| I heard a rumor that
this is the 10th anniversary of Cape May's "Haunted
Ghost Tour." So, I decided to take the tour again and
give our friend and co-founder Al Rauber a call, or in
this case an e-mail. Well, technically it’s their 10th
anniversary but the real 10th anniversary is
next year and… You know let Al explain:
Al Rauber is an
investigator of paranormal phenomena. His partner in the
tour business is ghost historian Diane Bixler who also
owns Boo-Tique, a cute little gift shop located in the
lower portion of the
Macomber Hotel, which is also where
you can go to purchase ghost tour tickets.
Now back to the 10th
anniversary thing. Here's Al, "...we are
going to do an unofficial 10th anniversary. You see, I
did a couple of tours 10 years ago but we really didn't
start the business up until the following year. So
technically, it has been 10 years of my
doing tours; but from our business end, it has only been 9
and next year will
be the real 10th year anniversary."
Whew! Glad we
straightened that out.
It’s been a couple of
years since I took the Haunted Cape May Tour and guess
what? My tour guide is the same person I had in October of
2002 – Desiree.
It is dusk and just
beginning to cool. A quiet has settled along the
beachfront on this Sunday evening in late September. The
throngs of tourists have disappeared but there are still
a nice number of people walking about. Halloween and
November often suggest an image of a "ghost town" in Cape May. We
don’t so much have tumbleweeds rolling down empty
streets; it's more like occasional sand traps brought about by heavy
winds whistling long into the night.
Desiree is much more
sensitive to ghostly apparitions bothering the tour
participants than she was two years ago. She asks the 20
or so people on the tour where they are staying so that
she can make a point of discreetly avoiding that hotel
or that particular room when the talk of ghosts
commences.
As we gather ‘round her,
the ocean serves as Desiree’s background and she begins
her tales.
Her first is about
Captain Kidd...
It seems Edward Teach, AKA, Blackbeard and
William Kidd; AKA, Ca ptain Kidd came through Cape May on
their travels. Captain Kidd found employment as an
English Privateer who found such success in New York and
the West Indies that he was called back to serve
England. The King’s officers asked Kidd to captain a new
powerful ship: the Adventure Galley. The Adventure
Galley was equipped with 34 cannons and a crew of 80.
Its mission was to capture all French ships, and the
pirates of Madagascar. Kidd accepted the proposition.
The problem is Kidd decided to man his boat with
actual pirates and they didn’t buy into the notion that
they could only hold up French ships. They wanted to
loot everybody with equal disdain for all.
In an attempted mutiny, Kidd ended up killing his
first mate.
It would appear that the
killing of the first mate turned Kidd into a pirate of
the worst sort – or perhaps the best depending on your
perspective. Captain Kidd proceeded to plunder all the
ships especially the ones from England. When he decided
to try and make his way make into the fold – that would
be the king of England’s fold, he dropped half of his
crew off in Cape May and told them to "blend in."
Supposedly, he also buried half of his treasure in Lake
Lily. This, then, would be the local angle.
Well, blending in didn’t
work so well for Captain Kidd. The governor of New York
dropped the dime on him and he ended up in a London
prison being hung by the neck until dead. If this
weren’t enough punishment, the king ordered Kidd’s dead
body be tarred and feathered and dumped in the Thames as
a lesson to future pirates.
No one has yet to find
the lost treasure of Captain Kidd, or at least they’re
not telling if they did. Lord knows people haven’t given
up searching. I heard some locals were still searching
for buried treasure this past winter when the dredging
of Lake Lily got underway.
Whew! Never knew so much
about pirates.
Ah no. We’re not done
yet. Blackbeard’s first mate was supposedly Israel Hand
(an old Cape May name). I think Hand was sent to Cape
May to protect Blackbeard’s treasure map. I could be
wrong though, because at this point, I’m getting my
pirates mixed up and we’re moving on to Tale #2.
Leave me alone. I can’t
write that fast. Especially in the dark.
Esmerelda of Jackson Street.
Desiree informs us that Jackson
is the most haunted street in Cape May. She knows this
because Al documents all hauntings and doesn’t include
them on the
tour until they have been thoroughly
researched. Eight houses on Jackson are said to be
haunted but only four want that fact known. The four
are: The Merry Widow, the Inn at 22 Jackson, the
Windward and the Saltwood.
The story goes something
like this. The innkeeper at 22 Jackson, ca. 1899, opens
her door to find a distinguished looking gentleman on
the porch. He tells her that he used to live in the
house and as a boy played on Jackson Street. While she’s
talking to him, she notices that the temperature in the
foyer drops suddenly. The man then asks the innkeeper if
the house is haunted and if she has met Esmerelda. The
woman brushes him off with a curt no and shuts the door.
