Over 200 years ago San Juan
Capistrano began as a Spanish California mission in 1775. This mission is known for the swallows that return every year in March. But
what many do not know is this mission is also considered haunted.
Mission garden |
One ghost story has been
passed down from one generation to the next since the early 1800s. It is a
story of lost love and lost life.
Magdalena was the 16-year old
daughter of one of the mission’s soldiers. She was considered to be very
beautiful. A young man--a promising artist by the name of Teofilo--traveled to
the mission to paint frescos on the walls of the newly built mission's Great Stone Church.
These two young people were
in love by the time Teofilo finished his task. But Magdalena’s father caught
wind of the couples’ budding romance and strictly forbid Magdalena from seeing
Teofilo ever again. He told his daughter that she must marry a man from her own
social class.
Defying her father’s wishes
Magdalena continued to meet Teofilo secretly. But the mission being a small
close-knit community did not lend itself well to secrecy. Magdalena’s father
discovered her and her lover one night as they met.
As punishment, he demanded
that Magdalena confess her sin to the mission priest but this was not enough,
he also arranged for Magdalena to parade in front of the entire church
congregation holding a “penitent candle.”
On the December morning in
1812 that Magdalena was to carry this candle she went to the church early. She
lit the candle and started her walk up the churches’ center aisle toward the
priest where she was to say her penance. But halfway there the earth began to
shake.
It was an 6.9-magnitude
earthquake.
Bells in 1813 a year after bell tower collapsed. |
The bell tower toppled onto
the church, people screamed and tried to make their way to the door but they
found it jammed shut. 40 people were buried alive under the rubble.
It took months for the
community to clear this debris and uncover the bodies so they could be buried. Among the dead was Magdalena. She was found still grasping the candle in her
hand.
Ever since, one ghost that is
seen at the mission is that of Magdalena. On moonlit nights countless witnesses
have seen her face staring out of the one remaining church window.
Some state she is still trying
to do penance for her sin.
Mission in 1810, the Great Stone Chapel before the earthquake. |
A Spirit Seen Before Death
Father O’Sullivan tells this
ghost story, he is a pastor at the mission.
A young woman named Matilda
lived in a small adobe house near the Serra Chapel at the mission. She helped
the padre by cleaning the church, altar and the altar clothes.
Serra Chapel |
One day as the padre gave mass
he noticed Matilda looking in through one church window. The next time he saw
Matilda he chastised her for not coming in and joining the service. Matilda
confused explained to him that she had not been at the church that day but
instead at home.
Soon after the padre and two
women saw Matilda at the church window. Her brother-in-law was outside the
church and saw Matilda walking away. He tried to gain her attention but she
seemed to just disappear.
He went to her home to wait so he
could ask her why she had ignored him. But to his surprise she was already there.
Again confused she told him that she had not been at the church-- in fact she
had been at home all day.
A few days later Matilda
died.
“It was whispered that the person seen looking in the window and lurking in the corridors of Serra Chapel had not been Matilda but her spirit, which was walking around while she lived; a sure sign of her impending death.”
Padre's patio |
On the day Matilda died one
last usual occurrence happened. The bells at the mission rang but no one was was assigned to ring them. It appears unseen hands rang these bells. When the area
was inspected shortly afterwards the bell ropes were found neatly coiled and
still.
Other Ghosts Seen
Over the years…
A faceless monk has been
seen. He is spotted in the North Wing Corridor walking quickly. He is
considered “faceless” because the witnesses who have seen him only briefly see
his back as he disappears into the darkness of the corridor.
A ghostly soldier is seen pacing
back and forth as if he is still guarding the Mission. His heavy boots are also
heard walking alongside the building.
Information about the mission’s history can be found at the San Juan Capistrano’s museum site, here.
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