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LOCATION:
The General Wayne Inn building can be found near Philadelphia, in Merion Station, Pennsylvania. Merion Station is located a mere 18 minutes from downtown Philadelphia, which is around 8 miles, if you don't get lost and take the scenic tour like Tom and I did. Yikes!
Once again, our advice is to get a good map and directions, and you will be successful!
DIRECTIONS: Travel on I-76 W toward VALLEY FORGE. / Take the MONTGOMERY DR exit- EXIT 341- toward WEST RIVER DR. / Turn LEFT onto MONTGOMERY DR. / Turn RIGHT onto BELMONT AVE. / Turn LEFT onto Pennsylvania-23 / CONSHOHOCKEN AVE. Continue to follow Pennsylvania-23. Stay STRAIGHT to go onto E MONTGOMERY AVE.
Address: 625 Montgomery Avenue, Merion Station,
Pennsylvania 19066-1216
HISTORY:
The General Wayne Inn building was built on land purchased by William Penn. Originally called The Wayside Inn,
this building has been continuously used since 1704, when a Quaker, Robert Jones,
went into the Inn/restaurant business, with the idea to serve travelers
going to and from Philadelphia and Radner, on the old Lancaster road way.
The Wayside Inn became The General Wayne Inn in 1793, when it was renamed
after a local Revolutionary hero. Because of its location, near Merion Station,
many Revolutionary War battles were fought around the area of the Inn.
Thus, this Inn has the distinction of playing host to American Patriots,
such as General George Washington and Marquis de la Fayette, and to the
British Redcoats and their hired, Hessian soldiers as well.
During the 1800's, many vacationing
Philadelphians came to the area, and enjoyed fine dining at The General
Wayne Inn, such dishes as Squirrel Ragout and Pigeon Stew. One of the
famous guests was Edgar Allen Poe. Until the 1930's , there used to be
a glass window that Edgar had scratched his initials on; E.A.P.
Besides being an inn and restaurant,
this historical building in the past also has been used as a post office, a general
store, and a social center for newly-arrived Welsh Immigrants.
After Mr. Johnson, various owners
have run the General Wayne Inn. In 1996, the co-owners, Mr. James E. Webb
and Guy Sileo, who were also best friends, were struggling financially.
On the day after Christmas, 1996, Guy Sileo supposedly shot to death Webb
in one of the third floor offices. (I'm sure the spirits residing there will give their moral
support and have welcomed Mr. Webb if he had decided to stay.)
Sileo was convicted of the murder and
sentenced to life in prison. Sileo claimed that it was his own hurt mistress,
20 year old Felicia, a chef at the General Wayne Inn, who shot Webb in
revenge because Sileo refused to leave his wife for her. Webb had strongly
disapproved of the affair between Felicia and Sileo. Felicia later killed
herself.
The General Wayne Inn was purchased
by Frank Cacciuti in October of 2001. Cacciuti had found great success
in running the prosperous Seven Stars Inn, located in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.
As of July 21, 2002, Cacciuti closed the General Wayne Inn because he wasn't
making enough money. Business hadn't recovered from the effects of the
murder, and the local economy wasn't supporting it.
In 2004, someone else bought
the place and made a go of it, as the restaurant was being advertised
on the ExperiencePA
Web-Site. For some reason this effort didn't work out. When Tom and I visited this building the summer of 2006 during our cross country road trip, the local Jewish synagogue had bought the building, renovated it into a modern building now called Chabad Center for Jewish Life. However, the words, The General Wayne Inn are still displayed proudly on the side of the building, and it is still a historical building as the sign marking it as such still remains.
DESCRIPTION:
The General Wayne Inn currently is being used as a Chabad facility. Underneath the stucco and paint the stone
and timber structure is still there, even if hidden by its new modern face lift. The stucco is a light tan, and the outside is nicely painted and is in great shape, ready to last another 50 years!
The outside originally was described as a "handsome, three-story building," that was
designed in the style of a 1700's English coaching inn. Inside, one found
a large dining room and a long, wooden bar, with wood beam ceilings and
fine wood paneling. Wooden dining tables were covered with fine linen,
and lighted with chandeliers overhead. Town meetings and different ghost
hunting organizations, such as the South
Jersey Ghost Research, used to meet in this dining room for their events.
