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The Haunted Librarian

~ Researching, investigating, and writing about the paranormal.

The Haunted Librarian

Category Archives: Uncategorized

Spring Break Road Trip: Cassadaga, Florida

30 Friday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Camps, Cemeteries, Famous Locations, Florida Mysteries, Hauntings, Historic Places, Road Trip, Roadside Attractions, Uncategorized

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carl hiaasen, cassadaga hotel, devils chair, george p colby, lake helen cemetery, lily dale ny, psychic center of the south, tom petty casa dega

Postcard

Spring Break Road Trip: Cassadaga, Florida

Spring Break is in full swing, and there are some off-the-beaten-path places worth exploring. One of them is Cassadaga, Florida. Cassadaga is 40 minutes north of Orlando, off I-4 or an hour and ½ southeast of Ocala. Here are 10 things to know before you go:

Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp

  1. Cassadaga is named after Cassadaga Lake outside Lily Dale, New York, sister town to Cassadaga, New York and Florida. Lily Dale is the oldest Spiritualist community in America. It was incorporated in 1879 as Cassadaga Lake Free Association but was ultimately renamed Lily Dale Assembly in 1906.
  2. George P. Colby (January 6, 1848-July 27, 1933), a trance medium, believed his Native American spirit guide “Seneca” led him to Volusia County, Florida in search of land to establish a Spiritualist community. George was homesteaded 145 acres in the area and donated 55 of those acres to create Cassadaga. He died at the age of 86 and is buried in the Lake Helen Cemetery.

Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Early Photo

  1. Cassadaga is a Native American word that means “water beneath the rocks.”
  2. Wintering psychics and mediums from the north sought a warm location to winter. The unincorporated town was established on December 18, 1894 as the Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Meeting Association.
  3. Cassadaga is known as the “Psychic Center of the South.” Less than 70 people reside in Cassadaga. All are psychics and mediums.
  4. The Cassadaga Hotel, the only hotel in town, was originally owned by the camp but was lost in foreclosure. It is privately owned. The original building burned down on Christmas Day 1926 but was rebuilt within 2 years.
  5. More than 15,000 people visit Cassadaga per year. There are 7 parks and meditation areas in the camp. Visitors can walk the town, book appointments with psychics, tour 2 historical buildings, shop the bookstore, or sip coffee at the hotel.
  6. Singer/songwriter Tom Petty (1950-2017) wrote the song “Casa Dega” about the town.
  7. Fiction writer and essayist Carl Hiaasen based the fictional town Grange in Lucky You on Cassadaga. In the novel, Grange is a strange town where people experience a lot of religious miracles. The main character JoLayne, and African-American woman who wins ½ of a Florida Lottery jackpot, resides in Grange.

CarlHiaasen

  1. If you visit, stop in the Lake Helen Cemetery, situated between Cassadaga and Lake Helen. In the cemetery in a family plot, there is a brick bench, a mourning bench. An urban legend has started that this is a “Devil’s Chair” whereby the Devil arrives when someone sits on the bench. Another tale states that if a can of beer is left, it will be empty in the morning. Let me know what happens.

DevilsChair2

Happy Travels!

Why Hospitals Are Haunted

28 Wednesday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Abandoned America, Famous Locations, Hospitals, Road Trip, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

hawkinsville state hospital, old hawkinsville state hospital, taunton state hospital, trans-allegheny lunatic asylum

Hawkinsville State Hospital

Hawkinsville State Hospital, Georgia Archives.

Why Hospitals Are Haunted

Ghosts haunt hospitals. Paranormal teams can investigate a lot of shuttered hospitals; however, very few have access to those that are open. Unlike cemeteries where the dead don’t have a strong connection, hospitals across the nation are the perfect locations for residual hauntings.

Prior to 1885, sick people were cared for at home by their family. According to Wendy Cage, author of Paging God: Religion in the Halls of Medicine, early American hospitals “provided lodging for the homeless, the poor, and travelers.” While some cities operated hospitals, a large number were established by religious organizations, specifically Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish organizations. Volunteer chaplains in many of these hospitals visited nearly every patient who died while admitted. Religious beliefs, prayer, and spirituality played a large role in the hospital ministry, even in an unofficial capacity. God and the afterlife may have been contemplated.

The pre-1920 hospital was where people went to die, not heal. These facilities were the place of last resort; staff were compassionate and helped ease death. For some, it was the last positive human experience; therefore, it would make sense that some dead would remain.

Modern US hospitals emerged after the Civil War. By 1920, people went to the hospital to be cured—not die. However, those who died in these hospitals may still have had a connection to the better service they received and may linger long after death.

