Haunted Halifax Citadel )O(

 

Merry meet all,

Here is my first article for the Paranormal Daily News!! 

 

Haunted Halifax Citadel – Canada’s Spookiest Ghost Tour

halifax citadel
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(Image – Canva)

​Brief history of the Halifax Citadel

Halifax is a charming maritime city in Nova Scotia, Canada, brimming with spooky historical legends. Ghost stories are often laced with tragedy and nowhere is that more true than at the Halifax Citadel, and Halifax itself, where the dead roam amongst the living.

The Halifax Citadel is a national historic site. Four fortifications were constructed on Citadel Hill since the British founded the city in 1749 and are often referred to as Fort George. Only the third fort which was built between 1749 and 1800 was officially named Fort George, after King George III.

While Citadel Hill was never attacked, the Citadel is significant in its defence of the Halifax Harbour and the Royal Navy dockyard.

The British founded Halifax to act as a counterbalance to the French stronghold of Louisburg, which was returned to French control the previous year by the 1748 Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. Edward Cornwallis, the appointed governor, arrived on June 21, 1749 to settle Halifax. He traveled to Halifax and was followed by 13 transports that carried about two thousand settlers. Halifax was a strategic city during the next decade in the ongoing Anglo-French rivalry in the region. The British had recruited Protestant settlers from Europe and built fortifications to protect them from raids by the French, colonial Acadians and allies from the Wabanaki Confederacy (Mi’kmaq).

The infamous ‘Father Le Loutre’s War’ (1749-1755) began when Edward Cornwallis, the appointed governor, arrived on June 21, 1749 to settle Halifax. He was followed by 13 transports that carried about two thousand settlers.

The current star shaped Halifax Citadel fort was a massive masonry-construction designed to protect against a land or water-based attack from the United States. Completed in 1858, the star shape structure was purposely designed to give many lines of fire from the defenders. A few portions of the hill were built with tunnels, which could be provided with explosives and detonated from the forts. The British forces enhanced Fort George’s armaments by using heavier and more accurate long-range artillery. By the end of the 19th century, the role of the Halifax Citadel changed to a command center for other harbor defenses and to provide barrack accommodations.

During the Second World War, the role of Halifax Citadel was to provide temporary accommodations, signaling and a coordination point for the city’s aircraft defenses during the war. Today, Parks Canada operates the Citadel as the Halifax Citadel National Historic site of Canada. The fort has been restored to its appearance as it was in the Victorian Era.

For many years, a set of military gallows with a flogging post, stood in the centre of the CitadelHill parade grounds.

In 1935, Citadel Hill was designated a National Historic Landmark but showed signs of decay. Some Halifax downtown businesses suggested demolishing the fort and using the space for parking and development.

​Restoration of the Halifax Citadel

halifax citadel
(Image-Canva)

Thankfully, the historic Halifax Citadel was recognized for its worth. The historical significance and the tourism potential led to its preservation and gradual restoration. In 1956, the site had been partially restored and opened for business as a Halifax army museum. It was home for the Nova Scotia Museum and the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.

Parks Canada fully restored the famous fort to its full grandeur in the 1990s. It was a common practice for the restoration workers to leave dated coins in the mortar or under replaced stone walls. The coins were a marker of what areas had been worked on and when.

Today, the site is still managed by Parks Canada. The Halifax Citadel is one of the most visited National Historic Sites in Atlantic Canada. The grounds of the Citadel are open to the public year round. From the spring to fall, living history programs feature animators portraying the 78th Highland Regiment, stationed in Halifax from 1869 to 1871, the 78th Highlanders Pipe Band, the Third Brigade of the Royal Artillery, and tradespeople. Halifax Citadel sees up to 200,000 visitors and tourists annually.

​The Halifax Citadel Ghost Tour

One significant attraction the Citadel offers is a year-round daily ceremonial firing of the noon gun, a reminder of the fort’s role in the city’s defenses. The best attraction for me and many other people are the ghost tours offered by the staff at Halifax Citadel.

A costumed guide leads you through a 70-minute walk, weaving stories intended to keep you awake all night. Be prepared to be spooked. You meet the guide on the drawbridge at the main gate and are led by candlelight (spooky setting!) through tunnels and prison sites, and hear true tales of many unexplained events in their real locations.

Popular ghost stories

There are about forty documented sightings of ghosts at the Halifax Citadel. Here are some of the popular ghost stories associated with the Ghost Tour.

The Grey Lady: A spirit said to forever wander the grounds, mourning her lost love and bearing the scent of roses. She wanders the floors of the Cavalier building, wearing a 19th-century dress and is still seen to this day. A guard was stationed overlooking the second floor balcony, and saw a woman pass on the veranda beneath him and disappear around the corner. She is believed to be Miss Cassie Alan, and was engaged to a soldier stationed at the Citadel. But on her wedding day, when she waited at the altar on November 14, 1900, he never arrived.

The carriage driver arrived to pick up the groom only to discover that he had shot himself. He believed that was the only way to conceal his past. The driver went to the church to break the sad news to the bride. She became hysterical and found the truth too hard to accept. Her spirit still searches the grounds for him. Officer Edward, the groom who committed suicide, is said to haunt the area near his barracks.

The most vivid occurrence of the Grey Lady being spotted was when an employee had to sit in a certain chair to greet guests. When she arrived, he saw her and thought she was of the living. He rose from the chair to greet her but then she was gone. She was spotted a few more times always wearing the same dress and disappeared before he had the chance to talk to her.

Ghost lighting a pipe: Brunswick Street is across from Citadel Hill and boasts its own ghost story. According to a newspaper titled The Acadian Recorder dated December 16, 1867, a ghost who was an imposing height of about twelve to sixteen feet was spotted walking from Citadel Hill to Brunswick Street. He wore a British Army uniform and paused to lean over a lamp post to light his pipe. A local Halifax police officer chased the giant apparition who vanished into a Brunswick street window.

The Murdered Soldier: A murdered soldier tragically fell down a well, his remains discovered centuries later. In 1782, two young officers were patrolling the grounds when they came upon an unsavory character. The tall figure wore Tom hunting clothes and he was tall and gaunt. One of the officers recognized him as his brother. A while later, his worst fears were confirmed when a letter arrived – his brother had died in a hunting accident the exact same time he saw the spirit.

