Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Aradale Mental Hospital

Aradale Mental Hospital

Aradale 

Aradale is Australia’s largest abandoned lunatic asylum. Comprised of over sixty buildings and placed in over hundred acres on the top of a hill near Ararat, Victoria, Aradale (formerly known as Ararat Lunatic Asylum) is a most-impressive facility.

Opened in 1867, the complex housed, in its approximately 130 year history, tens of thousands of people described as ‘lunatics’, ‘idiots’ and ‘imbeciles’ – some of them described as the worst lunatics in the British Empire. As it was far from the prying eyes of the Melbourne population, the very worst cases were sent to Ararat, where no one cared what became of them.

Completed forty years before Freud, this building saw some of the most controversial psychiatric treatments in Australia. Around 13,000 people died there in its 130 years. As a result, Aradale is considered one of the most haunted locations in Australia.

Over the last year, for the first time in its long history, Aradale’s doors have opened for evening explorations. I recently went on a Ghost Tour of this massive place, and believe me, it’s pretty damn scary.

My immediate thoughts on arrival at the front of the facility were, “wow, that’s massive”. Then I realised that the front is just a minute part of the place. Just as it was getting dark, our guide, dressed in top-hat and tails, brought us in through the front doors and armed us with small, battery-operated lanterns. I had a high-lumen head-torch, so I considered myself lucky. Throughout the tour, we heard many stories about the place; of the torturous ‘treatments’ the patients were subjected to, of the long and sometimes sordid history of the place, and, of course, of the hauntings that have allegedly taken place within the facility.

There are many reports of paranormal activity within the boundaries of Aradale: tales of Nurse Kerry, who allegedly haunts the women’s wing and watches the ghost tour groups from one room in particular; the unexplained pains and sense of being touched by people in the old men’s wing surgery; the unexplained cold winds emanating from the old office of the facility director (we felt that one ourselves); and the back area of the men’s wing isolation cells, where banging can be heard on the walls, even though no one else is in the building. Finally, there are tales of Old Margaret, supposedly one of the many patients who were kicked out in the late 90s, when Aradale closed, who still hangs around the facility because it was her home for her entire life.

http://www.thisishorror.co.uk/columns/antipodean-nights/australias-most-terrifying-and-haunted-places-victoria/

The Old Geelong Gaol



The Old Geelong Gaol

Explore one of Geelong’s darker sides with a visit to the Old Geelong Gaol, which has recently been reopened, not for prisoners but for tourists.


old geelong gaol 

Formerly known as HM Prison Geelong, this bleak and scary building was built in stages from 1849 to 1864 by prisoners who slept on high security barges on Corio Bay.

In today’s terms the prisoners lived in appalling conditions with freezing blue stone walls and iron bars.

The prison was used right up until 1991 when the new “hotel style” Barwon Prison was built near Lara. The award winning Australian film “Everynight, Everynight” used the prison building as a film set in 1994.

The three-storey central block is a cruciform and was based on North London’s Pentonville Prison with east and west wings serving as cells (some featuring interesting graffiti), north wing as administration and the south wing as kitchen, hospital, ablution rooms and a tailoring workshop.
A tour takes in all elements of the complex including security points, prisoners’ murals, muster and exercise areas, watchtowers, and a gallows setting depicting the 1863 hanging of James Murphy for beating a constable to death with a hammer in the Warrnambool courthouse.

Many believe the goal is haunted not only due to the fact that plenty of people have died in the building during its lifetime but also due to strange noises and weird feelings felt by some visitors.

http://www.intown.com.au/locals/geelong/attractions/geelong_gaol.htm

The Ghosts & Mr. Demarest

The Ghosts & Mr. Demarest

By David Knox on February 17, 2014 / Filed Under Pay TV, Top Stories 2
Robb Demarest half body 

