This large house in
Washington Heights is the oldest standing home in Manhattan. Today it is run as
a museum.
Morris-Jumel Mansion |
Rodger Morris, a British
Colonel, first owned the mansion. He had his 8500 square manor
designed in the neo-Palladian style. This elegant house sat on 100 acres of
thickly forested land. It had magnificent views and was the envy of all who
lived in the colony.
During the Revolutionary War he and his
family fled. George Washington then used the mansion as his base during the
Battle of Harlem Heights.
In 1810, a French wine-buyer
by the name of Steven Jumel and his wife Eliza bought the home.
Eliza Jumel had been an actress and prostitute in Rhode Island before their marriage. Steven did not find out about
this until several years after they married.
Eliza Jumel |
Eliza was a colorful
character who caused a stir wherever she went. On a visit to Paris she
befriended Napoleon and became infamous for being kicked out of France for
being too wild.
Back in New York she enjoyed
spending her husband’s money. Steven Jumel died in 1832 when he supposedly fell
from a carriage. Shortly after his death rumors spread that Eliza actually had
something to do with it.
Within months of Steven’s
death Eliza married Aaron Burr the former vice-president and the man who killed
Alexander Hamilton in a duel--more about this and places Burr’s ghost is seen is here.
Burr squandered Eliza money
in several controversial land deals and she promptly divorced him. After this
she became a recluse.
It is said that when Charles
Dickens met Eliza as an old woman it was she who inspired him to write the character
of Miss Havisham in Great Expectations.
She died in 1865 but many
believe she haunts the Morris-Jumel Mansion.
Several people who have
visited this house museum state they encountered her ghost. She is heard
tapping her cane on the floor during the day and witnesses state she spoke to
them through an old grandfather clock that stands in the mansion.
Front of Morris-Jumel mansion. |
One favorite story told by the
curators happened in the 1960s. A group of school children arrived early one
morning to tour the mansion. As they stood on the steps waiting impatiently
they were noisy.
An elderly lady wearing a
purple old-fashioned dress came out on the porch and yelled at them to “shut
up.”
As they entered the museum
they asked their tour guide about this old lady. None of the staff knew anything
about her.
The children became exited in
one room when they spotted a portrait on the wall. It was a picture of Eliza
Jumel. The children stated that was the women who had yelled at them.
An interesting side note to
this haunting is about a séance that was held in the mansion in the 1960s.
The participants supposedly
talked to Steven Jumal during this session. He told them that he had not died
from a carriage accident.
He stated a pitchfork stabbed
him instead. Eliza had then undone his bandages leaving him to bleed to death.
So Eliza had murdered him after all.
Eliza’s ghost is not the only
one to haunt the house. A more fanciful story told is about one painting in the
mansion.
This picture depicts several Revolutionary War soldiers. It is said if a person stands alone in this room they must be cautious for one soldier in this picture has been known to step out of this painting and accost visitors.
This picture depicts several Revolutionary War soldiers. It is said if a person stands alone in this room they must be cautious for one soldier in this picture has been known to step out of this painting and accost visitors.
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