The land where Washington
Square Park is located in New York’s Greenwich Village was used for over a
hundred years as a burial site.
It was initially used as an
Indian burial ground.
Then after the Revolutionary
War it was a potter’s field for criminals that were hanged in New York in the 1700s.
A Vault full of bones found beneath the park. |
There are an additional
20,000 souls buried in a mass grave, lost to a yellow fever epidemic that
lasted from 1791 to 1821.
As New York’s wealthier
citizens moved into the area, this extensive graveyard was covered over for a military parade ground.
It was at this point that the
shallow graves of the potter’s field began to surface. As a result, several
bones of the deceased poor were crushed underfoot.
The military parade ground at what was to become the park. |
This stark history, plus the
disturbance of these graves—point to this ground being haunted. After this
location became a park in 1828, people began to note unexplained activity.
Today, the buildings that
surround Washington Square, house the various NYU departments. The young people
that flock to this park often do not know, about the morbid history of their
favorite hangout.
Many bodies lie beneath the
famous fountain and arch at this park.
Hangman's Elm |
She is described as a shadow
dangling in the tree that appears to disappear when witnesses move closer, to
get a better view. Others have noticed this dangling figure from the various
windows that overlook the park.
Some have seen her apparition
walking through the park. Cold spots accompany her, even on hot summer days.
Most disturbing is the witnesses who claim they felt her walk right through
them.
Rose Butler was a house slave
owned by the Morris family. At age sixteen, the family accused her of stealing.
Previous owners had also caught her stealing.
Rose resentful, was also angered at the fact many blacks that were “free” lived near
the Morris household.*
She hatched a plan to kill
the family. She tried to burn down their house. She set it ablaze and tied
their only exit shut.
But she only managed to burn
part of the staircase, the family escaped unharmed.
Rose was arrested and tried
for arson.
Arson was a heinous crime at
the time—for there were not firefighters, and many perished in house fires.
Butler was condemned to death
by hanging. This was a harsh penalty—for a woman. The case went all the way to
the New York Supreme Court, but they upheld the ruling.
Some state this was because
New York was in transition at the time. Slavery was on the decline, and there
was a lot of tension between slaveholders and non-slaveholders.
At the age of nineteen, in
1799, Rose Butler was the last criminal hanged in what would become Washington
Square Park. She was buried in the nearby potter’s field.
Some feel her grave was one
of the many desecrated—hence the haunting.
* She should have been free, slavery was an abomination, but some because of this sentiment, claim she was innocent--the fire was just an accident. But my research reflected otherwise.
But another question remains--
Since Rose didn't succeed, should she have been hanged?
* She should have been free, slavery was an abomination, but some because of this sentiment, claim she was innocent--the fire was just an accident. But my research reflected otherwise.
But another question remains--
Since Rose didn't succeed, should she have been hanged?
1 comment:
I don't think she should have been hanged. Poor Rose, may she find Light and Love and Peace in Heaven.
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