Robb Demarest has been chasing ghosts for more than 20 years, yet he still can’t say with any certainty if they actually exist.
“They cover the full spectrum. Nice ghosts, mean ghosts. If ghosts exist at all,” he told TV Tonight.
“The idea of ghosts exists. But it’s not so much if they exist but what are they? Plenty of people will tell you they saw a ghost, but what did they really see? Was it something created by their mind? A dead relative? That’s what I’m always trying to answer, but 20 years later I still can’t give a definitive answer.”
In three seasons of Ghost Hunters International, and now in Haunting Australia, Demarest doesn’t set out to prove the existence of ghosts, so much as to investigate a logical explanation for reported apparitions first. He does this via a heavy arsenal of technical equipment and gadgets.
But his work has come at a price.
“I’ve had people say to me I am an agent of the devil, or Satan’s minion,” he suggests.
“I tell them ‘I appreciate your opinion, and I can see where you are coming from. Thank you for bringing me your ideas to me and I will continue doing what I do.’”
He’s also not a ghost-buster, so much as ghost-identifier. When he visits locations rumoured to have experience paranormal activity, it’s not with the intent of exorcising or ridding them of spirits.
His interest in all things paranormal extends as far back as his teens.
“At 16 I did my first ‘official’ investigation which means I had a tape recorder in my hand when I went to a haunted place. But long before that I was about 8 or 9 when my mum would take me to an empty buildings, many of which were rumoured to be haunted and we would just wander around,” he recalls.
“I didn’t know that people actually made a career out of it. So at 16 I thought ‘Ok, how do they do it?’”
Yet while he has appeared on a successful franchise, it isn’t his day job. Demarest carries a Masters Degree in Business and works as a Business advisor in Dubai.
“I don’t like money or people who are motivated by money. I think money makes people unhappy. The only thing I enjoy about money is spending it,” he says.
But the extra-curricular work has led him to Australia for Haunting Australia in which he is joined by 5 other investigators visiting sites across the country.
“Haunting Australia is the culmination of the best show that I’ve been a part of,” Demarest declares.
“We wanted to take people from all different disciplines and see what would happen. So we have people from 4 different countries who use different techniques. We have an exorcist, a medium, a clairvoyant, someone like me who is completely technical and see what happens.
“Gaurav Tiwari brought ghost-hunting to India. Before that it was all very metaphysical and you would move your sage around to get rid of the ghosts. But he said ‘Let’s use equipment,’ so he’s a good mix of more traditional Indian values and technical equipment.
“Alan Tiller looks like a man mountain, he’s huge. And he’s still rocking the mullet. He loves the 70s apparently! He’s very technical and always coming up with new ideas.
“We have 2 gentleman from the UK: Ian Lawman who is known as a psychic badboy, a 27-1 bare-knuckle boxer as well as a ballet dancer. One of the odder mixes!
“Ray Jorden is another gentleman from England who thinks all the new stuff is nonsense. You don’t need the phones and voice recorders. It’s all about the old-school technique like baby powder, putting marbles down.
“And then we have Rayleen Kable, another Aussie, who is the clairvoyant. She combined the ghost-hunting as far as she could sense things with the equipment. We would have her saying ‘I’m getting a voice saying Yes.’ And when you play the tape back it says ‘Yes.’”
Amongst the locations visited by the team are Aradale Lunatic Asylum, Gledswood Homestead, delaide Arcade, Australian Pioneer Village, and Cockatoo Island.
“Unlike some shows we don’t fake anything. Whatever you see on this show is what happened. We didn’t rig anything or put a voice on tape, and that’s tough to do because TV networks say to you ‘Wait a second, what if nothing happens?’
“Thankfully Syfy and the production company believed in our ability to make an entertaining show because they know we were going to some of the top, reportedly-haunted locations in the entire country.”
So the big question: what did they find?
“On multiple episodes you will see photographs of apparitions. I don’t know how many other ghost shows can legitimately say that. We didn’t rig it or fake it,” he insists.
“You will hear voices when there was no-one there.
“Each one is a self-encapsulated story of the location. We tell the story, the history, the people.”
The most extreme incident involved one of the team being knocked out by a spirit, yet the show doesn’t draw any conclusions about what took place.
“He got attacked. He got laid out, unconscious at a location. I’ve watched it over and over and asked ‘What happened that created that situation?’ Did he eat something wrong? But when you watch it, it’s really compelling television,” he explains.
“You’ll see the debate in the show. The viewer will determine their own opinion.”
Despite his still unexplained position on the existence of ghosts, Demarest says any spirits he has encountered are here for one of two reasons: either they have “unfinished business” or they don’t wish to move on.
“They (may be) here because they are scared of what judgment is waiting for them, in my opinion. They did such horrific things that they don’t want to move on,” he suggests.
“But whatever is going to happen next is inevitable. You need to move on. If like me, you believe in a forgiving God, He will understand that you may have done things wrong, there is penance to pay and you will be ok.”.
Demarest is also ready to move on, he hopes to a more humbler existence.
“I want a candle shop right next to a small, meandering creek, and I’d be happy,” he says.
“I’ve put over 20 years into looking for ghosts and I think that’s enough.
“If Haunting Australia comes back for another season I’ll do it. Other than that… it’s getting to that time.”
Haunting Australia airs 8:30pm Mondays on Syfy

