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LOCATION:
In Charlottesville, Virginia, a historical
landmark Manor House, called "Castle Hill," was built before
the Revolutionary War, in 1765, by a Dr. Thomas Walker.
Castle Hill Manor is privately owned
& not open to the general public, especially ghost hunters. However,
it may be possible for a student of history to have a short visit, if
diplomacy beforehand is exercised and prior permission to visit is gotten,
which might in turn result in an appointment to see the Manor. Check with
the local Chamber of Commerce for more information.
DESCRIPTION :
Walker's Manor was strictly made of
wood. Later on, in 1820, the brick additions were added onto the Manor
by Senator William Cabell Rives, who loved French architecture. This love
of French architecture can be seen in the entrance hall, which has twelve
foot ceilings, and in the large garden, which was designed in the traditional
French way.
MANIFESTATIONS:
Main center of activity happens in
one of the suite rooms, that are located on the ground floor to the rear
of the building, which happens to be the living space of a late owner,
Amelie Rives, a female poet and author. (She is buried on the grounds
of the Manor, in the family plot.) The pink bedroom in this suite is the
lightning rod for ghostly activities, which have gone on for a long time.
No one knows for sure who the ghost(s) could be.
1) Amelie Rives had smelled many
times a scent of a strange perfume, which wasn't recognized as any of
her own fragrances.
2) Many guests who have slept in
this room have been aroused and sometimes really frightened by uncanny
noises or footsteps. Some guests, over the years, have seen a female,
and describe her as a young, pretty woman, who is sometimes playful
and whose main goal is to disturb the people that she doesn't like sleeping
in her room. However, other guests that she does like have slept in
peace in her room, which supports the legend that she is discerning
as to whom she scares or annoys. The writer, Julien Green, who was a
firm disbeliever in ghosts, left in a big hurry after staying the night
in the pink room.
3) PSYCHIC RESEARCH: Hans Holzer
and his sensitive friend, Virginia Cloud, visited the room, and both
of them felt vibrations of a second, "fine, almost gentle,"
being, who was watching them both. They concluded that there were 2
presences in the pink bedroom.
After visiting the pink room, Holzer
thinks that the mischievous, "ghostly lady" is from the Revolutionary
War Era, when British General Banastre Tarleton & his troops had occupied
Castle Hill.
Dr. Walker, the owner at this time,
was a devout patriot who not only served the British their breakfast,
but used other forms of hospitality to delay them as long as he could,
so that Jefferson could escape capture in Charlottesville. Although there
is no proof, Holzer suspects that this "ghostly lady" could
be one of the ladies of the Manor that could have helped Dr. Walker delay
some British officer(s) by using her charms, all for the good of the Revolution.
Several such occurrences are known and confirmed to have happened among
other patriot women and British Officers, who didn't mind at all the "intrigues
of American ladies."
No firm guesses were offered as to
whom the second presence, "the gentle spirit," could be exactly,
except to say that it could be a former owner of Castle Hill, perhaps
Amelie Rives?
WITNESSES:
Past owners of Castle Hill, Amie Rives,
many guests from over the years, possibly Julien Green, Hans Holzer and
Virginia Cloud.
STILL HAUNTED:
Probably yes.
Nothing has been done to exorcise
any ghost from the pink room and the surrounding area. Owners through
out the years have accepted the entities as being part of Castle Manor. |