The Lady of the Ditch: A woman was found dead at the bottom of the ditch. Her remains were never identified. At 4am in the morning, a sentry observed that something had fallen into the ditch and was not moving. Upon closer observation, he realized it was a woman in a tattered grey dress who had fallen tragically to her death from the top of the wall with a slash across her throat. Now she haunts the Citadel and visitors have reported spotting her in the Cavalier Building

The Tale of the Missing One-armed Sergeant: There is a well on the northern side of the inner Citadel, behind a closed locked door in Casemate 18. The unfortunate sergeant went by the name of O’Reilly and his job was to guard the regimental flags in battle. That was a hard job. He was responsible for a young private named Billy and often gave him a hard time, believing it would teach him responsibility. That turned out to not be the case. A fire erupted at three in the morning at the North Barracks. The barracks were constructed from resinous pine lumber. No one noticed when the sergeant vanished but the fire consumed the entire building.

The next morning when the roll call was taken, Billy and O’Reilly were gone. In the winter of 1851, a soldier drew water from the well at Casement 18. To the soldier’s horror, a severed arm was found in the bucket from the well. The body of sergeant O’ Reilly was finally recovered. The water was putrefied. The rest of his body was brought up. He had been shot in the back by Billy, who deserted. To this day, his ghost is seen in the well standing at attention sometimes carrying his missing arm.

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Halifax Citadel Tour Guide – Commons Wikimedia

Visitors and staff have noticed orbs of light passing through walls and doors, shadowy figures that vanish when approached and cold spots that set off motion detectors. The prison cells of the fort are very spooky. People have heard chains dragging across stone floors and whispers in the dark! The grim history of the Halifax Citadel is full of loss and bloodshed, never to be forgotten, where the dead refuse to remain ‘quiet’. It is no wonder the Citadel is so haunted.

The horrors of the First and Second World Wars are over but their tragedies and the battles live on at the Halifax Citadel. The ghost stories will live on in our imaginations and in our hearts. Future articles will delve into ghost stories from other areas of Halifax.

References:

https://halifaxcitadel.ca/services/the-halifax-citadel-ghost-tour.html

https://www.dustykeleher.com/the-halifax-ghost-walk

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citadel_Hill_(Fort_George)

https://dalgazette.com/arts-culture/27613/

Halifax Haunts: Exploring the City’s spookiest places. Nimbus Publishing, 2009. Nova Scotia, Canada.

Blessings, Spiderwitch 

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Ghosts of the Frozen Frontiers )O(

Merry meet all,

Is the summer heat too much for you? Well grab yourself a mint mojito mocktail and chill in the shade or hole up in your flat from the heat. Here is a story sure to bring some relief from the heat. It may even give you nightmares. 

I have no idea what possesses a man to venture out to sea. The oceans are perilous, especially in the Antarctic. Let’s settle down for this spooky tale. 

Ghosts of the Frozen Frontier: Paranormal Tales from Antarctica

Ghosts of the Frozen Frontier: Paranormal Tales from Antarctica cover

Picture Antarctica’s stark, desolate beauty—an endless expanse of ice and snow that feels almost alien. Now, envision that same frozen wilderness haunted by the whispers of the past—ghostly apparitions, eerie noises, and unexplained phenomena. This icy continent, often regarded as the final frontier of human exploration, serves as the backdrop for some of the most chilling paranormal tales. Despite its inhospitable conditions, Antarctica boasts a rich history teeming with stories of tragic expeditions and mysterious events that continue to captivate our imagination. This article explores the paranormal phenomena associated with Antarctica, delving into ghostly encounters, eerie lights, and strange occurrences that render this remote land one of the most haunted places on Earth.

Antarctica
Two Adelie penguins on an iceberg in rough sea off the coast of Antarctica in 2013 – Christopher Michel – Creative Commons

The Extreme Environment as a Catalyst

Antarctica is the coldest, driest, windiest, and highest continent in the world, creating an environment that is as harsh as it is isolating. The extreme conditions can have profound psychological effects on those who brave its icy expanse. Prolonged isolation, relentless cold, and the monotony of a white, featureless landscape can lead to sensory deprivation, causing vivid hallucinations and intense paranoia, as reported by many Antarctic explorers over the years. These psychological stresses might contribute to the reports of paranormal experiences, as the mind struggles to make sense of its surroundings.

Historical Context

The history of Antarctic exploration is marked by incredible bravery and tragic losses. Early explorers, like Robert Falcon Scott and Ernest Shackleton, faced unimaginable hardships in their quests to conquer the South Pole. Scott’s ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition in 1911 ended in tragedy, with Scott and his men perishing in the brutal cold. In his final diary entry, Scott wrote, “We shall stick it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and the end cannot be far.” Shackleton’s Endurance Expedition faced its own trials, with the crew stranded on the ice for months. These historical events, steeped in human suffering and perseverance, create a fertile ground for supernatural beliefs and ghostly legends.

Scientific Explanations

While the tales of ghosts and paranormal activity in Antarctica are compelling, there are scientific explanations for some of these phenomena. Hallucinations caused by extreme isolation, sleep deprivation, and the harsh environment are well-documented. Geomagnetic anomalies, which are more pronounced at the poles, can also affect electronic equipment and human perception, leading to unexplained occurrences. A balanced approach considers both the allure of the supernatural and the rational explanations that science provides.

Antarctica
Scott’s party at the South Pole – Wikipedia Public Domain. Henry Bowers (1883–1912) – Huxley, Leonard (ed) (1913) “The Return from the Pole” in Scott’s Last Expedition, Volume 1, New York, United States.

Robert Falcon Scott’s Pole party of his ill-fated expedition, from left to right at the Pole: Oates (standing), Bowers (sitting), Scott (standing in front of Union Jack flag on pole), Wilson (sitting), Evans (standing). Bowers took this photograph, using a piece of string to operate the camera shutter.