TauntonTaunton State Hospital, Taunton, Mass.

Not all spirits who haunt hospitals are malevolent. In fact, there are numerous stories of helpful spirits or friendly spirits in closed hospitals. Nurses are commonly identified as haunting hospitals. Patients, too, linger. Few spirits are truly evil. Of these evil spirits, many may have not died at the hospital but are drawn there. However, abandoned asylums may be a different story.

Most of the facilities featured on Top Haunted Hospital lists were actually asylums. Further, a lot of these asylums and sanatoriums were horrible places. Cruelty prevailed. Understandably, these locations have a lot of negative energy and evil spirits attached. These abandoned facilities are dangerous. Anyone contemplating investigating an asylum or sanatorium should protect herself in body and mind. Say your prayers. Call on your spirit guides for protection. And when leaving, make sure that nothing or no one follows you home.

Trans-AllaghenyTrans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, West Virginia

If you find yourself in a hospital, look for these identify factors to see if the hospital is haunted:

  1. Scrutinize clothing. Look to see if the clothing is of a different time period.
  2. Check to see if you’re hallucinating. Were you dreaming?
  3. Look at people to see if they appear whole. Spirits will be missing a limb or some other important feature.
  4. Notice changes in smells.
  5. Watch for changes in electricity.
  6. Pay attention to sounds.
  7. Summon the courage to ask the nurses if the hospital keeps a “Ghost Report.” The GR is a listing of ghost sightings and strange phenomena. Not all hospitals keep a log, but you may get lucky.

Crisis and death happen at hospitals. Staff are employed over long periods of time and are attached to hospitals. Paranormal teams should head out to rural hospitals that have been closed and abandoned to investigate. These facilities present an opportunity to test new equipment, practice techniques, and discover new stories. Hit me up; I may tag along!

GAStateLunaticAsylum

ParaNews: Raising the Dead and Paychecks

27 Tuesday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Alty, Mummies, Stranger Things, Uncategorized

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ata

Mummy

Paranormal News for the Week of March 27, 2018

ParaNews: Raising the Dead and Paychecks

  1. The 6-inch skeleton discovered in Northern Chile positively identified as not being an alien. The mummified remains appeared to be disproportionate and fodder for many rumors since being found in a Chilean ghost town. “Ata” was aptly named for the Atacama Desert near the deserted town. Researchers were finally able to test Ata’s DNA. The findings revealed that she was genetically deformed. Scientists have not precisely dated the girl; however, they estimate she lived after 1500. She is privately owned. The findings are published in peer-reviewed journal Genome Research. Read the abstract here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/articles/29567674/

 

  1. Decomposing body of a sea creature is not the corpse of the mythical Georgia river monster “Alty.” Jeff Warren was boating with his son along the Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge when he spotted a disfigured, dead animal. He took pictures and video, headed inland, and passed along his tale. Locals were eager to claim “Alty” has been found, but not so fast. Area experts theorized the animal was a frilled shark, an elusive shark that has a long body. Read the blog here: https://thehauntedlibrarian.com/2018/03/23/sorry-its-not-alty-or-nessie-or-any-other-mythical-creature/

creature1

 

  1. Season 3 of Stranger Things begins production next month (April) with a very happy cast. All of the cast members secured huge pay raises. Adult actors Winona Ryder (“Joyce”) and David Harbour (“Hopper”) will earn between $300,000-350,000 per episode while at least two of the boys, Finn Wolfhard (“Mike”) and Gaten Matarazzo (“Dustin”) will earn upwards of $250,000 per episode. Caleb McLaughlin (“Lucas”) and Noah Schnapp (“Will”) will earn over $150,000, while Natalia Dyer (“Nancy”), Charlie Heaton (“Jonathan”), and Joe Kerry (“Steve”) will take home $150,000 per episode. The only unknown is Millie Bobby Brown. News media reports that she negotiated separately from the teenagers and will earn between $250,000-350,000 per episode. Considering the kids earned $30,000 per episode for the first two seasons, they have proven their worth on and off the set.

Season3

Note: Still waiting for the official Season 3 poster for Stranger Things.

Sorry, It’s Not Alty or Nessie or Any Other Mythical Creature

23 Friday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Alty, Mysterious Creatures, Nessie, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

altamaha-ha monster, dan ashe, georgia river monster, jeff warren, sea monster

creature1

Sorry, It’s Not Alty or Nessie or Any Other Mythical Creature

Georgia’s version of “Nessie” may have beached itself along the Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge. Or so the news media reports. Although it is easy to claim it was “Alty,” the bloated remains were probably something more common.

