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I’ve
been looking for ghosts every fall now
for, I’d say about four years.
I’ve taken walking tours, trolley tours.
I’ve followed ghost writer Craig McManus
around when he was looking for ghosts. I
invited Craig to our offices last year
in search of the ghosts I’ve heard about
for so long. I even stayed in a “haunted
“house one year and guess what? The only
thing I got was a great night’s sleep
and an even nicer breakfast the next
morning with my friend and innkeeper
Harriett Sosson of Poor Richard’s Inn.
But not even a whisper of a ghost. I’m
not saying, as former Cape May mayor and
innkeeper Bruce Minnix maintains, that
there are no ghosts in Cape May. I’m
only saying, I haven’t found them or
more to the point, they haven’t found
me.
This year, I
decided to take a walk-about for myself
and see if I could spy any unearthly
apparitions in my favorite haunts. It
was a great night for it. Dark, windy
and eerie. I didn’t know it but there
were tornado warnings issued for the
area.
Perfect. I started at the Hotel
Macomber, home to the original Haunted
Cape May Tour run by ghost historian
Diane Bixler and paranormal investigator
Al Rauber.
So legendary are
its hauntings, that every ghost writer
in town has written about and stayed at
the Hotel Macomber, formerly the
Stockton Villa, circa 1914 on Beach
Avenue and Howard Street. The spooky
activities begin in the lower level of
the hotel where Diane’s Boo-Tique is
located and include radios suddenly
going on or abruptly shutting off or,
and I love this
one,
turning the dial to Country Western
music. Upstairs right off the lobby is
the dining room at Union Park Restaurant
which has also been the scene of many a
sighting. There are tales of a woman
walking through the dining room and
kitchen “wearing a shabby waitress”
uniform. Table cloths lifting up from
the tables and the chef’s knives being
moved from one spot to another. Patrons
need not fear, however, because these
spooky occurrences seem to only happen
when the restaurant is closed and only
the staff is on hand. But the most eerie
story at the Macomber comes from Room
#10.
When I went on the
walking tour, my tour guide Desiree told
the story of an older woman whose
children treated her to a stay at the
Stockton Villa in the 1940s – the summer
after her husband died. She came back
summer after summer throughout the
decade with her steamer trunk and always
stayed in room 10 and, according to the
experts, she’s still coming back. Heavy
furniture or possibly a trunk can be
heard moving across the room throughout
the night
whenever
the lady is back in town, which
according to Desiree, is about three or
four times a summer. Psychic medium
Craig McManus had extensive encounters
with any number of spirits in Room 10
the night he stayed there. From the
“trunk lady” to “Pinky” who told him all
about the trunk lady because Pinky
apparently has to wait on her every time
she “checks in.”
I’ve never even
been in Room #10 but I like the idea
that someone who came here a long time
ago still likes to come here. Wouldn’t
you? And just looking up into the window
of Room #10 from street – or for that
matter – gazing at the Macomber in all
her glory at twilight is enough for me
to put her on my list of favorite
haunts.
From here, I walk
along Beach Avenue until I get to
Cabanas and Martini Beach, which is
upstairs. This is another classic haunt.
And again, just look at the place. Of
course there would be tales of odd
events there and quite naturally they
would come from the third and fourth
floors when it was known as
Denizot’s Ocean View House. The very
first story I heard about the building
is very sad and involves an Irish maid
or prostitute, depending on who was
telling the story, named Gloria (Cabanas
has had many changes in ownership over
the years and at one time was called
Gloria’s) who worked at the hotel and
kept her toddler close to her by putting
a chair up as a barricade at the top of
the third floor stairs. She, according
to the story, hung herself from the
third floor stairwell following the
death of her daughter, who allegedly ran
in front of a trolley car outside the
hotel.
In his book The
Ghosts of Cape May, Book One, Craig
McManus tells a
different
story. He traced the origins of the
first tale to a photograph someone took
a few years back of the front window on
the first floor. When the picture was
developed there appeared to be a ghost
of a young child standing in front of
the window. Craig says he was approached
by a ghost who called herself Julia and
denied any hanging incident. According
to Craig, she worked at the hotel as a
domestic and traded her services for
room and board. She did have a child out
of wedlock, a boy, and she did try to
keep him nearby by placing a chair in
front of the door. He died at a young
age but not because of a trolley
accident. So, there you have it. A tale
of two ghosts.
Here’s what I like
about a lot of the tales. Whether they
are accurate or not, they depict a time
and scenarios which are very true to the
period and take us back in time to a
time of steamer trunks and Irish maids
in white floor-length aprons. A time of
when trolley tracks ran alongside
railroad tracks and followed Beach
Avenue all the way to South Cape May and
Cape May Point. South Cape May is no
more and can you imagine? Railroad
tracks along a beach? What were they
thinking? Clearly the term erosion and
nor’easters were not in their vision.
