I’ve encountered many stories
about ghost children over the years, each one sadder than the last.
Child abuse is often the
reason for this type of haunting. These stories sometimes involve manifestations that
include heart-wrenching cries and pleas. When heard, these calls are to
gain the attention of the living.
One story that occurred in
the late 1940s includes all the elements above.
In September of 1948, Thelma
Cockrell, recently widowed, moved into a smaller house near her daughter in the
town of Princeton, Kentucky.
This home had been abandoned
for years. Mrs. Cockrell’s discovered the last owner had left town quickly
after his wife died. No one at the time thought to ask him what
happened to his stepdaughter.
happened to his stepdaughter.
Since the house was in such
poor shape, the widow had to have the whole place renovated before she moved
in. She was content in her new home for three months, but this quickly
changed.
One cold December night at
11:00 p.m. as Mrs. Cockrell dozed in her favorite rocker she was suddenly awakened
by a distressed child’s voice.
She heard the weak voice
calling, Help me, help me.”
She turned toward the fire
where the voice appeared to be coming from, only to see the flames shoot up in
an unusual manner. She was shocked to see an emaciated face floating above the
fire.
As she sat frozen to her seat,
this face disappeared, but the pleas for help continued. Finally, the flames
settled down, and the disturbing voice faded.
Terrified, the widow called
her daughter. This woman immediately came and stayed with her mother for the rest
of the night. In the morning, the two women called the police.
However, the officers after a
thorough search of the fireplace and chimney assured the widow nothing was
there.
Mrs. Cockrell, afraid to be
alone, convinced her daughter to stay the next night. Both women, this time, heard
the cries and pleas and saw the agonized face in the fire. Again the flames
shot up.
The daughter then called in
several female friends and told them what she and her mother had seen. These women agreed to
stay for the next few nights. They were curious to see the strange events for
themselves.
The group was not disappointed.
Each night at 11:00 p.m. for the next three days, the fire became agitated, the pitiful cries were heard, and the face was seen.
At the end of the week, Mrs.
Cockrell hired several men to dig behind the fireplace. When the dirt was
removed, a small skeleton was found behind the hearthstone.
The bones were piled in a
manner that left little doubt the body had been shoved in the space, as opposed
to being buried there.
The widow arranged for the
child to have a decent burial. After this, the pleas for help and the face were
never seen again.
Sometime later, when the
former owner was dying he made a deathbed confession.
He stated he had starved his stepdaughter after his wife had died--on the fifth
day no longer patient, he had finished the job himself.
Five days was the exact
number of days Mrs. Cockrell, and the other women had seen the girl's ghost. It was also
discovered that the dates of the five
nights she had appeared matched the dates of when she had been starved.
More Kentucky Ghost Stories by Michael Paul Henson
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