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Ghost stories from Gainesville and Livingston, Alabama from 1939

Ghost stories or a part of Alabama’s past. Below are three unedited stories from 1939 written by a WPA writer who interviewed three African-Americans in 1939. Warning: Please remember this story was written in the 1930s and some words used may be offensive by today’s standard

THREE GHOST STORIES FROM GAINESVILLE AND LIVINGSTON, ALABAMA

written by

WPA (Works Projects Administration) Writer1

ca. 1939

Although many negroes nowadays (1939) insist that “sperets is ‘magination”, (a phrase they must either have picked up in school or from their children who have had it dinned into them by conscientious teachers, for its wording seldon varies). Even those who most vehemently profess a disbelief in the supernatural will sometimes under pressure admit that they have seen ghosts.

These ghosts assume all shapes – sometimes that of a large dog, or a cat, sometimes they are tall and formless, or appear in human shape with or without heads. And they possess the startling power of disappearing at will, usually with suddenness, but occasionally as if dissolving into thin air.

I have always been interested in stories of such manifestations, and have lately formed the habit of jotting them down. The following are some tales from my notebook:

JOHN FOSTER

And the headless ghost

John Foster, who lives about three miles this side of Gainesville has had several experiences with ghosts. On one occasion he was walking along alone at night when he heard someone come up behind him. John moved over in the path to allow the stranger to pass, but instead, the presence fell into step with him on his left and continued to walk along beside him. John’s salutation, “Good evening”, was met with ominous silence, and he began to be afraid.

Even before he looked around cautiously out of the corner of his eye, he knew it was a spirit, for the night was dark and disagreeable and it was not likely there should be another human wayfarer on that secluded road. Sure enough, it was a ghost. Tall, headless and misty white, it seemed to float over the ground, yet its footsteps were plainly audible.

Terror-stricken, John tried to out-walk it. He quickened his pace, but the spirit continued to float or walk effortlessly at his side. He was on the verge of breaking into a dead run when the ghost raised it’s two hands and slapped them together right at John’s ear! With that, it disappeared suddenly, but John has always been slightly deaf on that side ever since.

Encounter on a lonely road

John has had another with spirits, and church member or no church member, no one could convince him ghosts do not walk the earth to haunt the lonely traveller. One night he was coming home from Gainesville in his wagon accompanied by his wife. He had only a mile or so further to go and the evening was pleasant, so when he saw ahead a church lighted for prayer-meeting (he thought) and heard the sound of singing issuing from its windows, he decided to stop and attend the services. This being disagreeable with his wife, who can “witness” this story, they hitched their team in the nearby grove and walked toward the church. But lo and behold! no sooner had they set foot in the churchyard than the lights suddenly went out, the music stopped and all was dark and silent as the tomb.

“For goodness sake, John,” I asked, “What did you do then?”

“We jumped in de wagon en tore out for home,” he laughed. “I whupped dat horse, but seems lack I could er out run him fer fair dat night! And,” he added, “I ain’t never passed dat way atter dark sence!”

House built over a grave-yard

I talked to Dan Richards, who lives in the same neighborhood.

“No’m”, he told me, “I ain’t never been in a haunted house but I sho did useter live near one. Mr. C? B. Boyd built ‘er house down on ‘er bend uv de river. ‘Twuz ‘er bran’ new house, but fust thing you knowed they wuz knockin’s en bumpin’s and sech keefying-on at night he never could live in hit. He had ter move out, en ain’t nobody stayed dere sense. Dat place musta wuz so hanty hit musta been built on top uv er grave-yard!”

Henry Mason’s haunted house

Henry Mason, who lives on the McCain place about four miles west of Livingston and who often comes to the house to do odd jobs, is also a firm believer in ghosts. He told me once that the house in which he lived was haunted.

“Yas’m”, he said, “my sister – she died there, en my brother-in-law, he died wicked. I knows dey comes back visitin’. They says in church ‘Chile uv God, don’t be erfraid ter die’, but goin’ through de iron gate is mighty hard, en dem dat dies wid sumpin on dey min’ dey’s gonna come back of dey kin.

