Woodburn Mansion |
For over 200 years, people
have seen and heard ghosts at the historic Woodburn mansion in Dover, Delaware.
This beautiful, 1790s
Georgian house has seven bedrooms and beautiful gardens.
Woodburn in the 1950s. |
Several of Delaware’s leading
citizens have lived in this house. In 1965, the state of Delaware bought the
property, renovated it, and made it the governor’s mansion.
The first Woodburn ghost
sighting happened in 1820. Dr. M.W. Bates the owner, at this time, invited a
Methodist preacher, Lorenzo Dow to stay the night.
After socializing, Dow
retired for the evening to an upstairs bedroom. The next morning, he passed
another man on the stairs. The preacher noted this man was dressed in “colonial
garb”—and was shuffling up the steps oddly.
When he reached the breakfast
table, he asked the Bates’ who the other guest was. Baffled, they told him no
other guests were in the home.
After he described this man,
the couple felt certain it was Dr. Bates’ father, who had been dead for years.
Woodburn gardens. |
Another ghost seen and heard at Woodburn is a “slave raider.”
Dan Cowgill, a Quaker, owned
the mansion before the Civil War. The house was a stop along the Underground
Railroad.
One night a group of angry
raiders came to the mansion looking for escaped slaves. Cowgill was able to
chase them off.
One raider attempted to
escape by climbing a poplar tree in the front yard. He slipped and got caught
in a knot of the tree. He hung there, trapped and unnoticed until he died.
This tree still stands.
To this day, witnesses report
hearing his screams as he tries to escape.
Woodburn dining room. |
Several governors’ wives have
seen ghosts in the mansion’s dining room.
These women state they heard
footsteps at all hours of the night in this room, as well as seeing men,
dressed in revolutionary-era clothes floating across the room.
These ghosts seem to be more
fun-loving than scary. The spirits in the house are called “wine ghosts.”
The reason for this is they
imbibe whatever wine is left out. If glasses are left half-full, etc.,
witnesses return to find them empty.
When Governor Charles Terry
Jr. lived in the mansion, one ghost, in particular, was observed helping
himself to the mansion’s vintage wines in the dining room.
A previous owner, before it
was the governor’s residence, stated every night he would fill a decanter with
wine, he then would find it empty the next morning.
It seems these ghosts like to
party.
The mansion also has a young
female ghost. This girl is seen in the garden wearing a red-checkered gingham
dress. She likes to splash water in the homes’ fountains and pools.
Fountain at Woodburn. |
This young spirit “crashed” Governor Michael Castle’s
inauguration in 1985.
Several guests felt something
tugging at them throughout the ceremony. And many witnesses saw her floating
shyly in the corner of the reception hall.
The public can visit this
mansion—but by appointment only.
What a fun haunting. I think it's hilarious that the ghost drink wine, ha ha! Good for them! 🍷
ReplyDeleteI was amazed when doing research about this haunting -it seems they are really fun-loving. LOL.
ReplyDelete