This historic town is a
National Park today but it still has 300 residents. Harper’s Ferry is located
in the Blue Ridge Mountains of West Virginia. It sits on the spot where the
Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers meet.
Because of numerous ghost
sightings over the years, the area is considered to be one of America’s most
haunted.
This post has 3 parts to include several of these hauntings.
Harper's Ferry |
Peter Stephens first settled
the area in 1732. He ran ferries on both rivers and built a gristmill. Fifteen
years later, Robert Harper bought Stephen’s squatter’s rights.
Harper House |
The first home Harper built
was swept away during a flood, so he began to build a new larger home on higher
ground, but he died before he could complete it. This home still stands in
Harper’s Ferry today and is the oldest remaining structure.
It is one of the many old buildings
in town that is considered to be haunted.
When the Harper’s first moved
to what was then known as “The Hole” it is said Rachel, Robert’s wife, cried for
days, begging to be returned to civilization.
After a flood took their
first home, Robert had to work on their larger house on his own—most of the laborers were away fighting in the Revolutionary War. He requested Rachel bury their gold
and tell no one where she hid it—afraid roaming renegades would rob them.
After Robert died, Rachel
continued to work on the house herself. She fell from a ladder and was
instantly killed—carrying the secret of where the gold was hidden with her.
In the 1800s the local
residents were convinced this house was haunted—they were even afraid to go
near it. Witnesses at the time stated they saw a woman dressed in 18th
century clothing peering from one high window.
This figure was seen looking down into where the Harper’s garden once was. Many felt Rachel was still guarding the couple’s gold.
In 1796, Harper’s Ferry
became more populated when George Washington had an armory built at Harper’s
Ferry. In 1820, John Hall established a musket shop and ten years later in 1830
he was using the first “assembly line” to mass-produce his product.
Harper's Armory |
Camp Hill Cemetery |
It is said these troops
paraded down the main street every night. Although they never went into battle,
many of these soldiers fell victim to a cholera outbreak and were buried on
Camp Hill.
Witnesses state they can hear these troops marching through town and the sounds of fife and drum
are heard.
John Brown |
Harper’s Ferry is best known
for John Brown’s raid in 1859. Brown was a strict Calvinist who also was an
abolitionist. He decided to rid the South of slavery.
Brown led 21 men into
Harper’s Ferry on the 17th of October. He planned to take the
armory and then arm all the slaves in the area—with hopes they would rush to
his aid—he then would set up a free state.
His plan worked until the
shooting started. Within one day the citizens and militia at Harper’s Ferry had
cornered John Brown and what was left of his men in the engine house adjacent to
the armory.
Lee's U.S. Marines attack John Brown and his men at the engine house. |
Three days later Lieutenant Colonel Robert E. Lee led 100 U.S. Marines into town. Lee had left in
such as hurry he did not even have enough time to put his uniform on. Lee’s men
stormed the engine house, which effectively ended the raid.
John Brown was captured and
was hanged on the gallows two weeks later. But he actually won in a way, for his raid
turned out to be the catalyst for the Civil War.
Read more about the haunting
at Harper’s Ferry including sightings of John Brown and a free man's ghost who
fought alongside him in Part ll of Harper’s Ferry National Park.
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