The building was closed and shut up for the day when we finally found it around 7:20 pm, just in time to get some daylight outside shots of the building. We didn't get to see the inside of the building which was a big disappointment, but they probably kept the nice features of the wood and brought in their own furniture. The painting of the scary Hessian soldier which used to hang
on the wall in the dining room is probably not on display, because it wouldn't go along with the new purpose of the building. Large, open fireplaces were at each end of the first floor, and are probably still there.
Originally the rooms on the second floor were used as small, sleeping rooms, beside an overhanging
porch, where exhausted guests could take it easy on the provided rocking
chairs. In the 20th century, the second floor was home to private dining rooms and other small
rooms. Currently, Classes and meetings are probably held in these second floor rooms now. The third floor rooms are probably still
used for offices and storage space.
MANIFESTATIONS:
In 1970, when Mr. Johnson bought The
General Wayne Inn, he was well aware of the ghostly tales he had heard
since childhood about the place, growing up in Merion, (now Merion Station.) However the reality
of having 17 plus, entities as unseen guests took him by surprise, and
took awhile to adjust to this ghostly company. Thanks to the work of well-known
New Jersey psychics, Jean and Bill Quinn, Johnson was properly introduced
to most of them, learned why they couldn't rest, and their critique of
the service offered at the Inn, during a 1972 seance held in the dining
room, led by the Quinns. The entities communicated directly through the
mediums present, in an orderly manner, each taking a turn.
1) Critique of The General Wayne Inn
- All the entities present were "generally satisfied" with
their "afterlife" at the Inn, but had a few improvements to
suggest. While they loved the dinner music provided for the diners,
they hated the crash of the drummer's cymbals. While they thought the
tea, which they drank constantly, was beyond compare, the gin, beer,
and wine didn't taste "quite right," and wasn't up to their
standards, concerning spirits.
2) First to speak was the leader
of the others, a friendly, courteous German Hessian soldier by the name
of Wilhelm, who liked to hang out in the cellar. He was killed during
a Revolutionary War battle, while fighting for the British. He couldn't
rest because he was buried in only his underwear. Wilhelm was mortified
that his Superior officer had his body stripped of its clothes, which
included not only his fine uniform, but his new boots as well, so another
soldier could wear them. He said that he was still searching for his
uniform, so he could be buried honorably & properly.
3) A little boy ghost - He had lost
his mother, and couldn't stop crying to say his name or any of the circumstances
of his death.
4) Two young, female entities, Sara
and Sadie - who were employed by The General Wayne Inn during the mid-1800's.
They died before they could solve a distressing problem, which began
when a Persian rug peddler came to stay at the Inn. He had told them
that he was supposed to meet a potential buyer for his valuable rugs
at the Inn. When the buyer never showed up, the peddler asked them to
be responsible for the rugs, until he came back, as he was going to
go and look for this buyer. When he never came back, these two women
were worried that they would be accused of stealing the rugs. Death
didn't relieve them of this worry, even 150 years later. They considered
the people at this seance assembly to be intruders, and were reluctant
to talk about how they died so young. (A guess is that perhaps their
deaths were tied into the rugs somehow.)
5) Eight other Hessian soldiers
also made a brief appearance, haunting the Inn, perhaps because they
couldn't accept their own deaths on the battlefield, and were not ready
to go to the other side.
6) An Indian and an Afro-American
also made an appearance, as well as others, but they didn't say much.
Sightings and Behaviors of the Inn's
Ghostly Guests.
1) In 1976, Ludwig, another Hessian
soldier, that wasn't present at the ' 72 seance, made an appearance
to a part-time contractor/ psychic Mike Benio. The week that Johnson
was on vacation, Ludwig began to appear every night at 2:00 AM in Benio's
bedroom, and sat on his bed. He told Benio that he had been killed in
a Revolutionary War battle, and that his bones were buried in the cellar
wall of the Inn. He pleaded with Benio to dig up his remains, and bury
what he finds properly in a cemetery. After getting permission from
Johnson, Benio excavated the cellar, and found a small, unknown room,
that was under the Inn's parking lot. He uncovered some pottery and
some unidentified bones. After burying the bones properly, Ludwig was
satisfied, and was at peace.