Then, she realizes she should at least get his name. She
immediately opens the door, steps out onto the porch but
the man is gone without a trace.
Two weeks later a tenant
on the first floor asks the innkeeper if the house is
haunted. "No." she says indignantly. But she gets to
thinkin’. She can’t stand it anymore and marches up to
the third floor – The Turret –the cone-shaped section on
top of the roof – and asks the tenant who had been
staying there for a while, "Have you seen any ghosts
lately," or something like that.
"Just the woman sitting
at the end of the bed," she says nonchalantly.
The innkeeper worried
about the ghost who seemed to have no boundaries and
fussed about the place as though she owned it. The
innkeeper particularly worried about losing customers
but the rest of the summer went by without incident.
In October when the inn
closed, her curiosity got the best of her. She marches
back up to The Turret and is overpowered by the sense of
someone in the room
with her. She rushes out the room
and doesn’t come back for two days. When she does go
back, she moves the bed against the wall and finds a
small door. Turns out the door was a laundry shoot which
ran from the third floor to the first floor. The
innkeeper also found out that "way back when" the
original owners of the house employed a nanny by the
name of Esmerelda.
Desiree is very
protective of us and cautions to stop walking in the
middle of the street and not to lean against the wrought
iron fences along Jackson. Not only could that be
hazardous to your health, the innkeepers don’t like it
very much. So off we go. Next stop Winterwood Gift Shop
on the Washington Street Mall. Desiree also cautions us
that the alley way between Winterwood and Gifts Galore,
or Draper Walk, has been the sight of a few frights of
it’s own.
It seems that on at least
two occasions, a woman (why do these things only happen
to women?) who was leaning against a stone memorial
dedicated to one Edgar Arthur Draper, 1886-1956, a Cape
May physician for 40 years, experienced the sensation of
her hair being pulled away from her neck. She might have
felt a kiss on the back of her neck or I might be making
that up. I love a romantic ending.
Knerr Sisters...
I
remember this one from my last tour. Winterwood is the
former site of Keltie’s Newsstand. At one time the Knerr
sisters who operated a millinery store also owned the
building. After the Knerr sisters a dentist occupied the
building.
Desiree relates two stories shared by the
owners of Keltie’s. The first involves a "residual
haunting" in which a man in a lab coat was seen coming
toward the proprietor with something in his hand. As he
drew near to the woman, he disappeared. It was the same
experience every time without deviation.
This is an example of a
residual haunting which according to ghost writer and
medium Craig McManus is defined as thus: "Energy
embedded in the either of the place. The energy creates
a movie that plays over and over again in the either."
The second story
associated with 518 Washington Street is an example,
Desiree says, of a "true haunting." This involves the
Knerr sisters and was also related by the former owners
of Keltie’s but confirmed by the present owners as well.
It would appear the Knerr sisters were a bit mischievous
and could be heard giggling throughout the building.
Then one day, they decided to take their mischief a step
further and pushed one book, then two, then three, etc.
etc. off the shelves. This happened more than once and
the finally one day the proprietor got fed up with them
and told them straight out to knock it off. And guess
what? They did.
However, Desiree claims
things still go bump in the night every once and while
when the staff at Winterwood opens up the next morning
and Christmas decorations are thrown about the place
that were clearly on the shelf the at closing time.
Queen's...
We are
now in front of the Queen’s Hotel, ca. 1876 at the
corner of Columbia Avenue and Ocean Street. The Great
Fire of 1878 stopped just short of this Grande dame then
an apothecary, Ware’s Pharmacy. Although Ware’s Pharmacy
survived the fire it still suffered damage and underwent
a redo in 1879. Ware’s, according to Desiree and most
historical accounts, also doubled as a speakeasy,
gambling house and brothel.
The ghost of the Queen’s
Hotel apparently was a "working girl" in her former life
and likes to haunt – yes, by now you should have guessed
– the third floor. Reports of the scent of perfume
have been reported, cold spots in the rooms and
occasionally a woman nudging past one of the guests,
usually a woman. The ghost of Queen’s Hotel is a little
on the jealous side. Desiree suggests leaving a buck or
two on the nightstand so she feels appreciated. She
being the ghost not Desiree.
Desiree concludes this
tour by sharing with us a few details about the Macomber.
Most commonly requested room? Room #10.
Even Al Rauber stays in that room once in a while. But
don’t be disappointed rooms 19, 29, 41, and 51 are said
to be afflicted with shaking bed syndrome. So, there’s
something for everyone.
Our virtual
ghost tour being over, we strongly recommend that you take the real
one!
Please visit
www.hauntednewjersey.com
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