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James Garfield Photo from Gallatindesign.com
Location:
The Garfield House can be found on
a hill, overlooking Garfield Road, at the edge of Hiram, Ohio, since 1961.
It was rescued from destruction by the Mallone family, who moved the whole
house to its present location. The city of Hiram is in Portage county
in northeastern Ohio, 25 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Description:
This lovely, privately owned mansion
is a three story, "Greek Revival" house. It has narrow clapboards, painted
a tasteful red shade. The mansion has large, old-fashioned windows, that
have white shutters, which is a nice touch to the decorum.

House Being Restored
Photo of Restoration from Dumondchemicals.com/html/garfield.htm
History:
This Greek Revival mansion was built
in 1836, and tuned into a boarding house for faculty members of the Western
Reserve Eclectic Institute College. James Garfield went to school there
from 1851 -1854. After going to school and getting his degree at another
college, Garfield eventually returned to Western Reserve to be a teacher
and principle there, and stayed in this boarding house.
His friend, Almeda Booth, who was
also a teacher stayed at this same boarding house as well. Almeda may
have been in love with him, but Garfield wound up marrying Lucretia instead.
After marrying in 1856, he and his wife lived in the house until 1861,
when he joined the union army to fight in the Civil War. James Garfield
went on to be elected President, but was assassinated after only serving
one term in office, on Sept. 19th, 1881.
This mansion had several owners, up
until 1907, when Marcia Henry, a teacher at the college, bought the place.
Because her father had been a close friend of the Garfield family, the
two families enjoyed a close relationship up until Garfield's death in
office. This mansion was willed to Hiram College, where it stayed until
1961, when the Mallones moved it to its present location
Manifestations:
The ghosts of James and Lucretia Garfield,
Marcia Henry, Almeda Booth and a boy named Andrew seem to be going about
their business in this house, enjoying the mansion, and finding some peace
there. When the house was moved and fixed up, they seemed to be activated
out of their dormant state.
When Mr. and Mrs. Mallone and their
daughter, Pam, lived in the mansion, they experienced these occurrences.
* Whenever they left the mansion,
the dining room light would pop on.
* Whenever Garfield's name was mentioned,
the dining room light would flicker.
* For awhile, lights in their bedroom
would pop on at 3:20 AM
* Faucets would be found running.
* One summer, when it was 95 degrees
out, the Mallones arrived home to find the temperature in their kitchen
and dining room freezing cold. The dogs refused to enter these rooms.
* Objects in the house moved and
flew on their own volition. For example, a candle flew off the mantle
and landed in the middle of the floor, and then jumped onto the love
seat.
* Candles would suddenly explode,
sending wax everywhere.
* Mr. Mallone was watching a ball
game on the TV. He had set his drink of soda on the sewing machine,
that was sitting beside his chair. When he tried to pick up the glass,
it hopped out of his reach. When he tried again, it skipped across the
sewing machine and fell on the floor, all by itself. This incident made
a believer out of the skeptical Mr. Mallone.
* Garfield loved cigars. Mrs. Mallone
would sometimes smell cigar smoke so strongly that her eyes would water,
and she would have to cough.
* A crossword puzzle in the paper
had been done over night for the living, in a handwriting style not
like anyone in the Mallone family. Comparing the handwriting in the
crossword puzzle to Garfield's handwriting, the e's were exactly the
same.
* The front door had a habit of
opening itself up, even when it was securely locked. The door knob didn't
work, and the door could only be opened by a Yale lock. One night, in
May of '86, Pam, and her parents were in the front room. The front door
was locked. Suddenly, they all heard a click, and watched in utter amazement
as the door swung open by itself.
* Sometimes the Mallones would let
a tape recorder run, on the advice the received from Mr. & Mrs. Warren;(mentioned
below), to see if they could pick up anything. Playing back a tape,
they heard a man and a woman speaking Greek, discussing where to hang
the picture. Garfield was fluent in Greek, and so was his wife. Pam
Mallone had the same room that belonged to Mr. and Mrs. Garfield, and
she experienced a lot of occurrences.
* Once, when she tried to take a
nap, the light above her suddenly turned on. She felt a male presence
and heard him walk across the floor. Then, the light went out.
* On various occasions, she found
all the pictures on her walls taken down, and placed neatly in piles
on the floor. Someone didn't approve of her taste.
* In the wee hours of the morning,
Pam awoke absolutely freezing cold. Suddenly a woman appeared and took
the blanket on the bottom of her bed and tucked it around her. Pam thanked
her, and the woman left. After finding out that her mother hadn't done
that, she looked through an old faculty picture book from the college,
and identified the kind woman as being Marcia Henry.
* Early one morning, Mrs. Mallone
saw a tall man enter the master bedroom and go over to the window, and
gaze out of it. The figure vanished into thin air before her eyes.
Psychic Research:
1) Lorraine and Ed Warren who are
well-known psychics came to check out the house, as they had just done
a lecture at the college. They found the house had a number of good ghosts,
and no evil ones.
* Lorraine went into a light trance
and saw a very small, sickly woman with respiratory problems who moved
slowly through the rooms of the house. She was dressed in a long, flowing
gown. She sensed that the woman was distant from her husband who also
was in the house. There was an empty cradle in the living room and a
source of sadness for the couple. (Mrs. Garfield was a tiny woman, who
suffered from respiratory problems. Mr. and Mrs. Garfield didn't have
a happy marriage, and were withdrawn from each other. Their first born
baby had died as well.
* Lorraine went into the master
bedroom and "felt a strong, domineering woman, with a masculine face."
This presence was later identified as Almeda Booth.
2) In an effort to learn something
about the ghosts, psychic Leta Berecek came to the house several times
and tried automatic writing during several sessions. This is when the
psychic closes her eyes, holds the pen, and lets it write by itself.
* First, a woman's small, neat handwriting
wrote about the child ghost Andrew, who was not a well boy when he was
alive. He used to come over to the house and work jigsaw puzzles.
* The second ghost to write was
Andrew himself, who said that he represented the ghosts in the house
who knew they were dead, but enjoyed the house so much they stayed.
He said that they would leave if the living wanted them to. He requested
that the Mallones would burn more candles. He also would like Pam to
make strings of popcorn and cranberries for the Christmas tree. Since
Pam has started doing so, the tree lights glow steadily and don't misbehave.
* On another day, in another session,
Berecek, who is right handed, put the pen in her left hand. It immediately
started to write. The candle near Berecek "widened to several inches
in diameter, and then shot a foot into the air." The writing on the
paper, that corresponded to the flame activity, said "I am James Garfield.
If you need proof, look at the candle. I am unhappy because so called
friends had me murdered." Garfield was left handed.
Still Haunted?
Yes.
Ghosts who enjoy the mansion hang
around, willing to share the mansion with the living. Most of the ghosts,
when living people, had lived in the mansion, when it was a boarding house,
and are used to sharing it with other people. Marcia Henry had really
loved the mansion when she owned it, and had told her nephew that she
would return after she died. James Garfield is still angry about his assassination
and betrayal by his friends, and would like justice to be done. He stays
around a place where he was truly happy when alive, in hopes of finding
some peace, as he can't rest because of his anger toward his killers. |