2) To see if his unseen soldier
guests, or others were using the bar, Johnston borrowed a tape recorder
from the Quinns. He heard for himself evidence that despite not liking
modern alcoholic drinks, the soldiers or others were going to the bar
late at night. The tape recorder picked up sounds in the empty building,
the noise of swiveling bar stools, the water faucet being turned on,
and a glass catching the water, which all began hour after closing time.
A visual sighting of a Hessian soldier, sitting slumped at the bar,
was made by a customer, who was peering through the Inn's front window,
late one Monday night. The Inn is closed on Mondays.
3) In 1986, While Johnson and Scott
sat at a table in the dining room, talking, a sharp form of a woman,
complete with hands and feet, flurried past them, dressed in a long,
billowing white skirt and a long sleeved blouse. Possibly, it could
have been either Sara or Sadie going about her business.
4) Johnson came to his Inn one morning
to find water in the partially open drawer of the cash register, which
points to something a child might do, or perhaps a disgruntled bar patron.
5). Nothing surprised Johnson. Odd
things had happened all the time. Mixer attachments and clean towels
have been thrown all over the kitchen, both front doors have been found
unlocked in the morning, after Johnson and his sons had securely bolted
them the night before.
The Hessian Soldiers often made their
presences known to the living.
1) The Hessian soldier, whose picture
hung in the big dining room, had been seen by several employees. He
could be a bit of a bully. He scared poor Nathan, who was sweeping the
dining room, by striding menacingly up to Nathan, with a glare in his
eye, and walking right through the now terrified Nathan, who left in
a hurry, leaving the floor unswept. Johnson, of course, understood.
2) The Maitre De had so many "visual
encounters" with friendly Wilhelm in the cellar, that he finally
refused to go down there anymore. Johnson, of course understood.
3) A luncheon hostess personally
met several German soldiers in various places at the Inn. Some were
striding through the dining room, sitting at the bar, and hanging around
upstairs, in the private dining rooms.
4) A playful game that the soldiers
enjoyed for over a year was blowing on the necks of the young women,
sitting on the bar stools.
5) The soldiers, who had a history
of mischievous behavior, are suspected as the ones who liked to play
tricks on Johnson's wife. Once, when she was trying to help the accountant
with various chores in the office on the third floor, she was having
a hard time adding up the totals on the adding machine. After trying
several times to add up the numbers, and getting the wrong totals, she
tested the machine with 2 + 2 and it read 5! She immediately suspected
that someone was mischievously tinkering with the machine, so she impulsively
ordered the "guys" out of the room, scolding them, telling
them that she had work to do. The machine worked perfectly after that,
with no reoccurring problems. Ghosts are fascinated with anything electric.
Johnson and his ghostly clientele,
had accepted each other. The ghosts had never owned the Inn, and had always
shared it with the living. Johnson felt that the ghosts had as much right
to be at the Inn as he did, and had taken their habits & personalities
in stride, as he generally would with any living patron. For he was in
the customer service business, for both the living and his unseen guests.

Still Haunted today?
Probably yes. Throughout the years, the entities who reside in this building have let the living know they are there, according to the eye witness accounts. Too many people to count have experienced
seeing or feeling their various presences. Customers, reporters, psychics,
employees and others have attested to the reality of these ghostly guests
of this building.
The Chabad Center for Jewish Life had just moved into this newly renovated building, as they had a banner hanging outside with their name on it. Today, the entities may be quieter at first, but unless the building has been blessed or the rite of exorcism performed, the many entities, plus perhaps a few more who call this place home are stuck here or choose to stay. They will share the building with the Chabad Center for Jewish Life, but will find ways to get their chuckles as well, sooner or later, as young male entities often do. Hopefully the new owners have a sense of humor and will accept their unseen guests as just being part of the building.



Sources: Michael Norman & Beth Scott:
Historic Haunted America and
The National Directory of Haunted Places,
by Dennis William Hauck, 1996
Newspaper
Story - Philadelphia Inquirer Report
Picture & Story of 1996 murder - From Angelfire.com
South
Jersey Ghost Research - Pictures of Unseen
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