Paranormal Encounters

The Spirits of Ross Island

Ross Island is a site of numerous ghostly encounters. In 1979, a tragic plane crash claimed the lives of 257 people when an Air New Zealand flight struck Mount Erebus. Visitors to McMurdo Station on Ross Island often report a creeping sense of unease, hearing disembodied voices whispering in the wind, and seeing footprints materialise in the snow with no visible source, as if an invisible presence is walking beside them. The spirits of the crash victims are believed to wander the island, their presence felt by those who venture near the crash site.

Robert Scott’s Hut

Robert Scott’s Hut at Cape Evans is another hotspot for paranormal activity. Built in 1911 for the Terra Nova Expedition, the hut remains a poignant symbol of the explorers’ struggle. Visitors often describe an overwhelming sense of discomfort upon entering the hut. Disembodied voices and unexplained footsteps are commonly reported, as if the ghosts of Scott and his men still linger, replaying the final days of their doomed expedition. The nearby memorial crosses, erected for the deceased members of Shackleton’s Ross Sea Party, further enhance the hut’s eerie atmosphere.

Deception Island

Deception Island, with its abandoned whaling station and wartime history, is a place steeped in eerie tales. The island’s remote location and treacherous waters make it accessible only to the most determined travellers. Visitors report a sense of being watched, hearing ghostly voices, and seeing shadowy figures. The island’s history as a whaling station is underscored by the bones scattered along its shores, remnants of a bygone era that seem to whisper of past tragedies.

Wordie House

Wordie House, a former British research station, is infamous for its poltergeist activity. Researchers have documented objects moving on their own and doors slamming shut without explanation. The site’s dark, foreboding presence has led many to believe it is haunted by the spirits of those who once worked there, adding another layer of mystery to Antarctica’s haunted lore.

The Ghost Ship Jenny

The legend of the ghost ship Jenny, found frozen in ice with its crew perfectly preserved, is one of the most chilling tales from Antarctic waters. Discovered in 1840, the Jenny had been trapped in ice since 1823. The sight of the frozen crew, eerily preserved in their final moments, continues to haunt seafarers and adventurers who traverse these treacherous waters.

Blood Falls

Blood Falls, a glacier that seeps iron oxide-rich water resembling blood, is both a natural wonder and a source of eerie tales. While scientists have explained the phenomenon, its striking appearance adds to the haunting atmosphere of Antarctica. The sight of blood-red water against the pristine white ice evokes images of ancient, unsolved mysteries.

The Ghost of Lenin

At the Antarctic Pole of Inaccessibility stands a bust of Vladimir Lenin, a remnant of Soviet exploration. Some explorers claim to have seen Lenin’s ghost hauntingthis abandoned site. The surreal image of Lenin’s bust amidst the icy wasteland, coupled with reports of spectral sightings, adds a unique twist to the continent’s ghost stories.

The Ningen

The Ningen, humanoid cryptids said to inhabit the Southern Ocean, emerged from Japanese online forums and have since become part of Antarctic folklore. Described as massive, human-like creatures, sightings of the Ningen add an element of cryptid mystery to the continent’s supernatural lore. Some claim to have seen these beings on Google Earth, fuelling speculation and intrigue.

Third Man Factor

The “Third Man Factor” is a phenomenon where explorers report sensing an unseen presence providing guidance and companionship during moments of extreme duress. This phenomenon, experienced by figures like Shackleton, suggests a spiritual dimension to the harsh environment of Antarctica. Whether a psychological coping mechanism or a genuine supernatural presence, it offers comfort and mystery to those facing the continent’s challenges.

Shackleton’s Hut

Shackleton’s Hut on Ross Island is believed to be haunted by Sir Ernest Shackleton himself. Sir Edmund Hillary, who claimed to have seen Shackleton’s ghost, was inspired to preserve the hut. This site remains a testament to Shackleton’s enduring spirit and the supernatural tales that surround it.

Antarctica
Shackleton expedition – A night picture of the Endurance with ice in foreground during Shackleton’s Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, June 1915 . Wikimedia Commons.

Theories and Explanations

Paranormal Perspectives

Various paranormal theories attempt to explain the strange phenomena reported in Antarctica. Some believe that the spirits of explorers and victims of tragic accidents are bound to the icy landscape, unable to move on. This idea mirrors legends from other remote, desolate areas such as the Arctic and certain desert regions, where extreme conditions are believed to thin the veil between worlds. Others suggest that the extreme environment acts as a conduit for otherworldly entities or dimensional shifts, allowing glimpses into parallel worlds.

Sceptical Viewpoints

Sceptics argue that many of these paranormal experiences can be explained by the psychological and physical effects of Antarctica’s harsh conditions. Hallucinations, sleep deprivation, and the power of suggestion can all contribute to the perception of supernatural events. Geomagnetic anomalies, which are more pronounced at the poles, can also interfere with human perception and electronic equipment, creating illusions of ghostly activity.

Open-Ended Conclusion

Despite numerous theories and explanations, the paranormal phenomena of Antarctica remain largely unexplained. The continent’s remote and inhospitable nature ensures that many mysteries endure, inviting further investigation and speculation.

Conclusion

Antarctica, with its stark beauty and brutal environment, is a land of both scientific wonder and eerie legends. The stories of ghostly encounters, haunted huts, and spectral ships add a haunting dimension to this frozen frontier. Whether one believes in the supernatural or prefers scientific explanations, the tales from Antarctica captivate the imagination and underscore the human desire to find meaning in the unknown.

As we continue to explore this enigmatic continent, who knows what other mysteries and ghostly tales await discovery? The haunting stories of Antarctica invite us to ponder the line between reality and the supernatural, encouraging us to keep an open mind and a watchful eye.

Antarctica
Elephant Island party. This ice-covered, mountainous island is located off the coast of Antarctica in the outer reaches of the South Shetland Islands, in the Southern Ocean. – Wikimedia Commons

References

  • Tedesco, Lianna. “Haunted Arctic: These Stories Are Why It’s Considered The Most Haunted Place On The Planet.” TheTravel, 30 Mar. 2021.
  • “Ghosts of Antarctica.” Phoenix Paranormal SA, 23 May 2022.
  • “Antarctic Ghosts: Spirits in the Ice.” Paranormal Explorers, 15 Jan. 2023.
  • “Shackleton’s Ghosts: Haunted Huts of Antarctica.” Explorer’s Journal, 8 Feb. 2023.
  • “The Mystery of Blood Falls.” Science News, 12 Apr. 2023.