My brother-in-law, he name’ Ottaway Lett, he wuz er hotel man. Eve’ybody knowed Ottaway in dese parts, he wuz de porter at de hotel fo’ hit burned. He died uv ‘cute digestion. He et er aig (egg) en seem lack hit made er lump in his stummick en wouldn’t digest. He wuz lyin’ in de bed awful sick, de doctor didn’t do him no good, en my sister say, “Ottaway, wait on dat travellin’ man!”

Ottaway, he jump up en go ter gropin’ en er-fumblin’, den he fell down daid on de floor! Dat’s de reason he come back, caze I know dey wuz sumpin on his min’.

Dey sho is som funny things happen at our house at night! Sometime we see de spirit, dat’s what we think is sister. Hit’s tall en white en kinda smokey-like, en whilst hit’s in de room you gits de funniest feelin’, prickerly en hot all over yo’ arms en down yo’ back, en seem lack you cain’t talk.

Me en my chillun see hit lots er times, en hit makes us all fee dataway. Den hit kinda mists, off, en de feelin’ goes, en den we kin talk natcheral ergain.

Door knobs turn by themselves

Den we hears things, too – dat’s Ottaway. Sometimes de do’ knob turns en de latch click en de door open er little way. Den in er minute hit shets ergain.

One night de house wuz all shet up tight, hit wuz in de winter time, en all uv er sudden here come er big noise, wham, lack sumpin done fell out er de ceilin’ in de middle uv de floor. En I know hit wuzn’t de cats, caze we puts de cats out ev’y night. En we doan have no rats at our house, neither, tre be ‘sponsible fer de racket, caze we keeps two cats all de time.

We got er rockin’ cheer, too, whut rocks by hitself ‘thout nobody in hit. En sumpin shake de bed ef de light be out. We doan hardly ever sleep in de dark, we keeps er lamp burnin’ all de time, we be’ze so skeered uv de ghosts!

Walking to church

Jes de other night, me en my chillun wuz walkin’ erlong goin’ ter church en Clarice, she my oldest daughter, say “Poppa, dey’s er spirit goin’ long wid us”. En sho nuff, dey wuz. Hit wuz er warm steam travellin’ right erlong erside us en in er little while hit go erway. Dat happen lots er times, en my chillun heered me talk erbout hit so much they’d knowed right erway whut hit wuz. En sometimes de steam have er bad odor to hit. But hit ain’t no use ter be ‘fraid er ghostes. Dey skeer you, but day cain’t hurt you, de life is all gone out er dem.”

1During the 1930s, Great Depression era, many writers were employed to interview people and write stories about life in the United States. The program was named the U.S. Work Projects Administration, Federal Writers’ Project and it gave employment to historians, teachers, writers, librarians, and other white-collar workers. This is a transcribed, unedited story from a WPA writer Mabel Farrior on December 17, 1936.

VINEGAR OF THE FOUR THIEVES: Recipes & curious tips from the past

  • Have you heard excessive brain labor causes baldness or the cure for wrinkles is a tepid bath in bran?
  • Do you want to know Thomas Jefferson’s recipe for Vinegar of the Four Thieves or how to make Ox Tail Soup?
  • Have you ever had ‘blueberry pickles’, ‘batallia pie’ or ‘snow birds’? You will learn all this and more in “Vinegar of the Four Thieves.”

Our ancestors had to be resilient when they faced obstacles in daily life, from dealing with pests, medical emergencies, caring for clothing and cleaning shortcuts. Almost everything they used in daily life was homemade. Some ideas were great but some were very strange.

This book is a collection of household tips, medical cures, clothing care and old recipes from the 1800’s and 1900’s. Many of the tips, such as the household cleaners, cooking tips and ways to control pests, still work and are helpful in today’s ‘green’ environment while others such as ‘how to cure a dog of eating eggs’ will make you laugh. Either way, this book will help you appreciate the difficult life your grandparents endured.

With Bonus: First two chapters of novel Ribbon of Love

VINEGAR OF THE FOUR THIEVES: Recipes & curious tips from the past

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12 comments

  1. what is the meaning of people posting the names of another. Not a single comment here was noteworthy. only a person’s name?

  2. love good ghost stories. Some of my relatives has actually seen ghost/haints/spirits.

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