Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Savannah's Yellow Fever & The Colonial Cemetery

As promised , part two of the historic Colonial Cemetery in Savannah, Georgia .There is a section that has over 700 graves of the Yellow Fever outbreak of 1820. As I walked thru this section looking at tombstones mounted on  the brick wall, thinking of all the people that suffered from black vomit and high fevers,  the hysteria that the town must have felt during this period. It caused merchants to shut down their businesses, and people left the city to avoid catching it. What a scary time it must have been.







 



To the east of Forsyth Park is the Candler Hospital, many ghost tour companies still tell the stories about the death and dying which took place there. During one of the last Yellow Fever outbreaks in Savannah, as the story is told, there were a great number of people who died in the Candler Hospital from Yellow Fever. So many in fact, that tunnels were dug and secret burials were made throughout the entire area.  One of the secret burial grounds was a tunnel that ran underneath Forsyth Park. This tunnel didn’t have an exit. It was simply a place to put the bodies of the dead without bringing them to the surface. Founded in 1808, Savannah’s Old Candler Hospital has served as a Union hospital and an insane asylum, and thousands of patients, including those afflicted with Yellow Fever, died on the premises. A morgue tunnel once existed under the property, and some speculate the passageway was also the site of clandestine medical experiments. Though the building hasn’t been open to the public in over two decades, passerby report seeing lights and shadows in front of the windows. While on one of the many tours I was on, I was told that a mass grave was dug and bodies dumped under what is now Forsyth Park. Now whether it is true or not , I do not know.



windows where ghosts are supposed to be seen

beautiful iron work on fence next to hospital

Morgue Tunnel


The fountain at the park


There are many things in Savannah worth seeing , so if you get the chance to go, you won't be disappointed. so until next time I leave you with this:


Those we love don't go away, they walk beside us every day, unseen, unheard, but always near, still loved, still missed and very dear. - Anonymous



Sunday, August 11, 2013

Duelists, Ghosts & Revoluntary Soliders

While in Savannah, Georgia I explored  a cemetery full of interesting history, haunting's, and give night time tours, as well. The Colonial Cemetery has 10,000 graves , including a revoluntary war hero, a Declaration of Independence signer, duelists , a consort and sightings of ghosts!  Because this is such an interesting cemetery, I will post in two parts.  I will started with some back ground info on the cemetery, it's first burial was in 1750, and it's last was 1850.  The Entrance:





Perhaps the most famous grave here would be Button Gwinnett, who was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence . Mr. Gwinnett meet his end after a duel with Lachlan McIntosh, after an argument about who was right regarding an invasion into Florida. 




Major General Nathanael Greene.of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. He was given a plantation named Mulberry Grove, for giving so much to the war, including his own money. He died here of a sunstroke in 1786. The cotton gin  created by Eli Whitney, was made here. He was interned here in the Graham tomb originally then moved to Jackson Square along with his son., in 1902. 





Jackson Square





James Wilde was the brother of the well-known American poet, Richard Henry Wilde. The cemetery commemorative plaque in honor of James Wilde contains a stanza from his brother's most famous poem whose completion was interrupted by the death of James in the duel.


This is the most interesting debated video shot here of a ghost:

You decide what you see. I make no claims to this , neither the person taking the video or saying it is true. 
Until my next post  I leave you with this :



Those we love don't go away, they walk beside us every day, unseen, unheard, but always near, still loved, still missed and very dear. - Anonymous






Monday, August 5, 2013

Slave Cemetery At Mount Vernon

Located not far from Washington's Tomb on the grounds of Mount Vernon , are the burial grounds of the over 50 - 75 slaves that worked and lived there ( 1760-1860). Unfortunately records of slave cemeteries are far and few between . So because of this the headstones and rocks used to mark the graves over the years have either sunk into the ground with the shifting of land, or broken and removed. The few records that are their recorded  was George's valet William " Billy" Lee ( 1828) , his brother Frank Lee ( 1821). West Ford, who was a freed slave but still worked for the Washington family.  A marker was installed by The Mt. Vernon Ladies Association .


                                              Entrance:



                                             Marker:


Close up:


Sign:



Left side of grounds: 


Right side of grounds:



My only regret is that records were not better kept during this time.
 There is a house that has more history of the slaves of Mt. Vernon.
Well worth the trip! 





I leave you with this:

Those we love don't go away, they walk beside us every day, unseen, unheard, but always near, still loved, still missed and very dear. - Anonymous