Credit given to: https://paranormaldailynews.com/ghosts-of-the-frozen-frontier-paranormal-tales-from-antarctica/4838/

Blessings, Spiderwitch

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The Dos and Don’ts of Haunted Objects

Merry meet all,

I am so honoured to discover that my blog is included on the website 100 Best Paranormal Blogs and Websites! Wow! I am honoured. I mean this is awesome. Truly awesome. 

Today the sun’s shining hard but the cold wind lingers. That ruins my groove because I can’t wear certain tops, unless I have the equivalent of an eskimo parka on over it. Not sure why this cold wind is still here but I hope it leaves soon.

Today’s post is about how to deal with a haunted object. Enjoy!

The Dos and Don’ts of Dealing with a Haunted Object

Many people believe that objects can become Haunted. Whether you believe it or not, there are certain steps you should take if you think you have a Haunted object in your possession. In this blog post, we will go over what to do if you think an object is Haunted as well as how to remove a spirit from an object.

How Can a Spirit Become Attached to an Object?
There are two main ways that a spirit can become attached to an object: through attraction or through energy. The first instance is when the spirit is attracted to the object itself. This could be because of the material it is made out of, its color, or even its shape. The second instance is when the spirit becomes attached to the energy of the person who owns the object. This often happens with items that have been passed down through generations or have been owned by someone for a long time. The attachment can also happen if the owner was very emotional when they were using the item.

For example, if a person got very angry while using a particular tool, that tool could pick up on that anger and attract a spirit that is also angry. Or, if someone passed away while wearing a certain piece of jewelry, that jewelry could hold on to the energy of the person and their passing. There are many different circumstances in which a spirit can become attached to an object.

Can Objects Be Haunted?
The answer to this question is a little bit complicated. Technically speaking, no, an inanimate object cannot be haunted because it does not have a soul. However, what many people think of as “haunted” objects are actually just objects that have had a spirit attached to them at some point in time. So while an object cannot be haunted in and of itself, it can have all of the same symptoms as a haunted house would—things moving on their own, strange noises, etc.—because there is a spirit present.

Dos:

• If you think an object is Haunted, the first thing you should do is try to figure out why the spirit is attached to the object. This can be done by researching the history of the object or talking to a medium.

• Once you know why the spirit is attached to the object, you can try to help them move on. This can be done by holding a seance or by performing a cleansing ritual. • If you are successful in helping the spirit move on, be sure to bless the object so that it does not become Haunted again.

Don’ts:

• Do not attempt to remove a spirit from an object without knowing why they are attached to it. This can agitate the spirit and make them angry.

• Do not try to communicate with the spirit without the help of a professional medium. This can be dangerous as spirits can lash out if they feel threatened.

• Do not attempt to perform a cleansing ritual without first doing your research. Cleansing rituals can be dangerous if not performed correctly.

If you think you have a Haunted object in your possession, there are certain steps you should take. Do your research and try to figure out why the spirit is attached to the object. Once you know why they are attached, you can try to help them move on. If you are successful, be sure to blessed the object so that it does not become Haunted again. If you have any further questions or concerns, please consult with a professional medium.

Credit given to: https://paranormalacademy.co.uk/the-dos-and-donts-of-dealing-with-a-haunted-object/

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The eerie cemetery Visit )O(

Merry meet all,

The other day I visited a cemetery. I often like to visit cemeteries and this particular spooky day was perfect for that. It is late March here but early spring. Crocuses are popping up everywhere. However, as you can see in the photo above, my attention was drawn to the misty eeriness of the cemetery. I took several photos of the cemetery situated next to the Public Gardens. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Trees stand out from the somber fog. The fog makes the cemetery appear ethereal, like you had crossed a threshold into the Otherworld. The tombstones add to the inescapable feel of death. It creeped me out, being there. When I left, after taking many photos, and I had crossed the threshold of the cemetery, I felt freed of something. Free of death’s grip? Free of the spirits whose icy fingers clung to me, pulling me to join them in their prison? One can only guess. The air felt less heavy when I reached the sidewalk. 

Spring is here. The ground is less frozen and now muddy. Daffodils and crocuses pop up on lawns, greeting spring with their cheery faces. But in that cemetery, Time and Death stood still and held hands. Spring slumbers there yet. 

Personally, I am grateful for spring’s return. I suppose that is due to my restlessness. It is very contradictory. I want to sleep or I feel restless. Spring is change. Spring is fresh new life. Spring ushers in foals, eggs, chicks, hens, neighing horses and shrieking jays. As much as I love the gothic atmosphere of the cemetery, I am a gardener. For the last few weeks, I have tended to my starter herbs and veggies. I take care of them and I have taken good care of my cat, who shares in my eagerness for warmer days. I spied a small bird nest up high in a tree on the nature trail a while ago. 

Winter is hard for my dear cat. I can’t have the screen door open all day for her the way I do in summer. She doesn’t understand that. I can only imagine how bored she is. Lately she has taken to attacking her big bag of cat food. 

Last night, I watched the new Ghostbusters movie: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire. I loved it. I was late so I missed the previews and the very beginning of the movie but I sure enjoyed the rest. I would highly recommend anyone who is curious to grab some popcorn and a friend, and go see the movie in theatres. 

The ethereal eeriness of the cemetery is like one last swan song of the dark half of the year before the sun engulfs the world. I am happy to have visited the cemetery to experience the chill of death, the reminder of mortality. I know spring is around the corner, slowly tiptoeing in and soon to kick the darkness to the curb. 

Spooky cemeteries and ghost busting movies! I even got a Batman doll souvenir! I do love theatre popcorn!

Blessings, Spiderwitch

 

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Paranormal Convention in Thunder Bay

 

Merry meet all,

I obtained a white garment like a nightgown. I like it because I can alter it to match the chemises that I see on the Holy Clothing website. I am not done yet but it will look great. I love this photo! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tonight I am going to Trident Cafe to support a likeminded awesome horror author.  I’m celebrating women in horror month. Yay!

Today’s post covers a new exciting event in the world of the paranormal. Enjoy!!! 

