Ravens Cove is approaching the darkest time of the year. It is so easy to stay home and sit by the woodstove with a soup-cup mug of hot chocolate. But when I do that for too long I tend to get a little crazy. I know because BC keeps his distance. So, when my feline companion started avoiding me today, I knew it was time for a mental health trip into town.
I toddled myself down to Jo’s Bakery—Josephina Latrell owns this place (she’s another story)—and it was closed. The sign on the door said, “Gone to Anchorage. Back tomorrow.” I deflated like the well-known balloon.
No mocha today. Rats!
I scanned the street and decided on the library as my next choice of entertainment. There was usually one or two of my neighbors in there. Except for today.
I wandered the quiet, book-lined aisles feeling lost. I stopped in front of the Alaska History and Legends section. I picked a book entitled, A Dena’ina Legacy K’TL’EGH’I SUKDU The Collected Writings of Peter Kalifornsky from the shelf. I love to read our history. Grandma Bricken tells me so much, and yet I feel a craving to know more. One story caught my eye.
If you know anything about Ravens Cove and the attacks against us in the past few years, you’ll recognize one of the nasty entities from this story told by my ancestors. The evil entity’s name is Pet. Such a small thing can cause such great destruction. Forgive me, I am off subject. Here’s the part of the story that reminds me of Pet.
It is a supernatural story that starts with the people known to steal children and ends with this: “Then there is a really bad one, called Gilyaq. This one, they say, senses people’s thoughts. If you’re thinking hard, if you’re longing for someone, he’ll become that person and come to you…” Although Pet isn’t exactly as Gilyaq is described, he was close enough to give me shivers when I read this. By God’s grace, I survived that brush with evil.
It was strangely comforting to know that Ravens Cove is not the first town to experience the horrors we have. Now, if I just knew why we continue to be a hotbed of activity for these nasty guys, I would sleep so much better. A mystery yet to be solved…
Until next time.
I love Jefferson, Texas. It is steeped in Texas history, sits on Caddo Lake (truly a swamp), and offers a wealth of ideas for my writing. It is a spooky and beautiful location. Jefferson is said to be the most haunted town in East Texas—maybe all of Texas.
There are several sites, including The Grove and The Jefferson Hotel, with documented hauntings.The Excelsior House Hotel is also said to be visited by spirits, although the owners of the hotel, The Excelsior Foundation and the Jessie Allen Wise Garden Club, do not encourage such a reputation. They believe it detracts from the history. I only know the spooky rumors do not affect my opinion of the hotel.
The Excelsior House was built in the 1850s, and has been in continuous operation since, making it the oldest hotel in East Texas according to the National Register of Historic Places.
The Excelsior is built on property once owned by a steamboat captain named William Perry. This land was a gift from the City of Jefferson in 1846 as a thank you For Perry’s hard work to keep the Big Cypress Bayou navigable.
William Perry, realizing the need for a hotel in this rowdy part of town, constructed the Irving House. Today, this is the oldest part of the hotel, forming the northwest portion of the Excelsior. The southwest section was added sometime between the end of the Civil War and 1872.
The Big Cypress Bayou once allowed riverboat traffic to reach Jefferson from both New Orleans and St. Louis, via the Mississippi and Red Rivers. Its main export was cotton, which was brought in from towns as far away as Dallas and sold to commercial merchants. During this time, Jefferson was a bustling port town. It was also known as one of the most violent towns in Texas. Many deaths occurred here.
The most notable was of Diamond Bessie, or Bessie Moore, aka Annie Stone. Diamond Bessie was dubbed as such because she sported large diamond rings wherever she went. She met a tragic end in January of 1877.
Diamond Bessie and Abe Rothschild came to Jefferson a few days earlier. They registered at the Brooks House as "A. Munroe and wife, “although most accounts say they never married.
Their short, two-year relationship was tumultuous. It is rumored Rothschild forced Diamond Bessie to prostitute herself so he had money for alcohol. It all ended when Abe and Bessie took a picnic lunch across the bridge at Cypress Bayou, walking away from town along the Marshall road. Abe returned without Diamond Bessie, saying she had gone into the bayou to visit friends.
Bessie was found a week later with a bullet to her head. Abraham Rothschild was charged with the murder and, after three trials, acquitted. Many people felt it was an injustice for Rothschild to be found not guilty. It was written up in the newspapers as a miscarriage of justice.
