Haunted Buffalo: Ghosts in the Queen City
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About this ebook
For all ages, explore Buffalo New York's spooky side with true stories and ghostly tales of the city's spooks and spirits.
Everyone can go on a haunted adventure of a lifetime in Buffalo, New York in this comprehensive guide to some of Buffalo's spookiest sites. Avid ghost hunter and paranormal investigator Dwayne Claud and researcher Cassidy O'Connor entertain readers with stories of the city's most acclaimed spooks and spirits, such as Tanya, the five-year-old that can be spotted bouncing on guest beds at the Grand Island Holiday Inn. The book includes twisted tales from the Buffalo Psychiatric Center, as well as stories of roaming spirits at Frontier House - a hotel frequented by figures such as Mark Twain and President McKinley. This gripping collection of ghostly tales is sure to thrill anyone fascinated by the unknown.
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Haunted Buffalo - Dwayne Claud
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INTRODUCTION
BUFFALO, NEW YORK— A BRIEF HISTORY
The splendor of the great city of Buffalo began over two hundred years ago. Far before it was surveyed by the Holland Land Company, the region was an active trade route for both settlers and Native Americans. The first settler in Buffalo was in the late 1700s. His name was Joseph Hodges, and he was a unique individual for the area. He was unique in that he had neither red nor white skin. In fact, Hodges was a black man, which confused many, but it made him a good middle man between the natives and settlers. Hodges earned the name Black Joe,
according to the Buffalonian in 2003. The number of travelers through the region forced Black Joe
to educate himself so that he could fluently speak the language used by the Seneca and the other travelers. His mastery allowed him to become an interpreter for many from his small cabin, which became the first tavern in Buffalo. It became a destination where individuals could trade and rest, which is much of what Buffalo has become today.
Buffalo was not always a city. In fact, the region was not surveyed until 1804 by the Holland Land Company. After the survey, settlers began to lay claim to the region. Land was purchased, homes were built and people began to move into the small village. Its name came from the river that ran through the area. The village continued to grow at a slow pace until the War of 1812. In 1813, the British and native troops invaded the village. Historical records state that almost every building in the village was burned to the ground; only two were left standing. Many of the village people were taken to Montreal as captives, while few managed to escape.
The rebuilding of Buffalo was difficult. The region remained very isolated until 1819, when the idea of the Grand Canal,
better known as the Erie Canal, was born. This gave the village of Buffalo the possibility of growth. New harbors and buildings for storage, stores and shops began to be built. People began to move back into the area, and by 1832, banking and insurance companies had moved in, along with breweries. Its access to Lake Erie allowed Buffalo to become one of the largest grain-shipping ports in the world. Buffalo was growing into a place much larger than a village. It would become a city in 1825, and by 1840 there were over eighteen thousand people living here.
Growth didn’t slow down; Buffalo continued to boom. European immigrants came to Buffalo to work in the grain mills and steelworks. Industry and manufacturing became one of the key resources for the city. As the population grew, so did the advances that the city experienced. A hospital opened and churches, schools and universities soon followed. A rail line was built through the city to aid in the transportation of goods and people. The city became known as the City of Light
thanks to neighboring Niagara Falls, which generated hydroelectric power. It was one of the first cities in the United States to have electricity citywide.
Throughout its years, Buffalo has grown with beautiful theatres, historic buildings and artistic beauty. It is a city rich in history, but also given at a price. Buffalo had its own share of class wars in the 1920s, Prohibition challenges in the late 1930s, struggles of the Great Depression and World War II in the 1940s and antiwar movements and riots in the 1960s. The 1970s rejuvenated Buffalo’s passion for growth with exciting events such as the opening of the Naval and Serviceman’s Park, which features the haunted USS The Sullivans; the renovation and reopening of the beautiful Shea’s Theatre; and national sports teams teams like the AFC’s Buffalo Bills football team and NHL’s Buffalo Sabres hockey team. Even with the boom in growth and business surrounding the city, Buffalo still struggled financially due to struggles in the steel and local automotive industry. By the 1980s, the economy had begun to see a gradual improvement. New jobs were created in the region with the opening of the Buffalo/Niagara International Airport. The steel industry gained new guidance and growth, which resulted in unemployment experiencing a steady decline. The retail climate exploded with new shopping malls and stores.
The USS The Sullivans, a haunted monument to Buffalo’s past.
A grain elevator along Buffalo’s Lake Erie shoreline. Courtesy of the Buffalo Historical Society.
The city itself, from the beginning, has been a city rich in cultures and beauty. It’s had its prosperity and its devastation, which leaves it rich in recorded history and even richer in paranormal history. The canal made it very easy to bring in and out many people and cultures and is much of the reason that Buffalo is what it is today. The grain industry is still in use today, though not to the extent of years ago. General Mills and ADM Pillsbury companies still sit on the waterfront. Many of the original grain elevators have begun to deteriorate, though with the help of the historians of the area and the Industrial Heritage Committee of Buffalo, some of the tall elevators have been brought back to their original beauty and use. Even today, you can board the Miss Buffalo cruiser ship and take a beautiful journey back through time along the Buffalo River and tour the city ship canal. You can see the beautiful grain and canal buildings that made the little village of Buffalo the massive city that it is today.