Thunder Bay paranormal convention set to showcase the spooky side of life this fall

Workshops, guest speakers will cover all manner of paranormal topics

A group of people stand in a circle.
A group of paranormal investigators record a drop in temperature inside a site believed to be subject to paranormal activities. Paranormal investigators will gather in Thunder Bay, Ont., this fall. (Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters )

With a slate of guest speakers and workshops on the schedule, the first-ever Lake Superior Paranormal Convention will shine a spotlight on the strange and spooky this fall.

The convention – which is being organized by Thunder Bay paranormal investigation group Lucky Paranormal – will take place in October at the Prince Arthur hotel. Tickets go on sale Saturday, March 2, and will be available online.

“At a paranormal convention, they have lots of speakers,” organizer and Lucky Paranormal member Gail Willis said. “All day long, you can listen to paranormal experts on paranormal activity, investigation, UFO’s, Sasquatch, Bigfoot, all of those types of things are spoken about openly at a convention.”

More than 15 guests have been booked so far. They include:

  • Beyond the Haunting Investigations of History’s Most Haunted;
  • Shane Pittman, from Netflix’s 28 Days Haunted and Discovery Channel’s The Holzer Files;
  • Author and researcher Jeff Belanger (Ghost Adventures and Paranormal Challenge);
  • Author and researcher Chris Rutkowski;
  • Thunder Bay writer Kim Casey;
  • Investigator and filmmaker Dee McCullay, and
  • The Winnipeg Paranormal Group.

The convention will also include vendors, as well as workshops on how to use some of the equipment paranormal investigators use, organizer and Lucky Paranormal member Mel Willis said.

A REM pod, used in paranormal investigations.
A REM Pod used by Lucky Paranormal during their investigations. The upcoming Lake Superior Paranormal Convention will feature workshops on how to use ghost-hunting equipment like this. (Kris Ketonen/CBC)

The idea for the local convention grew out of visits to other, similar events by Lucky Paranormal members.

“We’ve gone to a number of conventions in the U.S.,” Mel Willis said. “There’s one in Halifax and that’s the only one across Canada and we’re like, ‘well, we’re smack in the middle of Canada, why not here?'”

Gail Willis said the convention isn’t only geared at investigators, and hopes that everyone with an interest in the supernatural will take away something worthwhile.

“I hope that they leave with more information,” she said. “I hope that they leave with a passion for the paranormal, and also maybe new connections.”

A few other events are scheduled around the main convention, which will take place on Saturday, Oct. 5. Those include:

  • A VIP party with celebrity guest speakers on the evening of Oct. 4;
  • A celebrity-led paranormal investigation at the Thunder Bay museum, scheduled for the evening of Oct. 5, and
  • Sunday Spirits n’ Sweets at Cafe Ora, which will include afternoon tea and coffee with Canadian psychic medium Kerrilynn Shellhorn on the afternoon of Oct. 6.

The Lake Superior Paranormal Convention itself, meanwhile, is scheduled for Oct. 5, 2024, at the Prince Arthur Hotel. For ticket information, visit the event’s website.

Superior Morning8:22Mel and Gail Willis of Lucky Paranormal: Paranormal Convention

Thunder Bay ghost hunters and paranormal enthusiasts, mark your calendars, the first-ever Lake Superior Paranormal Convention is coming to the city this fall. Hear from the organizers.

Blessings, Spiderwitch

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Paranormal Dining

Merry meet all,

I am sad to announce that my friend Scott Lee Bower has passed away. He died from a serious heart complication this week. His friends and I are saddened by his passing. I posted about him on this blog and I will repost it for everyone to see again. He was a genuine person and he loved the paranormal. Scott will be missed. 

Today’s post is about an investigation led at the most famous Five Fishermen restaurant. I have been there and I can attest that the restaurant is genuinely haunted. Read on if you dare!

Paranormal investigators reach out to spirits at haunted Halifax eatery

On a chilly Saturday night in October, a group of paranormal investigators gathered at a historic Halifax building long rumoured to be haunted.

What is now a popular restaurant in Halifax’s downtown core was once a mortuary, processing bodies from both the sinking of the Titanic and the Halifax Explosion.

The persistent stories of strange happenings at the Five Fishermen at 1740 Argyle Street have attracted the attention of Paranormal Investigations Nova Scotia (PINS.)

Desperate for answers, the group decided to gather their equipment and spend a long night at the restaurant in the hopes of solving the mystery behind the reports of flickering lights and unknown footsteps.

“Hoping to try and communicate with a spirit of some sort, somebody that has, you know, been trapped here, someone who has personal possessions here,” says Darcy O’Neil of PINS.

The group doesn’t have to wait long.

Cameras are quick to catch a motion sensor going off on its own. Suspecting a malfunction, the team discusses the problem while a white mist moves across their video screen.

No one on the team can explain it and the mist is only the beginning.

The team sets up a ghost box, a digital audio recorder with a built-in radio set on a reverse frequency.

Where a person’s ears would only pick up static, investigators say other voices sometimes emerge from the white noise.

The team also sets up a laser grid in an effort to spot any shadows passing by.

The investigators say the quickest way to determine whether a ghost is present is to simply ask.

“Is there a female here?” they ask.

The silence is deafening as they wait for an answer in a dining room where a mysterious man has been spotted several times in a mirror.

“If there’s a male here, what’s your name?”

Suddenly, through the static on the ghost box, the words “it’s Drake” seem to fill the air.

“That was a male voice that just came through,” says O’Neil.

A man named William Leonard Drake died in the Halifax Explosion. The body of the 24-year-old was prepared for burial in the building.

“I thoroughly believe that we are haunted,” says the restaurant’s general manager, Heather Brown. “I don’t believe that any of the spirits here are here to hurt us. I think they’re more or less just here to say this is our space.”

The embalming process in the old funeral home took place in what is now a private dining room.

A basic security system catches some action in the room as balls of light, or orbs, dance around the space. The orbs are invisible to the naked eye but can be seen plain as day on the infrared video.

Upstairs in the woman’s washroom, where a little girl has been spotted and a woman heard weeping, the team brings so-called trigger objects – items chosen to elicit a response.

There is no obvious response, but some women in the group report feeling numb.

The investigators try the same method in the wine cage.

