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LOCATION:
Carnton Mansion is considered the most haunted house in Tennessee. It is now a museum, run by the Carnton Society. It is open to the public. Open Mon-Sat 9-4, Sun 1-4 Apr-Dec;
Mon-Fri 9-4 rest of the year (615) 794-0903
Carnton Mansion is located at 1345 Carnton Lane, in the town of Franklin, Tennessee 37064, which is about 15 miles south of Nashville. It sits on land that was the site of a bloody
Civl War battle, where many men were killed without mercy, in a hail of
bullets that were like rain.
DESCRIPTION:
The Carnton House is a large,
two story, 22 room early 1800's brick mansion, that greets the visitor upon
arriving with 7 beautiful white columns and a front porch on both stories.
A verandah and a closed in porch are located along the backside of the
mansion. The inside rooms contain much of the original furnishings in
the mansion from 1820 - 1860. All the woodwork is treated to look like
mahogany and rosewood. Colors frequently used in the decorum of the mansion
were mustard yellow, dark blue and Pompeii red, all colors that were found
when archeologists first unearthed Pompeii in the 1800's. The discovery
of Pompeii made these colors popular in American decorum of the time.

HISTORY OF MANIFESTATIONS:
1) A graveyard where 1700
Confederate soldiers, who had died in the fields near this mansion were
hastily buried after this bloody conflict, is located close to Carnton
Mansion. After the horrible battle was over, Carnton Mansion became a
hospital, where 4 generals died of their wounds, and their bodies s laid
in state so the men who were lucky enough to survive could show their
respect.
2) A young house servant
girl was murdered in the kitchen by a jealous field hand in the 1840's,
because she rejected him as a suitor.
3) Out of their five offspring,
only 2 of the Cantron children made it into adulthood.

INSIDE MANIFESTATIONS
1) Two spirits haunt the
kitchen area of the mansion, and sometimes move to other parts of the
house.
A) A mischievous spirit
likes to play tricks on the living, when not doing chores like washing
the dishes in the kitchen. Hearing some noises from the small, enclosed
porch off the back of the house, the curator went to investigate. She
found two old panes of glass, on either side of the back door, which
had been taken down from a box of panes, located on a shelf. It is thought
that this spirit was the girl who had been murdered.
B) The head of a cook who
worked for the family during the Civil War years was seen floating in
the hallway, near the kitchen.
C) The cook is often also
heard bustling around in the kitchen, doing her various duties, going
about her business, letting the living know that she is still there.
2) A beautiful young girl,
with long brown hair appeared to a workman on the second floor hall
way, inspiring his hasty retreat down the stairs. Workmen now go upstairs
in pairs.
3) A soldier's spirit has
moved into one of the bedrooms. Perhaps he died there, or close by outside,
and decided to move into the mansion and stay there, perhaps not quite
ready to leave. A picture of the mansion mysteriously crashed to the
floor in this bedroom, and was found on top of the floor heater, a place
that it couldn't get to by itself.
4) A ghost of a lady dressed
in white haunts the back porch area, sometimes floating into the backyard.
5) Spirits of the fallen
are especially active in the Autumn months, at dusk. One general isn't
able to rest, because he knew that his men wouldn't hold up too well and
is still fretting about the coming battle he knew would be a bloodbath
. This spirit, General Pat Cleburne, a man with a mustache, a short beard
and piercing eyes, paces the back porch, walks around the outside parameter
of the mansion, and on occasion talks to lone persons.
A) A man, Mr. P, who had
an ancestor fight in the Franklin battle came at just after 5:00 PM
to see Carnton Mansion, but it was closed, so he walked around the place,
on a path that led to the back of the mansion, trying to soak up the
atmosphere, and thinking about his relative who fought here and survived.
Near the porch, he saw
the silhouette of a man that he thought was about to get on a horse,
but the horse vanished. Noticing another man on the porch, Mr. P asked
him what had happened to the horse. The man explained that the horse
was shot from under the other soldier, like his horse had been earlier.
This mysterious man, standing
on the porch, dressed like a Civil War Confederate Officer, went on
to explain that whether on horse or on foot, they would be at the mercy
of the enemy tonight.
Furthermore, if Mr. P was
coming with him, P had better have a pistol, or he wouldn't last long.
This Civil War officer further predicts in an angry voice that not many
men were going to make it through the night, and it was the fault of
that fool, Hood, who had ordered his men into this soon to be slaughter.
He then hums a line or two of a rallying song.
Mr. P was thinking that
this officer must of been part of a Civil War enactment, and must have
thought that Mr. P was part of it. Mr. P asks this officer what kind
of carbine he was carrying. "It's an Enfield .577. What do you have?"
Mr. P confesses that he
doesn't have any, and wouldn't know how to use it. His comment astonished
and alarmed the officer, who urgently told him to quickly leave and
go to either the Carter house or to town, out of harm's way.
The officer then talks
to another spirit by his side. "Well, Govan, if we are to die, let us
die like men." The officer then throws his hat up in the air, in an
angry, forceful way, and melts into the air.
Mr. P then heard the sequence
of the sounds of battle. The officer's voice, yelling "Charge men! Charge."
Then a swell of the sound of shots, shells, muskets and cannons fill
the air. He heard the music of a regiment band, playing "Annie Laurie."
Then he heard a whole army of rebel yells, which were fierce, nerve-jolting
cries. Terrified, Mr. P tried to run toward his car, surrounded by the
unearthly din of battle, as he felt the cold, creepy feeling of death
surrounding him. He found himself stumbling around in the graveyard
near the mansion.
The next day, Mr. P went
back to Carnton Mansion when it was open, and found out that the officer
he had talked to was indeed the much loved Irishman, General Pat Cleburne
.
B) Still another officer
paces back and forth in heavy boots on the front porch.

STILL HAUNTED?
Definitely yes!
The spirits are especially
restless at dusk, during the Fall months, when the Battle at Franklin
took place.
The Cook is usually heard
in the kitchen around meal times. Perhaps she doesn't know that she is
dead, or feels she has unfinished business in the kitchen. The other spirits
let the living know that they are still around, sharing the mansion.




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