http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2014/02/the-ghosts-mr-demarest.html 

Haunting Australia


2014-01-24_0128 

Syfy unveils the world premiere of Haunting: Australia next month, featuring Robb Demarest from Ghost Hunters International.
An all new local production, Haunting: Australia follows a group of global ghost grabbing experts as they investigate some of Australia’s most haunted locations. In an effort to finally dispel the myths and spooky legends around our country, the team investigate each site using a slew of techniques. Spooky sites such as Sydney’s Cockatoo Island and the Old Geelong Gaol in Victoria all receive the expert treatment as they’re explored and examined by the team.
Internationally renowned ghost hunter Robb Demarest (Ghost Hunters International) leads the investigation with a sceptical yet open-minded approach. The team includes a number of paranormal professionals with clairvoyants, psychics and even exorcists forming a top supernatural task force. Demarest demands real physical or scientific evidence before believing a site is haunted. His scientific approach contrasts and complements the spiritual and psychic directions taken by the other team members.
Monday 3rd February at 8.30pm AEDT on Syfy.

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Nine Men's Misery

 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Nine Men's Misery is a site in current day Cumberland, Rhode Island where nine colonists were tortured by the Narragansett Indian tribe during King Philip's War. A stone memorial was constructed in 1676 which is believed to be the oldest veterans memorial in the United States.

History

On March 26, 1676, during King Philip's War, Captain Michael Pierce led approximately sixty Plymouth Colony colonial troops and twenty Wampanoag Christian Indians in pursuit of Narragansett Indians who had burned several Rhode Island towns and attacked Plymouth, Mass., as part of King Philip's War. Pierce's troops caught up with the Narragansett Indians, Wampanoag, Nashaway, Nipmuck, Podunk but were ambushed in what is now Central Falls, Rhode Island. Pierce's troops fought the Narragansetts for several hours, but were surrounded by a larger force of Narragansetts. The battle was one of the biggest defeats of colonial troops during King Philip's War with nearly all killed in the battle, including Captain Pierce and the Christian Indians ("Praying Indians") (exact numbers vary by account somewhat). The Narragansetts lost only a handful of warriors.
Nine of the colonists who were among the dead were first taken prisoner (along with a tenth man who survived). These men were purportedly tortured to death by the Narragansetts at a site in Cumberland, Rhode Island, currently on the Cumberland Monastery and Library property. The nine dead colonists were buried by English soldiers who found the corpses and buried them in 1676. The soldiers created a pile of stones to memorialize the colonists. This pile is believed to be the oldest veterans' memorial in the United States, and a cairn of stones has continuously marked the site since 1676.
The "Nine Men's Misery" site was disturbed in 1790 by medical students led by one Dr. Bowen looking for the body of one of the dead colonists, Benjamin Bucklin, who was said to be unusually large with a double row of teeth. They were stopped by outraged locals. The site was desecrated several more times until 1928 when the monks who then owned the cemetery built a cemented stone cairn above the site. The cairn and site can still be visited on the Monastery grounds.
Pierce's Fight was followed by the burning of Providence three days later, and then the capture and execution of Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansetts. The war was winding down even at the time that Pierce's party was destroyed, and in August, King Philip himself was killed.

FORMER MONASTERY IN CUMBERLAND, R.I CLAIMED TO BE HAUNTED

CUMBERLAND, RI- Ghost hunters are trying to determine if an old monastery in Cumberland, which is now a public library, is haunted.