“Is there anyone here who wants to communicate with me?” asks one investigator.

The light of the flashlight comes on, seemingly on its own.

“Are you a female? Turn it on for yes.”

Again, the flashlight lights up on its own.

“Are you a young child?”

The light turns on once more.

The team begins to pick up more activity. Radios and motion sensors continue to go off for no apparent reason.

And so it goes, until well after midnight.

As the investigators pack up and leave, they conclude the evening has generated more questions than answers. They vow to return.

With files from CTV Atlantic’s Suzette Belliveau

https://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/paranormal-investigators-reach-out-to-spirits-at-haunted-halifax-eatery-1.2081831

In other news:

There are 29 days till Spring Equinox! I can’t wait. I mean I have a few herb seedlings growing under my grow light. I am literally counting the days, hours, minutes and seconds till I can be in my garden again. I am just chomping at the bit for spring. 

I put some seeds on damp paper towel and put the paper towels in ziplock baggies. I used mountain arnica seeds, mint, elecampane, purple basil and marshmallow root. I can’t wait to grow those herbs! Starting seeds that way is a great way to see which seeds will grow the strongest and what the germination rate is. I love starting seeds that way. 

The next turn in the Wheel of the Year is Ostara. Ostara is the second Spring sabbat. 

Blessings, Spiderwitch

 

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Preparations

Merry meet all,

Pumpkin season is here. The Paranormal Symposium is a few days away. I have been busy preparing for it. I can’t wait to attend. 

The beautiful black plush blanket that I ordered from Killstar arrives tomorrow! I can’t wait for that either. The blanket has a spiderweb print and will keep me warm. I want to download lots of photos of my ancestors for Samhain. I also want to make them a beautiful offering of golden flowers this year. I decided on goldenrod and marigolds, and maybe asters. I am sure they will appreciate the offering. 

The host of the Paranormal Symposium, Elliott Van Dusen, wants to interview me about my blog, The Paranormal Quill after the Symposium. I am happy about that. It is nice to get some recognition after all my hard work. I have had a long go of it. I will have to prepare for that too. It should be interesting. 

I bought a cool black glossy nail polish the other day. The brand is Opi and the color is black onyx. I love the color and the quality of the nail polish. I am almost all set for the Paranormal Symposium. I just have to decide what to wear. I washed two gothy witchy dresses and they will be clean in time for the big day. I bought a beautiful black handbag today on Spring Garden near the Public Gardens. It is so lovely. I hand washed that too, as it had a strong scent. I want to use that bag the day of the event. Yes this has taken a lot of thought. I need spending money for lunch and maybe cabfare. It is a day long event so that is why I have been thinking everything through. The black boots I wanted to wear aren’t ready. I have an alternate pair. The clothes are clean. Yup I do believe I just have to enjoy myself and relax. I even asked my Mom to give me a wake up call early in the morning. I take the bus so I have to get up early early in the morning. I have to be ready by 8 am to leave or be there at the time. I know where the event is to be held and I know which bus to take. Now the old me would have scrambled at the last minute. This time I have prepared well in advance. Yeah being this organized sure feels better. 

I even checked out hairstyle options. Maybe not that necessary but you never know. I mean we would seriously prepare for a job interview right? Right. I really want to make an impact with my appearance.

Penny will be groomed later in the month. I needed the money today to buy groceries and to pay for duties and taxes for the quilt to be shipped to me. I hate that but I had to do it. The blanket was 60% off. I wouldn’t have bought it otherwise, considering it is mailed from the States. 

I harvested roses, yarrow, black horehound, asters, lavender, apples and red clover. I dried them save for the apples in my dehydrator. Now they are stored in jars. The herbs look beautiful even when dried. I ground up a large quantity of black pepper and I ground up a loaf of white bread. I stored the black pepper in the same jar and stored the bread crumbs in a ziplock bag in the freezer. I want to use up the food that I have because it is so expensive these days. Yup times are tough right now. I am not buying a new outfit for the big day. I intend to use what I already have. That is what the happiest people do. They make the most and best of what they have. I have nice things and I try to make them last me as long as I can. 

I will have to get to know black horehound. I am not too acquainted with that herb but it is not that accepted amongst herbalists. One more herb to learn! 

I am a student of life! 

Blessed Be, Spiderwitch )O(

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Canadian Hauntings )O(

Merry meet all,

This collection of true eerie tales is sure to put you in a spooky mood! Read on to get scared! Remember to stay spooky…

5 ghost tour guides share their favourite haunting tales from across Canada

Haunted hotels, back-alley apparitions and more terrifying local lore.

Blurry hands and body figure abstraction that looks like a ghost standing behind a glass pane with with her hands on it
(Credit: iStock/Getty Images)

Just as pumpkin spice lattes pair perfectly with leaf peeping, there’s perhaps no better way to get in the Halloween spirit than with a good old-fashioned fright night.

In fact, Canada has plenty of its own nightmare-inducing campfire tales to keep you lying awake in terror — take it from some of the nation’s top tour guides who specialize in spinning cobweb-covered yarns from the crypt.

To celebrate spooky season, we asked five of these pros to share their favourite sinister stories with us — many of which are associated with regular, real-life ghost sightings. So, read on, if you dare.

These stories have been edited and condensed for clarity.

Apparitions in Blood Alley

As told by Lydia Williams, owner and guide, Ghostly Vancouver Tours

I love all my ghosts equally, but what I love to talk about is the Woman in Black and the Man in Black of Gaoler’s Mews. 

The Alhambra Hotel was completed in 1887, the year after the Great Vancouver Fire. It was an opulent hotel and it also had a reputation for being a full-service hotel — meaning, you could get any kind of room service you might desire (wink, wink). I’m sure the building has its fair share of ghosts, as do many old hotels, but its most prolific ghost makes her appearance on the back stairs in Gaoler’s Mews. She seems to have a preference for dark, rainy nights, however, that is not absolute. She materializes as a stunning woman in long black dress with long black hair, and is often seen clutching her waist. Then, she straightens, glides down Gaoler’s Mews and disappears into Blood Alley. People theorize that she is a widow walking toward the hangman’s noose that once stood in Blood Alley. But was there ever really one there? I have doubts.