GHOST HUNTING—THE BEGINNINGS
The ghost hunting phenomenon first made its presence known in the public mainstream in 1984. Dan Aykroyd and Bill Murray, with a cast of other characters, saddled up with proton packs on their backs and EMF meters to hit the streets of New York City, capturing rampaging ghosts and spirits. Ghostbusters became a Hollywood blockbuster. It ushered in a new interest in ghost hunting for the general public. Author Vince Wilson points out that prior to 1984, there had never been any mention of using meteorological equipment in the detection of paranormal phenomena. It was only after 1984 that ghost hunters began to use equipment to measure changes in ion counts in the atmosphere, electromagnetic field variations and temperature changes, among many other criteria that are now considered benchmarks in the current field of paranormal investigation. Interest in the paranormal jumped dramatically after the release of the film White Noise, which was based on the recording of electronic noise phenomena or ghost voice. Most recently, a flood of paranormal television programs has hit mainstream media. This, however, was not where ghost hunting began.
Ghostly appearances and apparitions have been documented to make appearances to individuals as far back as AD 100. This was actually the first documented case of paranormal investigation.
R.C. Finucane’s Appearances of the Dead: A Cultural History of Ghosts reports that the case involved a home in Athens, Greece, that was said to be haunted by the spirit of a thin, shackled man. It was said that each night the spirit would rattle its chains at night, bringing disease and sometimes death to the visitors of the home. Not threatened by the spirit, the philosopher Athenodorus purchased the Athens home. As first he tried to ignore the existence of the spirit. As he found ignoring the spirit didn’t work, he observed as the spirit beckoned to him. He followed it into the garden of the home, where it promptly vanished. The next day, local officials came and dug at the site where the spirit had vanished, and there they discovered a shackled skeleton. They promptly gave it a proper burial and the haunting stopped.
The first true ghost hunters came shortly after the Fox sisters began the Spiritualist movement. John and Margaret Fox were devout Methodists living in Hydesville, New York, in 1848 when the first events took place. Their four adult children had long since moved away and started families of their own, leaving the youngest daughters, Margaretta and Catherine (Maggie and Kate), in their small home. One night in March, the family was asleep when strange noises abruptly startled them awake. Reportedly, a variety of bangs, raps and similar sounds kept the Fox family up that night and every night for the rest of the week. They searched for, but could not find, a source for the mysterious sounds. On March 31, the date often recognized as the birth of Spiritualism, Kate, the younger of the two girls, decided to try to discover what was causing the rapping. She asked the noise to rap ten times. It did. Kate’s questions became more complicated, querying as to the ages of the six Fox children, among other things, and each time the tapping responded perfectly.
The Fox sisters helped to begin the Spiritualism movement. Courtesy of Lily Dale Historical Society.
Through a series of question and answer sessions with the source, Kate discovered that the noise was that of the spirit of a peddler who had been murdered and buried in the basement of the Fox house some years past. The spiritual communication was given validity when human remains were reportedly unearthed beneath the floor of the small cottage. As word of the occurrences spread, the girls gained fame for their discovery of what would set off a veritable wildfire of Spiritualist activity. The sisters conducted many sessions outside of their own home as well, including a session in the Hyde House, better known as the Octagon House, which is now located at the Genesee Country Village in Mumford, New York.
In April 1848, news of the now locally famous Hydesville Rappings
reached the ears of Leah Fox Fish, Maggie and Kate’s older sister. Middle-aged Leah lived with her adolescent daughter in nearby Rochester, New York. Her husband had abandoned her and her daughter, so when Mrs. Fish saw the opportunity to capitalize on the fame of her younger sisters, she decided to seize it. Kate had to move to her brother’s house in Auburn, New York, while Margaret took refuge at her sister Leah’s house on Plymouth Avenue in Rochester. Raps broke out at both places, indicating that it was the young girls who were supplying the necessary vital energy for the spirit to manifest as it did. The raps were particularly violent in Leah’s house.
The violent disturbances continued in Leah’s house until a friend named Isaac Post remembered that the girls’ brother, David, had once conversed with the Hydesville spirits using the alphabet. As an experiment, they tried this method again with the following results: Dear Friends, you must proclaim this truth to the world. This is the dawning of a new era; you must not try to conceal it any longer. When you do your duty God will protect you and good spirits will watch over you.
From that time onward, the communications poured forth and the manifestations were orderly and nonviolent in nature. The successful relaying of the above message apparently released the frustration and urgency on the part of the spirit, thereby allowing more orderly and cohesive communication. Imagine, if you can, the sense of release you would feel if, after trying so very hard to convey a message to someone without success, you were suddenly able to do so. This is exactly what the spirit experienced during this period.
Although later on the Fox sisters would come under considerable heat with allegations of fraud and hoax, these allegations would never be proven without a shadow of a doubt. The commercial successes of this family had led to a much more important element: a way of believing in life after death, or modern Spiritualism. Spiritualism is a philosophy