Stories of voices, spirits even unexplained door slams have people very curious to see what the ghost hunters found.

"I have found things here at the monastery; rocks on the seat of my car after my car was locked and I've walked," said Marylou Boyer.

And the ghostly stories continue.

ABC6 - Providence, RI and New Bedford, MA News, Weather
 
Library director, Celeste Dyer said, "One of our staff members said she heard someone calling her name. Whoever was calling her name was using her full name which is unusual cause none of us ever call her by her full name."

Dyer won't tell us everything the ghost hunters investigated, but says they did record vibrations.

Throughout the Cumberland library remains parts of the monastery built in 1900. A fire in 1950 destroyed one of the main buildings.

Among the spooky places… the infirmary, a stair case with flaking plaster walls, and an outdoor grave.

About a ten–mile hike from the library brings you to Nine Men's Misery, considered one of the most haunted areas.

"The ghostly rumor is that if you come up here at night, sometimes you will hear moaning," Said Dyer.

But very few believe in ghosts.

Batty Hamilton said, "I don't really think I do. I've yet to see one."

Marylou Boyer claims it's haunted. She said, "Once I thought something was touching me and I turned quick and I thought I saw a shadow."

Story:ABC6
http://hauntedearthghostvideos.blogspot.com/2014/02/former-monastery-in-cumberland-ri.html
http://www.triprg.com/ri-s-haunts

Located in Cumberland, RI on the grounds of an old monastery is a site many Rhode Islanders don't even know about, never mind visitors to our miniature state. The site's stone and mortar monument marks the area where the luck of nine militiamen evading a bloody tidal wave of Native American anger ran out. The men were found flailed (skinned alive) and hung to slowly die as their tormentors looked on. Upon death, they were beheaded and their heads placed on poles with sticks placed in their mouths to make them smile, mockingly recreating the lying white men's smiles that they had tolerated for too long. The site can be seen as it appears today in the picture on the left just as it was erected in or around 1670.The men's agonized cries and moans have not died over the years and more than one visitor daring enough to put their ear to the stones have heard the cries of the men. Police have been called more than once to investigate reports of screams coming from the woods in the vicinity of the monument. These woods have been the scene of many other gruesome deaths over the centuries as well. Instrument readings go off the scale or are abnormally high in the immediate area of the tomb and many groups have succeeded in recording chilling EVP there. If you decide to see the monument for yourself, you just might see the ghost of a little girl running through the wooded swamp...perhaps another victim of the Natives' bloody revenge for the Great Swamp slaughter of their own children. Stop in at the town library while you're there, it is haunted as well. You just might be the next person to meet the ghost of a monk that sees to it that the library stays neat and clean!


Friday, February 21, 2014

Why orbs are not paranormal

Uploaded on Dec 29, 2010
A video to finally illustrate why orbs cannot ever be considered as evidence of the paranormal.
 
 

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The Ghost Under the Bed

The Ghost Under the Bed

Netlore Archive: Chain letter circulating via email and social media claims a ghost seen hiding under a bed in an attached photo will 'collect your soul' if you don't forward the message to at least five other people.

Description: Chain letter w/image / Ghost story
Circulating since: Oct. 2004
Status: False (see details below)
Example #1:
Email contributed by A. Riner, Oct. 28, 2004:
Subject: FW: Read story first before Looking @ Picture !!
This photo was taken in a hospital after the patient was in an accident where he was responsible for a young woman's death. It is said that when you receive this image and do not send it to at least five people, the woman will look for you during the night to collect your soul. People in Laredo, Texas, received this image and did not send it and were killed outside a bar; it looked as if this woman killed them. Send it to five people or the woman will look for you.

Example #2:
As shared on Facebook, June 21, 2013:
This photo was taken in a hospital after the patient in the bed was in an accident where he was responsible for a young woman's death.
It is said that when you see this image and do not share it, the woman will look for you during the night to collect your soul.
A couple in a western suburb area of Sydney saw the message and ignored the picture without sharing it. This couple was murdered by their 15 year old neighbor who claims to have been possessed by the woman.
A 28 year old woman in Whittlesay Road, Cambridgeshire, England, was run down by a car driven by another female that fit the description of the woman in the photograph, the police investigation revealed that the murdered lady had ignored this picture only 4 hours before her untimely death and did not pass it on.