But what of the ghost that follows? The Man in Black? He is a well-dressed gentleman in a long black coat and bowler hat. He usually makes his entrance via the front door of the restaurant that backs onto this alley — now known as L’Abattoir. He’s so solid that the host or hostess will try to give him a menu but he simply walks forward, through the restaurant, often disappearing in the alley behind the atrium. So what’s his story? Since he is often seen seconds after the Woman in Black, one can reason the two had a relationship, but we can only speculate on the nature of it. Is he watching out for her? Or is he a customer still hoping to visit his favourite mistress? 

Back in April of this year, I had a mother and young daughter from Calgary on the tour with me. Once we got to Gaoler’s Mews, even before I began telling any ghost stories, the young teen looked up at the window above the Twisted Fork, and said, “there’s a man in an old top hat looking down at us.” I couldn’t see anyone so I asked her, could he be wearing a bowler hat? She didn’t know what that was, but it was an old-fashioned black hat. Apparently, he watched us the entire time we stood in that spot. The Man in Black often disappears into that very building, and the second floor was once a brothel.

Experience it in person: Ghostly Gastown Tour, 90 minutes, $27

The tale of the headless nun

As told by Shawn McCarthy, co-founder, Character Matters Miramichi

The legend of the ghost in French Fort Cove proceeds in this way: one night, around 1758, after having helped a woman through a difficult childbirth, Sister Marie Inconnue was returning to the settlement at the cove — at the time home to a battery of 16 cannons and a small detachment of soldiers. As she crossed the footbridge over Crow Brook, she was set upon. 

Some say it was a pair of leprous sailors from L’Indienne de Morlaix, out for revenge on those who had imprisoned them. Others insist that it was a mad trapper, wild and desperate from years living in the woods. Whoever he was, he was looking to extort the location of a buried treasure from the young nun. Sister Marie adamantly refused to divulge the whereabouts of the treasure, uttering only prayers for the redemption of the poor wretch’s soul. 

In a fit of rage, the maniac severed her head with a violent blow. Some say he severed the head so he could dig into her throat, thinking she had swallowed the map as she saw him approach. The head was thrown into the waters of the cove, and her body was left on the bridge. 

The settlers mourned the loss of Sister Marie for months. The militia attempted to find the man who had perpetrated this terrible crime, but were unsuccessful. Sister Marie’s death could not be avenged. Her body was sent to France for burial, but her head was never recovered. Since that day, it is said that the ghost of Sister Marie still roams the cove, still diligently protecting the treasure — and searching for the head that will make her whole again. 

Experience it in person: The Headless Nun Tour, 60-75 minutes, $15 Email CharacterMattersMiramichi@gmail.com to book.

Winnipeg’s ghost bride

As told by Kristen Treusch, owner and guide, SquarePeg Tours

This story takes place at the Fort Garry Hotel in Room 202. The urban legend is that the spirit of a woman haunts this room. She looks like a bride and lets people know she’s in the room in several ways. People have reported hearing footsteps in the room, feeling someone sitting on the foot of the bed, and occasionally, lying beside them when they were half asleep. She has also been known to leave wet footprints in the bathroom, turn the light on in the closet and mess with the TV and phone. If you are fortunate enough to actually see her, she’ll chat and then exit the room through the window.

It is said that this bride was either murdered by her new husband or witnessed him being struck down by a trolley car on Broadway when he went across the street to get something. When she saw this, she was torn apart with grief and guilt and [died by] suicide in the room.

I carry a K2 meter on my tours and it lights up whenever I talk about her; that’s how she lets me know she’s around.

Experience it in person: Broadway Ghost Walk, 90 minutes, $15

The ghost ships of Lake Ontario

As told by A.A., storyteller, Haunted Walk of Toronto

One of the most intriguing ghost stories I tell is honestly one of my favourites. It also happens to be tied closely to our history. While the Canadas were still colonies of the United Kingdom, we became the front line for the War of 1812. Lake Ontario was frequently populated by both American and British warships — with more than a few battles fought on the water.

One fateful day, the wind had died down. Unable to move their ships without the aid of the air, both sides were forced to wait on the peaceful water. The winds returned as a violent storm in the early hours of the morning. Two American schooners, the Scourge and the Hamilton, sank under the weight of their top-heavy guns. Over 50 sailors were sent to the bottom of the lake with them. The intense storm, filled with rain and lightning, only lasted a few minutes.

Today, the ships still lie at the bottom of the lake, their wrecks officially considered a national historic site — but that’s not where their stories end. A local legend has since emerged among some older mariners. This tale suggests the ships continue to set sail from time to time. One might see two ghostly ships emerging from the mist on dark nights with thick fog. The sailors who died that day, still on board, are forever trapped in their final moments on deck. Some even say that to see these ships may lead to a death on your own crew.

Experience it in person: Original Haunted Walk of Toronto, 75 minutes, $24.99

The haunting of Room 207

As told by Ghost Guide Daniel, overseer, Ghost Walks

I love to tell the story of Molly McGuire at the Prince of Wales Hotel. The legend talks about the house, which once stood on that land. During the War of 1812, as the American soldiers marched in, one soldier was sent into the house to check it for the British. It was dusk and there were no electric lights. Upon entering a second-floor bedroom, he mistook a shadow for a British soldier. He rushed in and ran the person through with his bayonet — only then realizing it was an innocent woman.

The woman was Molly McGuire, and the bedroom is said to be where Room 207 at the Prince of Wales Hotel exists today. Room 207 is considered the most haunted room in the hotel. 

A manager told us the story of a couple who stayed in the room. In the middle of the night, they awoke as something fell in the bathroom. Getting up together to investigate — neither wanted to do it alone — the wife opened the bathroom door, flipped on the light and saw a woman with long, dark hair staring at her from inside the bathroom mirror. 

One of our guides had a similarly spooky experience. While telling Molly’s story, she noticed a swing across the street in Simcoe Park. One seat was swinging violently back and forth. There was no wind. It was nighttime, so also no kids. 

She ran into the park to check it. The swing continued swinging, until a guest took a photo. After the flash, it slowed, then stopped on its own. The best part: in the photo, there was a big, bright orb on the swing seat.

