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LOCATION:
The Woodburn Mansion (Governor's Residence)
is on King St., in Dover, Delaware. Tours of Woodburn are open to the
public Monday through Fridays, 8:30 am to 4:00 pm, by appointment only.
Admission is Free!
For appointments call Sande Price
at (302) 739-5656 or e-mail her at: sprice@state.de.us
Address: 151 King's Highway, Dover,
Delaware 19901.
Web-Site: State.de.us/facts/history/woodburn.htm
DESCRIPTION:
This 1790 Georgian Mansion was built
by Charles Hillyard, a man with impeccable artistic taste. He would've
been pleased to know that he created a mansion that more than fills the
various needs of a governor's residence. The mansion's layout includes
a stately drawing room, music and dining rooms, wide hallways, 7 bedrooms,
and a cellar. The inside decorum stays true to the middle period Georgian
style, and show cases beautifully crafted paneled walls, grand fireplaces,
and big, sunny windows.
Plus, when the mansion was purchased
out of private hands in 1966, by the Delaware General Assembly, funds
were made available to not only completely restore, renovate this structure,
but also to decorate this mansion in furnishings / objects of the time
it was built, making it an authentic example of a 1790 Georgian Mansion,
inside and out.
Outside, the mansion sits on an estate, with many old, ancient pines,
Crepe Myrtles, Popular Trees, and English Boxwood. East of the mansion
one finds the formal garden, which features a large Boxwood maze. In front
of Woodburn Mansion stands a gigantic, looming, gnarled Popular, with
eerie-looking "apertures" in it's hollow trunk. This tree has
a ghost story attached to it, that makes the local children run by the
place after dark, which will be told later in this report.
MANIFESTATIONS:
Woodburn Mansion not only is the home
of Delaware governors, but also home to several benevolent spirits and
one nasty one, who scares the living, now and then, as they pass by the
mansion. Manifestations in the mansion have only happened on occasion,
as the " psychic atmosphere" and "spirit vibrations"
felt inside the mansion have been pleasant and friendly.
1) The first recorded manifestation,
can be found in Judge Fisher's paper that he wrote for the Historical
Society of Delaware, called "Dover in 1824". According to
Fisher's account, a Dr. M.W. Bates and his wife lived at Woodburn Mansion
in 1824. They had a Lorenzo Dow as a guest overnight. As Lorenzo was
going down the stairs to eat breakfast with the Bates, he passed a gentleman
going up the stairs, who was "dressed in the fashion of the preceding
generation, complete with queued hair, knee breeches, ruffled blouse,
etc." This apparition was solid, and Lorenzo thought he was another
guest, and didn't realize it was Mrs Bates' long, departed father, which
he later learned at the breakfast table from the Bates themselves.
2) The ghosts who reside at Woodburn,
have long had a love of good wine.
A) One owner of the mansion had said
that while he filled an antique decanter with wine every night, he
always found it empty the next morning.
B) Governor Charles Terry Jr.
reported that an apparition of of man in a white wig had been spotted
helping himself to a decantor of wine in the dining room, and is the
one suspected of helping himself to the vintage wines in the cellar.
3) A former governor's wife, who
is a professed light sleeper, has heard on occasion footsteps going
up the stairs, at an hour when no one else living could be responsible.
4) Another pleasant ghost who occasionally
floats and glides around is dressed in a Revolutionary War costume.
5) The third seen ghost is thought
to be one of an unpleasant Southern slave raider. The Woodburn Mansion
was part of the underground railroad, during the pre-Civil War time
period. Slaves would be hidden in the cellar, until they could escape
in boats on the nearby river. The story goes that one night, Southern
raiders came to the mansion, looking for run-away slaves. When Daniel
Cowgill, a Quaker who owned the mansion at the time, drove the raiders
off, one of the raiders decided to hide in the huge Popular that is
still in front of the mansion now. Consequently, this raider slipped,
and got his head caught in a hole in the tree, and hung there until
he died. On occasion, people have seen his body hanging in the tree,
as he relives his horrible death.
6) The fourth seen ghost is an apparition
of a little girl in a red-checked gingham dress. She was first seen
playing by the garden pool during the 1940's.
Still Haunted?
Yes. The ghosts who stay enjoy the
mansion and the activities of the living.
1) During the inauguration party
for Governor Michael Castle, back in January, 1985, various guests felt
the tugging of an invisible presence. One guest spotted the apparition
of the little girl standing /floating in the corner of the reception
room.
2) Governor Castle let a teacher
and three of her students spend the night in the mansion. The students
reported that a lady in a portrait hanging in one of the rooms kept
smiling at them in a friendly, welcoming manner.
3) On occasion, people can still
see the raider hanging in the tree, and hear the awful moans and his
rattling chains inside and outside the mansion.
Photo from state.de.us/facts
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