Port at Alexandria Virginia |
This story began in 1816 with
an arrival of a young married couple to the Old Town port in Alexandria,
Virginia.
Gadsby Tavern |
They disembarked and rented a
carriage to take them to what is today Gadsby’s Tavern and Museum but then was
known as City Hotel.
This hotel sat at the center
of the city’s social life in the late 1700s into the 1800s.
Immediately, rumors began.
Who was this young couple? They were fashionably dressed and appeared to have
wealth.
Even more attention was
focused upon them because the husband had carried his beautiful young wife
through the hotel lobby—she being gravely ill.
Wild rumors flew that she was
the daughter of Aaron Burr, Theodosia who had been lost at sea years earlier. I
write about her ghost here. Another rumor stated the young wife was the
daughter of an English lord and the couple was eloping.
Once situated in Room #8 at
the hotel the husband called for a doctor to attend his wife. He oddly refused
to give Mr. Gadsby, the owner of the hotel, or the doctor his or his wife’s names.
For three weeks his young
bride suffered in pain. On October 14, 1816 she died. Strangely, the husband
requested the doctor and owner of the hotel take an oath. They both swore they
would not reveal the identities of the young couple.
His wife was buried at St.
Paul’s Cemetery nearby. He arranged for a fancy tombstone to be placed on her grave.
The inscription on it is a long sad letter to his wife. This epitaph begins,
“To the memory of a Female Stranger . . .”
Female Stranger headstone |
Soon after his wife’s funeral
this man left town without paying any of his bills. These expenses included: the
hotel bill, the medical expenses and the money owed for his wife’s funeral.
The townspeople were furious
but there was nothing to be done for they did not know the name of this clever
young man or his wife. Their identities are still a mystery today.
They say when this young
husband first carried his wife into Room #8 at the hotel the number on the door
slipped sideways. This is not a good omen being the symbol for infinity.
Is this the reason the Female
Stranger haunts the Gadsby to this day? Some believe it is.
One recent encounter with her
ghost scared a college student working in the Tavern’s restaurant. This server
had just picked up a food order and had the plates balanced on both arms when
she turned around.
The ghost was standing close
to her staring right into her face. The ghost spoke to her and then vanished.
Terrified, the young lady screamed and dropped the plates.
Ballroom |
The Female Stranger also
haunts the building’s ballroom. Especially during parties held in this room.
She is most often
seen in Room #8 where she died. Since the encounter with the young student she
has not spoken to anyone else.
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