Blessed Be, Spiderwitch )O(

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Helen Creighton – Canada’s Lady of Folklore

Merry meet all,

As I type here, the rain’s pouring. The sky is heavy and overcast. I haven’t been out to my garden yet. It’s mid-August but the bugs are still harassing me, the weather is still warm but stores are stocking Halloween goods early. I am not ready for the spookiest time of year. That has to do with the goods in my garden growing late in the year due to the heatwave.

Here is a fascinating story about a true paranormal investigator. Read on and enjoy!

Canada’s Lady of Folklore

Helen Creighton

 Helen Creighton was a celebrated folklorist, author, and pioneer researcher. She is  best known for her book Bluenose Ghosts about firsthand accounts of spine-chilling tales. Creighton excelled at collecting local folk ballads, folk tales and ghost stories. She is also known for her skill at collecting local dances, games, cures and proverbs.
            She was born with a caul. A person born with a caul will have a warning before danger. This proved true when Creighton explored the province in search of folk tales. One night she stayed at an inn the night before the Miramichi Folk Festival and had a dream of a child coming towards her. The next day a deer jumped in front of her car on the highway. She would have several of these portentous experiences including her own doppelganger warning her of danger. It made her the perfect person to lend an empathetic ear to those sharing their own experiences.

Because Creighton encountered their stories with a sense of empathy, people trusted her and felt comfortable opening up to her about  their tales, customs and ghost stories. An elderly man once told her, “You’ve got a way with you; you’d bewitch the devil.”

The blurb for Bluenose Ghosts reads: “Haunted houses, headless ghosts, phantom ships, supernatural warnings of death – these are just some of the unexplainable and mysterious phenomena that appear in Bluenose Ghosts. Written in a personable and accessible style by celebrated folklorist Helen Creighton, Bluenose Ghosts is based on the experiences of ordinary people as told to the author over a period of thirty years. These chilling stories come from across the Maritimes – the Highlands of Cape Breton, the woods of New Brunswick, and the harbours around Halifax. First published in 1957, Bluenose Ghosts is a classic of Nova Scotia folklore presented here in a new format and with a foreword from Clary Croft.”

Her career as a folk tales and songs collector spanned forty years. Her celebrated book Bluenose Ghosts focuses on true ghost stories, superstition, witchcraft and buried treasure. She recorded first-hand accounts from the people she interviewed and did her utmost best to maintain their authenticity. She was a collector of tales, not an analyzer, and she received an unfair amount of criticism for that. Creighton collected the folk tales with no intention of analyzing them. That made her stand out from her colleagues and is what was so unique about her.

She took painstaking care to record the folk songs that she collected. She had limited means to work with as she transcribed her work. Over time, Creighton met people who would assist her in accurately transcribing and preserving her work.

It happened by chance that Creighton began collecting local ghost stories. She originally set out to gather folk tales and songs. Bluenose Ghosts is chilling because the scary accounts are from real, everyday people. That is what gives her book so much appeal. The scary experiences are shared by people who have no reason to lie and know how to tell a tale. I dare you to read it at night with the lights on.

Creighton was often found carrying a meter long melodeon in a wheelbarrow when she visited people. She used a tape recorder when it was invented ten years later.  Creighton worked tirelessly to collect four thousand folk songs and tales of eerie spectral encounters. It demonstrates her immense respect for what ordinary men and women had to say. She was determined to preserve their tales to keep them from disappearing in the mists of history.

Creighton may have recorded thousands of folk tales, ghost stories and songs. Yet it was the voices of those she interviewed that shone in the books and tapes. She never got in their way or tampered with their words. She was given the nickname the Ghost Lady by those she interviewed.

Here is an unsettling excerpt from the book: “An East Chester woman said, “My uncle was a contractor, and when I was fifteen, he and I were going home to Mahone Bay from Western Shore. When we were in the woods I heard a horse and it seemed to be so close that I could almost feel its breath. I looked around and what I saw was a horse all right, but there was a man sitting on it with no head. My uncle didn’t see it, and I was too scared to speak until we got home and then all he said was, ‘That’s nothing. Lots of people have seen that horse and rider.’ Since then I have asked many people but nobody seems to know who the rider is supposed to be.”

A headless ghost and his horse, top that. That is one of many chilling tales from regular people simply sharing their stories. This is why I love the book and why it spooks me.

Here’s a second excerpt about a sea captain, the devil and a set of playing cards:

“They were his own cards anyway, so he put them in his sea chest and locked them up. “That night he was awakened from his sleep and was surprised to see a man sitting on his sea chest. He was dealing cards, and he dealt four hands. Then the stranger saw that the captain was awake and asked him to sit in and have a game with him. Before he could make up his mind he looked at the man’s feet and saw the cloven hoof. He screamed and the stranger disappeared, and that was why he would have nothing more to do with playing cards.””

The excerpts above demonstrate how spine tingling the book is. No other book compares to Bluenose Ghosts. I highly recommend the book to anyone who craves a salty maritime ghost story.

Creighton left Canadians with a trove of rich folklore. She ‘still hasn’t been matched”. Her style and approach were considered unconventional. “Horace Beck wrote (that), “Perhaps your most important achievement is that you have done something no one else has been able to do in North America. You have brought folklore to national and public attention and given it a status in Canada it has never achieved in the United States. This you have done most singlehandedly and for this all folklorists must be forever grateful.””

Helen Creighton left a legacy to those who are passionate about ghost stories and the paranormal. She was a true pioneer. When Helen Creighton began her career, she was untrained and inexperienced but that didn’t stop her.

“Over the course of her career, Creighton collected over 60,000 materials including 4,000 songs and ballads. She authored thirteen books of traditional songs, ballads and stories, of which her Bluenose Ghosts is the most widely known. She also wrote an autobiography, and a number of articles. She received many awards, including Distinguished Folklorist of 1981 (Canada); six honorary doctorates; Fellow of the American Folklore Society, Honorary Life President of the Canadian Authors’ Association; and The Order of Canada. Helen was awarded Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017 by Folk Alliance International. In 2018, Parks Canada designated Helen Creighton a nationally significant person who helped define Canada’s history.” The collection of her life’s work now resides at the Nova Scotia Public Archives.

 

Blessings, Lady Spiderwitch

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