This story took place over
150 years ago on St. Simons Island off the coast of Georgia. *
In the 1800s the owners of the rice
plantations on St. Simons Island decided to hire a teacher to teach their
children. They found a young teacher that lived in Ohio that was willing to
move south.
Margaret was wise beyond her
years. She had traveled extensively in both America and Europe and had
attended some of the finest schools.
St. Simons Island |
She settled happily into
her new assignment. She spent her days at the little schoolhouse on the island
teaching the plantation owner’s children. Then at night, she would teach the
slave children at her home.
Many of the plantation owners
objected to her teaching their slaves, but Margaret was strong-willed, so she
prevailed in this endeavor.
One young slave boy, Joshua,
became Margaret’s best pupil. Joshua loved the stories and poems Margaret read, and he often stayed late to hear more.
He was lucky for his master was a kinder man than most of the plantation owners. He told his teacher that he felt learning would help him to gain his freedom in the future.
He was lucky for his master was a kinder man than most of the plantation owners. He told his teacher that he felt learning would help him to gain his freedom in the future.
Unfortunately, Joshua never
attained his dream. A slave uprising occurred on the plantation adjacent to his
masters. The plantation owner was killed in this struggle, and a mob of angry men gathered that night to seek revenge.
This mob attacked several plantation slave quarters, including ones that had not been involved in the uprising. They
came to Joshua’s family cabin, ripped down the door and started to beat his
parents. Joshua jumped in to defend his mother and was clubbed on the head, he
died instantly.
Margaret grief-stricken
started to isolate herself from the rest of the community. It is said she only
spoke now to the children that she taught. She was often seen wandering
aimlessly through the island’s backwoods.
One day as she sat in the
school preparing the next day’s lessons, she spotted a black raven that sat on
one windowsill. This raven would fly above her as she walked home every day.
Isolated and lonely, Margaret began to read poems to this raven, as he sat near her in the afternoons. Two
plantation children returned one day after school to find an item they had left
behind. They quietly observed their teacher reading to this blackbird.
They ran home and announced
to their parents that their teacher was “a witch.” Their parents ignored this, but rumors started to fly. Many people at the time had a fear of “black magic.”
They began to wonder if this silent teacher could be a witch.
Others, not liking the fact
that she taught the slave children started to add fuel to the fire. Hysteria
took over, and an angry mob went to her home one night. They dragged her out,
accused her of being a witch, and then killed her.
After this, the community
refused to allow her body to be buried in the local churchyard. Joshua’s master, who was a kind man buried her alongside one road. He placed a stone marker on
her grave. On it, he carved, “A Beloved Teacher.”
Soon after he buried her, people
started to observe that all the vegetation in the area began to die. Even
today, 150 years later, nothing grows in this area--no trees or moss or even grass.
* This story is a good
example of how folklore often reflects people’s superstitions.
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