Analysis: Chain letters promising dire consequences for those who fail to pass them along are old news, but variants accompanied by "ghost" photos such as the one above are a relatively new phenomenon and unique to the Internet, so far as I'm aware.
Another specimen that made the rounds in 2003 featured an apparition purportedly caught on film in Bangladesh. "The Ghost Under the Bed" began circulating just before Halloween 2004.
To those who will inevitably write and demand to know how I can "prove" that the chain letter and accompanying image are fake, I can only respond that if you really believe such proof is necessary, no logic or evidence is likely to convince you otherwise.
For the rest, suffice it to say that: 1) photos such as the above are easily fabricated using double exposure or digital manipulation, 2) chain letters do not exercise magical powers over their recipients, and 3) ghosts — dare I say it? — simply do not exist.
Update: Alex Boese of The Museum of Hoaxes informs me that this image was ripped from a 2003 Thai horror film (see sample DVD cover image at right) known variously as "The Unborn" or "The Mother."
Boese adds that he first received the image attached to a similar ghost story quoted as follows:
"This picture was taken in one of the rooms of 'Our Lady of Charity' hospital in Toluca, Mexico while one of the patients was asleep, the patient had been involved in a multiple car accident and the lady under the bed was the only one person who died in the same accident and taken to the morgue, the brother's patient captured this image with his own camera and the picture has been seen around the world and has been authenticated by the research center in Chicago, Illinois."
Read Here:

Myrtles Plantation Haunted Hotel

Ghost Adventures: Myrtles Plantation


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The GAC heads to St. Francisville, LA, to investigate one of the most haunted places in America: The Myrtles Plantation.

Filed under: 



Zak Bagans interviews Teresa David, general manager of The Myrtles Plantation in St. Francisville, LA. The plantation is considered to be one of the most haunted places in America.


Legends of Myrtles Plantation

This article is about the legends surrounding Myrtles Plantation in Louisiana

Legends and ghost stories

Touted as "One of America's Most Haunted Homes",[1] the plantation is supposedly home of at least 12 ghosts.[2] It is often reported that 10 murders occurred in the house,[2] but historical records only indicate the murder of William Winter.[3] In 2002, Unsolved Mysteries filmed a segment about the alleged hauntings at the plantation. According to host Robert Stack, the production crew experienced technical difficulties during the production of the segment. The Myrtles was also featured on a 2005 episode of Ghost Hunters.[4][5]

The legend of Chloe

Possibly the most well known of the Myrtles' supposed ghosts, Chloe (or Cloe)[6] was reportedly a slave owned by Mark and Sara Woodruff. According to one story, Mark Woodruff had pressured or forced Chloe into being his mistress.[7] Other versions of the legend have Chloe listening in at keyholes to learn news of Clark Woodruff's business dealings or for other purposes. After being caught, either by Clark or Sara Woodruff, one of her ears was cut off, and she wore a green turban to hide it.
Chloe supposedly baked a birthday cake containing extract of boiled and reduced oleander leaves, which are extremely poisonous. The various legends diverge as to why she did this, a house maid who was getting the favor of the mistress was a suspect with some saying she was getting revenge on the Woodruffs[2] and some saying she was attempting to redeem her position by curing the family of the poisoning. According to the legends, her plan backfired. Only Sara and her two daughters ate the cake, and all died from the poison. Chloe was then supposedly hung by the other slaves, and thrown into the Mississippi River, either as punishment or to escape punishment by Clark Woodruff for harboring her.[2]
The historical record does not support this legend. There is no record of the Woodruffs owning a slave named Chloe or Cleo, or any slaves. The legends usually claim that Sara and her two daughters were poisoned, but Mary Octavia survived well into adulthood. Finally, Sara, James, and Cornelia Woodruff were not killed by poisoning, but instead succumbed to yellow fever.[3][7]Regardless of the factual accuracy of the Chloe story, some believe a woman wearing a green turban haunts the plantation.[3]