Last Friday, March 16th, boater Jeff Warren spotted a decomposing sea creature along the beach. He snapped a picture and took some video showing a long-necked, flippered grey dead animal. The only sure thing was that the animal was dead. He left the carcass and headed inland, sharing his tale with locals, who wondered if Warren had indeed witnessed “Alty,” the mythical Altamaha-ha creature reported to be haunting the Altamaha River since the 1830s.

He did not. According to Dan Ashe, former Director of the US Fish and Wildlife Service and current President and CEO of the Association of zoos and Aquariums, Warren probably spotted a marine animal whose shape was altered during the decomposition process. [Multiple media outlets keep reporting that Ashe is the current Director of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. He isn’t.] Ashe went on to theorize that the altered shape made the creature appear to be the prehistoric Plesiosaur, a creature common in the Jurassic Period that was located all over the globe. The Plesiosauria measured between 5-49 feet and had a broad, flat body, 2 sets of flipper-like limbs, and a tail. It died off some 200 million years ago. A full-sized preserved body of a Plesiosaur has never washed onto a beach.

Plesiosaur_on_land

Fig. 2. Heinrich Harder’s illustration of a Plesiosauria from the Jurassic Period.

Other marine scientists opined that the creature was possibly a juvenile frilled shark, an elusive “elongated deep-sea shark with prominent gill covers that give the appearance of a frill around the neck.” Seems the easier and more logical explanation. However, some people of Georgia hope it is “Alty.”

The river monster is a popular North American legend. It was first documented when on April 22, 1830, when Captain Delano of the schooner Eagle spotted her. Witnesses included 5 men on the vessel and people on St. Simons Island. For more information on “Alty,” read my upcoming blog. Suffice it to say, Warren’s creature isn’t “Alty” either.

However, there is a lesson here. When out exploring and you come across a strange dead creature, take the initiative and bag it for future identification. Who knows! Maybe next time it may be a prehistoric creature.

For Sale: Zombie-Free Lakefront Home in Canada

19 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Uncategorized, Zombies

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

kahshe lake, swan cottage kashe

Zombie-Free-Cottage-Billboard

Paranormal News for the Week of March 19, 2018

ParaNews for the Week of March 19, 2018

For Sale: Zombie-Free Lakefront Home in Canada

Travel agent and real estate owner Matthew Swan is offering a 30-day guarantee that his 3,100 square foot island getaway is free of zombies. Swan secured the domain name zombiefree.ca for the purpose of selling the 5 bedroom/2 bath cottage. Swan also advertises the home on a billboard on a highway nearby. Originally built in 1965, the home underwent a large expansion in 2007. The home reportedly sleeps 26 and sits on Lindhill Island in Kahshe Lake, an hour and a half north of Toronto. It is listed for $869,000 Canadian dollars.

What We Do in the Shadows (2014) is a Kiwi Delight

19 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Horror Movies, Movie Reviews, Movies, Uncategorized

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jemaine clement, jonny brugh, karen o'leary, mike minogue, taika waititi, welling paranormal

Poster2

What We Do in the Shadows (2014) is a Kiwi Delight

The BBC created a listing of the top 100 greatest comedies of all time. They polled 253 film critics from 52 countries compiling a comprehensive international list. What We Do in the Shadows came in at #62. Not too shabby for a low budget New Zealand production. This kiwi vampire mockumentary entertains and delights.

A film crew follows three vampires as they adjust to modern living with roommates, assign chores from the chore wheel, and navigate the singles scene in Wellington, New Zealand. Filmed for $1.6 million dollars, the film grossed over $6.9 million in the United States alone. The film is probably one of the most financially successful horror/comedy films Americans haven’t heard of. That is until now. Amazon Prime is streaming the film for free.

The three lead actors are large stars already. Taika Waititi, “Viago,” recently directed Thor: Ragnarok. Jemaine Clement, “Vladislav,” is the writer/actor responsible for Flight of the Conchords (TV series 2007-2009 and now a major motion picture opening in 2018). Jonny Brugh, “Deacon,” is a series regular on 800 Words, playing on US PBS stations, as “Monty.”

Walking

A mockumentary is “a motion picture or television program that takes the form of a serious documentary in order to satirize its subject.” Rob Reiner coined the term during press junkets for the film This Is Spinal Tap (1984), probably the most successful mockumentary film produced. Other examples are Best in Show (2000) and Drop Dead Gorgeous (1999). They are also called fake documentaries. Comedy is a key genre to a mockumentary films success.