My favorite
haunted street is of course, our oldest
street Jackson. There are so many tales
and legends and myths written about this
street, we just don’t have
enough time or space. I’m going to focus
on my friend Harriett’s B&B because I
have exciting updates for you.
Over the
years, Harriett has heard ghostly
shenanigans coming from various areas in
the circa 1882 B&B. In what used to be
the servant’s quarters, guests have
reported seeing a “lady in her dressing
gown” standing in front of a mirror
brushing her hair. She is transparent,
so the story goes, except for part of
her face.
In Room #7, where
I stayed one night in search of ghostly
wanderings, three women friends shared
the spacious room, which, at the time,
had twin beds. The lady on the bed next
to a curtained closet was reading a
magazine when a sudden force of energy
swept the magazine from her hand ad
flung it into the closet. Said incident
was witnessed by the other two friends.
In Room #3, which
is on the first floor, more than one
guest has reported pounding on the bed
from underneath the box spring.
This summer,
however, a new tale has emerged from
Room #6 – where nary a ghost has ever
appeared. As
Harriett
tells the tale, the guest checked into
Room #6 with her six-year-old son whom
she said has “paranormal powers.” Within
minutes, the woman came out of the room
with her son and asked if there were
“spirits in the house?” Harriett said,
“I never know how they want me to answer
that, so I just said, ‘I don’t know, why
do you ask?’” Her son, it seems, has
“paranormal powers” and was hearing
voices in the room. The next morning,
mother and son reported that the bed was
moving throughout the night. Harriett
says this particular 4-poster bed has no
box spring and is more of a platform
bed. In other words, this isn’t the kind
of bed that moves – easily.
“So, I asked her,”
said Harriett, “Well, how did you
sleep?”
“Oh,” said the woman, “We slept well. It’s a great bed.”
It’s also a great
house with some great history to go with
it. It was built as the private
residence for the owner of the Carroll
Villa, just next door. It has been a B&B
since 1977 and I strongly advise you do
your own investigating here. What’s the
worse that can happen? You’ll get a
great night’s sleep and a great
breakfast to send you on your way.
I think my next
most favorite haunt has to be the old
Ware’s Pharmacy, formerly Hairloom hair
salon and B&B, presently home to Cheeks
at the Beach and the Queen’s Hotel at
the corner of Ocean Street and Columbia
Avenue. It
was
also a law office at one time. Stories
from here just abound. Apparently, Dr.
Ware ran a pharmacy on the first floor
(where Cheeks is). A gambling joint took
up the second floor and a brothel
occupied the third floor.
The very Victorian
City of Cape May must have been akin to
Sodom and Gomorra based on all the
gambling and brothelling we hear about,
especially scandalous considering the
neighboring community of Cape may Point
was established as a religious retreat.
At any rate, it’s safe to say that a
gentlemen looking for a bit of
distraction would find it, especially on
Columbia Avenue. Let’s not forget that
the prestigious Mainstay Inn was also a
gambling establishment.
According to the
scuttlebutt, a lot of activity has been
reported from Room #22 on the third
floor or the Plum Room as it was once
called under a previous owner. Most of
the disturbance comes in the form of
rocking. One of the ladies was assigned
the task of look-out. If they saw the
law coming, she would start rocking –
the creaking of the chair on the
floorboards would alert the gamblers
down below.
When Dane and Joan
Wells still owned the Queen’s, I spoke
to them about the stories. He said
several guests, prior to their
ownership, reported a presence in the
room, followed by the smell of woman’s
perfume. He, himself, however did have
one strange incident in which the guests
were locked out of their room and he
could never explain how it happened.
In his second
book, appropriately titled The Ghosts of
Cape May Book 2,
Craig reports having stayed in the
hotel, which is currently owned by Doug
and Anna Marie McMain. He did not stay
in Room #22 but nevertheless, was
awakened in the middle of the night by
the sound of knocking. When he opened
his door all three times to see who was
knocking there was only silence and an
empty hallway. He later saw a vision of
a tall woman walking through the
corridor with a silver tray and
beverages. He politely told her he was
not thirsty and simply wanted to go to
sleep and the knocking stopped.
I like that story.
I like the fact that the ghosts of Cape
May are always friendly and still
looking to lend a helping hand whether
we want them to or not. And if you don’t
care to be bothered, all you have to say
is, “No thank you.”
These are my
favorite haunts and stories, but there
are plenty more where they come from.
Take a tour, read a book and find out
more about our ghosts because a better
understanding of our past often gives a
hint to what our future might be.
Besides, if nothing else, you really
will learn a lot about how life used to
be in the oldest seaside resort in the
country. Happy Halloween! |