Other legends


Reportedly haunted mirror within Myrtles Plantation
There are a variety of other legends surrounding the Myrtles. The house is reputedly built over an Indian burial ground, and the ghost of a young Indian woman has been reported.[2] During the Civil War, the house was ransacked by Union soldiers, and legend claims that three were killed in the house. Supposedly, there is a blood stain in a doorway, roughly the size of a human body, that will not (or would not) come clean. Other legends say that cleaners have been unable to push their mop or broom into that space.[3]
A mirror located in the house supposedly holds the spirits of Sara Woodruff and two of her children. According to custom, mirrors are covered after a death, but legend says that after the poisoning of the Woodruffs, this particular mirror was overlooked. The uncovered mirror reportedly trapped the spirits of Sara and her children, who are occasionally seen or leave handprints in the mirror.[8]
The plantation is also reportedly haunted by a young girl who died in 1868, despite being treated by a local voodoo practitioner. She supposedly appears in the room in which she died, and has been reported to practice voodoo on people sleeping in the room.[9]
There is also a ghost who reportedly walks, staggers, or crawls up the stairs and stops on the 17th step. Some have said that this is William Drew Winter, the victim of the only verified murder in the house. He was shot on his front porch and, according to legend, staggered or crawled up the stairs, but collapsed, dead, on the 17th step. Alternate versions of his murder claim he managed to crawl up the stairs, and collapsed in his wife's arms on the 17th step.[3][10] However, this version of the story is contested.[3]

References

  1. Jump up^ "The Myrtles Plantation". Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  2. Jump up to:a b c d e [1] - Myrtles Plantation Bed and Breakfast Haunted House[dead link]
  3. Jump up to:a b c d e f Taylor, Troy; Wiseheart, David. "America's Most Haunted: Myrtles Plantation". Troy Taylor. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  4. Jump up^ "Ghost Hunters". SciFi Channel. Season 2. Episode 201. 2005-07-27.
  5. Jump up^ Hawes, JasonWilson, GrantFriedman, Michael Jan (2007). "The Myrtles February 2005". Ghost Hunting: True Stories of Unexplained Phenomena from The Atlantic Paranormal SocietyNew York:Pocket Books. pp. 135–147. ISBN 978-1-4165-4113-4LCCN 2007016062.
  6. Jump up^ Hawes, Wilson and Friedman, p. 139.
  7. Jump up to:a b [2] - "Haunted Plantation - Myrtles Plantation Bed and Breakfast, St. Francisville, Louisiana" by Joe Nickell, Skeptical Inquirer, September-October 2003, retrieved July 18, 2006
  8. Jump up^ [3] - "Haunted Plantation - Myrtles Plantation Bed and Breakfast, St. Francisville, Louisiana" by Joe Nickell, Skeptical Inquirer, September-October 2003, retrieved July 18, 2006
  9. Jump up^ [4] - "Haunted Plantation - Myrtles Plantation Bed and Breakfast, St. Francisville, Louisiana" by Joe Nickell, Skeptical Inquirer, September-October 2003, retrieved July 18, 2006
  10. Jump up^ Hawes, Wilson and Friedman, p. 140. Winter's surname is misspelled "Wincher" in this book.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

America's Hauntings: The LaLaurie Mansion

Now that American Horror Story Coven, features a semi-fictitious story around the real events I thought I'd share. Madam LeLaurie character from American Horror Story: Coven was based on this actual woman.










Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Known for her involvement in the torture and murder of black slaves
Number of victims: Several
Date of murder: 1831 - 1834
Date of birth: c. 1775
Victims profile: Blacks slaves
Method of murder: Starvation - Torture
Location: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Status: Fled before she could be bought to justice. She was never caught. Died in Paris on December 7, 1842  


Marie Delphine LaLaurie (née Macarty or Maccarthy, c. 1775 – c. 1842), more commonly known as Madame LaLaurie, was a Louisiana-born socialite, and serial killer known for her involvement in the torture and murder of black slaves.

Born in New Orleans, LaLaurie married three times over the course of her life. She maintained a prominent position in the social circles of New Orleans until April 10, 1834, when rescuers responding to a fire at her Royal Street mansion discovered bound slaves within the house who showed evidence of torture over a long period. LaLaurie's house was subsequently sacked by an outraged mob of New Orleans citizens, and it is thought that she fled to Paris, where she died due to a boar attack during a hunting accident.
As of 2012, the Royal Street mansion where LaLaurie lived is still standing and is a prominent New Orleans landmark.