Critics enjoyed the movie. Roger Ebert gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars. It has a 7.6/10 rating on IMDb and a 96% Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer score. Rolling Stone Magazine’s Peter Travers says it best: “But when the vamps hit the town to party with werewolves, zombies and the strangest creatures of all, you won’t be able to wipe the smile off your face. A good sign.” Actually, it’s a fantastic sign for the B-movie.

TaikaW

Taiki and Jemaine secured $1.4 million dollars for a spin-off of this film. It will be a 6-episode 30-minute situation comedy (sitcom) tentatively titled Wellington Paranormal. It follows police detectives Mike Minogue and Karen O’Leary reprising their roles in What We Do in the Shadows as they investigate paranormal phenomena. The website Gizmodo calls it “like the X-Files­ but with zombies and werewolves.” Stay tuned for US access.

5 Paranormal/Horror Movies You Can Binge on Amazon Prime

19 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Horror Movies, Uncategorized

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Poster2

5 Paranormal/Horror Movies You Can Binge on Amazon Prime

Amazon Prime has added 100 new movies to their streaming service. Here are 5 binge-worthy horror/paranormal films to watch—or even re-watch.

  1. Night of the Living Dead (1968);

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  1. Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1947);

 

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  1. What We Do in the Shadows (2014);

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  1. The Witch (2015); and

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  1. The Blackcoat’s Daughter (2015).

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5 Best Stephen Hawking Quotes:

17 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Cosmos, Extraterrestrial Life, Famous People, In the News, Obituaries, R.I.P., Space, Uncategorized

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hawking quotes, stephen hawking, universe in a nutshell

6390329

5 Best Stephen Hawking Quotes:

Professor Stephen Hawking (01.08.1942-03.14.2018) died at the age of 76 years old this past week. After earning his Ph.D. in 1965, Hawking went on to author many academic papers and books. He was a cosmologist armchair space traveler who enjoyed being lost in space. Although confined to a wheelchair since his ALS diagnosis in 1963, Hawking remained active and researching up until the end.

Below are 5 of his best quotes about the universe, extraterrestrial life, and the future of the human race. R.I.P. Professor. May your journey be filled with stars.

  1. “Hawking described Homer Simpson approvingly as a guy who ‘is always trying to get something for nothing.’ That’s the universe in a nutshell.”
  2. “I think the conventional afterlife is a fairy tale for people afraid of the dark.”
  3. “I think the human race has no future if it doesn’t go into space. I, therefore, want to encourage public interest in space.”
  4. “I think it would be a disaster. The extraterrestrials would probably be far in advance of us. The history of advanced races meeting more primitive people on this planet is not very happy, and they were the same species. I think we should keep our heads low”
    • In Naked Science: Alien Contact, the National Geographic Channel, 2004
  5. “The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race. It would take off on its own, and re-design itself at an ever increasing rate… Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete, and would be superseded”
    • Interview, BBC, December 2014

 

Finalizing the Manuscript

14 Wednesday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Mothman, Uncategorized

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Finalizing my manuscript on Mothman. Mothman--Meme

ParaNews for March 12, 2018

13 Tuesday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Amelia Earhart, Extraterrestrial Life, Famous People, Hoaxes, Horror Movies, In the News, Uncategorized

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Amelia Earhart, bryan bertino, michio kaku, richard jantz, strangers prey at night

AmeliaEarhart2

ParaNews for March 12, 2018

Paranormal News for the Week of March 12, 2018:

  • Media outlets seized on the Amelia Earhart disappearance by covering Dr. Richard Jantz’s overhyped article in Forensic Anthropology To be clear: Jantz does not proffer any new evidence or even support his theory that the infamous Nikumaroro Bones found in 1941 belong to the aviatrix. Read my blog titled “The Nikumaroro Bones Have Not Been Proven to be Amelia Earhart” detailing the serious flaws in his “research.”

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  • The sequel in The Strangers franchise debuted on March 9th. The Strangers: Prey at Night (2018) garnered poor reviews despite landing the talent of Christina Hendricks and Bailee Madison. The US gross totaled $10.4 million. Part 2 takes Bryan Bertino’s 2008 film The Strangers and places the unsuspecting family in a mobile home. Both were “based off a true story.” Unfortunately, it seems that it’s the same story—a fairly common one where kids reported strangers knocking on doors. Bertino also cited the Manson Family murders. Neither theme is supported in the scripts. The film is rated R and runs 85 minutes.

MichioKaku

  • My copy of Dr. Michio Kaku’s new book The Future of Humanity: Terraforming Mars, Interstellar Travel, Immortality, and Our Destiny Beyond arrived last week. Give me a few days to read; however, I will leave you with the alarm that Dr. Kaku recommends to humans interacting with extraterrestrials: RUN!
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