Wavery Plantation Oaks |
A loving husband had this
unique Southern plantation home designed and built for his wife in the
mid-1800s. But she tragically died, before Waverly Mansion, located in Clay County
Mississippi was finished.
George Hampton Young was a
colonel who moved from Georgia to Mississippi to establish a cotton plantation
along the Tombigbee River.
Waverly Mansion--today. |
Young and his ten children
moved into their new home in the 1850s. He ran an impressive farm.
Waverly, besides providing
large quantities of cotton had a tannery, lumber mill, gristmill, brick kiln,
icehouse, gardens, orchards, and livestock. The plantation also manufactured
its own gas, which was piped into the house to illuminate it.
Waverly has a unique
architectural feature, not often seen in the South, a massive copula sits atop
this home that affords the visitor a 360-degree view of the surrounding
countryside.
This mansion also is known as
one of the most haunted homes in the South.
The Young family maintained
Waverly until the last of the ten children died in 1913. It then was left to
slowly deteriorate.
Robert and Donna Snow fell in
love with the old house and spent several years in the 1960s, restoring it to
its original splendor. It was made a National Historic Landmark in 1973.
During this time, the Snow’s
became acquainted with an assortment of ghosts that haunt Waverly.
The home today is run as a
house museum.
During the Civil War several
Confederate officers, friends of the Young family, recuperated from battle
wounds at Waverly.
In one mirror from this
period, a strange sight is seen. Visitors report a Confederate soldier
standing behind them, only to turn around and find no one is there.
Colonel Young’s wife, who
never lived in the house, is observed wandering through the second-floor rooms. She
turns and stares at visitors and then slowly disappears.
Waverly family cemetery. |
The Colonel himself is seen riding a phantom horse near the family cemetery. He is also seen walking
through this graveyard and in the yard near the mansion.
The most active ghost at the
plantation has been seen and heard by many tour guides and visitors.
This four-year-old girl is
believed to be the daughter of a Young family friend. Her apparition appears so
real that visitor’s on tours have tried to find what adults she belongs to.
Staircase landing. |
She is usually spotted on the
landing of the spiral staircase between the second and third floors.
It is believed that she died
of diphtheria in the home during the Civil War.
This young ghost is also
heard crying for her mother.
Another sound often noted
involves many voices attending a dinner party—they are heard laughing and
enjoying music in the mansion’s ballroom.
Here is a brief video about the
young ghost, known as “Little Girl Lost.” The Snow’s daughter and another
witness are interviewed.
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