(As a side note: The townspeople paid for Diamond Bessie’s burial. To this day, her grave can be seen in the Oakwood Cemetery in Jefferson.)
This tragic tale is a familiar one when it comes to hauntings. There are differing accounts about Diamond Bessie staying at the Excelsior Hotel. Yet, it is rumored that she is one of the phantoms which haunt it. There are also reports of a headless man sited in the corridors, a woman in black gripping a child to keep it close, phantom cigar smoke and perfume-like smells, and top covers being torn away from sleeping guests.
While at least three rooms are allegedly haunted, the most haunted one is said to be the Jay Gould Room. A simple Google search will tell you the rocking chair in this room is said to rock on its own, and the door will slam shut on its own.
Maybe the most notable eyewitness account is from film Director, Steven Spielberg. He was in Jefferson during the 1970s, filming his movie Sugarland Express. According to rumor, Spielberg stayed in the Jay Gould room where he tossed his briefcase on a chair, only to have it fly right back at him. In the early morning hours, a small boy awakened the director, asking if he was ready for breakfast. Spielberg awoke his crew and checked out of the hotel.
(An interesting note: Spielberg wrote and produced the film Poltergeist soon after his visit to the Excelsior House Hotel.)
If you get a chance to visit Jefferson. I recommend you check out The Excelsior House Hotel. The history alone is worth the visit. If you run into an apparition, well, maybe it’s a bonus…Or not.
Sources:
- My East Texas http://myetx.com/
- Wikipedia.com
- Bump in the Night Blog https://bumpinthenightblog.wordpress.com/
- Kicker 102.5 Radio
My publisher, sponsor of Author Masterminds and Readers and Writers Book Club, is gifting $408.69 worth of bonuses to encourage readers to try award-winning Ravens Cove. Bonuses include a free Ravens Cove eBook and the Works of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven Edition. Here’s where you’ll find the details: https://buff.ly/2qxQxXK.
The following story is courtes
y of Ghost Report, an online paranormal resource who is now, unfortunately, defunct.
The following article brings many questions to mind: Are there really portals to our world? If so, how did they come to be? Why are they here? How do we protect ourselves against an unseen and undetectable threat?
The Blue Hole Of New Jersey – The Devil’s Puddle
There are many strange and haunted places in the United States. However, most of them don’t involve bottomless portals to Hell. The “Blue Hole” of New Jersey seems to do just that.
The Blue Hole is a nearly perfect circle of water, deep in the Pine Barrens of Winslow, NJ. The water is strangely clear blue, unlike the murky waters of it’s surrounding counterparts. It is said that fish do not swim in the water and that there are no signs of life inside of what many call “The Devil’s Puddle”. The water also seems to maintain an unusually low temperature, even in the warmest months. When standing near the Blue Hole, it is said to be eerily quiet, with no signs of life at all. Not in the water or around it.
For many years, parents have kept their children away from the small body of water. Many believe that the Blue hole is a bottomless pit. Some people even claim that the Devil himself uses the water hole, as his personal portal to Hell. Some also claim that the hole is home to another kind of devil. This Pine Barrens area is closely associated with the infamous Jersey Devil, and many say that the Blue Hole is home to the mysterious creature. The Jersey devil has been terrorizing people for over 200 years in the Pine Barren area, although evidence for its existence is scarce. Some locals have claimed to see the creature crawling out of the hole, on occasion. The fear of locals is not unfounded. It seems that many who chose to swim in the small body of water, never made it back out. Many bodies have been pulled out of the unusually still water, with scratches on their backs and lower legs. This makes sense, when you hear other reports from swimmers who claim to have felt cold hands clawing at their legs, pulling them down.
Unexplained whirlpools have been witnessed inside of the circular body of water, which defy explanation. One occasion, a man was pulled from the water, with scratches on his legs and black empty holes where his eyes once were. Some have attributed this to some type of ritual or occult activity. others say that it’s just the Devil’s handy work. No matter which legend you choose to believe, it seems as though some type of paranormal activity may be happening at this remote body of water.
You are welcome to find out yourself, if you are ever in the Pine Barrens area. Just follow the paths through the forest and you will soon find yourself at one of the most mysterious places on earth. However, I wouldn’t recommend going for a swim. The water is always cold. And there may be even colder hands, waiting beneath the surface.
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Until Next Time,