Early life
Delphine Macarty was born around 1775, one of five children. Her father was Barthelmy Louis Macarty, whose father Barthelmy Macarty brought the family to New Orleans from Ireland around 1730. Her mother was Marie Jeanne Lovable, also known as "the widow Lecomte," whose marriage to Barthelmy Louis Macarty was her second. Both were prominent members of the New Orleans white Créole community. Delphine's cousin, Augustin de Macarty, was mayor of New Orleans from 1815 to 1820.
On June 11, 1800, Delphine Macarty married Don Ramon de Lopez y Angullo, a Caballero de la Royal de Carlos (a high ranking Spanish officer), at the Saint Louis Cathedral in New Orleans. By 1804, Don Ramon had risen to the position of consul general for Spain in Louisiana. Also in 1804, Delphine and Don Ramon traveled to Spain. Accounts of the trip differ. Grace King wrote in 1921 that the trip was Don Ramon's "military punishment", and that Delphine met the Queen, who was impressed by Delphine's beauty.
Stanley Arthur's 1936 report differed; he stated that on March 26, 1804, Don Ramon was recalled to the court of Spain "to take his place at court as befitting his new position", but that Ramon never arrived in Spain because he died in Havana en route to Madrid.
During the voyage, Delphine gave birth to a daughter, named Marie Borgia Delphine Lopez y Angulla de la Candelaria, nicknamed "Borquita". Delphine and her daughter returned to New Orleans afterwards.
In June 1808, Delphine married Jean Blanque, a prominent banker, merchant, lawyer and legislator. At the time of the marriage, Blanque purchased a house at 409 Royal Street in New Orleans for the family, which became known later as the Villa Blanque. Delphine had four more children by Blanque, named Marie Louise Pauline, Louise Marie Laure, Marie Louise Jeanne, and Jeanne Pierre Paulin Blanque.
Blanque died in 1816. Delphine married her third husband, physician Leonard Louis Nicolas LaLaurie, who was much younger than she, on June 25, 1825. In 1831, she bought property at 1140 Royal Street, which she managed in her own name with little involvement of her husband, and by 1832 had built a three-story mansion there, complete with attached slave quarters. She lived there with her husband and two of her daughters, and maintained a central position in the social circles of New Orleans.

1834 Fire
The LaLauries, in the style of their social class at the time, maintained several black slaves in slave quarters attached to the Royal Street mansion. Accounts of Delphine LaLaurie's treatments of her slaves between 1831 and 1834 are mixed. Harriet Martineau, writing in 1838 and recounting tales told to her by New Orleans residents during her 1836 visit, claimed LaLaurie's slaves were observed to be "singularly haggard and wretched"; however, in public appearances LaLaurie was seen to be generally polite to black people and solicitous of her slaves' health, and court records of the time showed that LaLaurie emancipated two of her own slaves (Jean Louis in 1819 and Devince in 1832). Nevertheless, Martineau reported that public rumors about LaLaurie's mistreatment of her slaves were sufficiently widespread that a local lawyer was dispatched to Royal Street to remind LaLaurie of the laws relevant to the upkeep of slaves. During this visit the lawyer found no evidence of wrongdoing or mistreatment of slaves by LaLaurie.
Martineau also recounted other tales of LaLaurie's cruelty that were current among New Orleans residents in about 1836. She claimed that, subsequent to the visit of the local lawyer, one of LaLaurie's neighbors saw one of the LaLaurie's slaves, a twelve-year-old girl named Lia (or Leah), fall to her death from the roof of the Royal Street mansion while trying to avoid punishment from a whip-wielding Delphine LaLaurie. Lia had been brushing Delphine's hair when she hit a snag, causing Delphine to grab a whip and chase her. The body was subsequently buried on the mansion grounds. According to Martineau, this incident led to an investigation of the LaLauries, in which they were found guilty of illegal cruelty and forced to forfeit nine slaves. These nine slaves were then bought back by the LaLauries through the intermediary of one of their relatives, and returned to the Royal Street residences. Similarly, Martineau reported stories that LaLaurie kept her cook chained to the kitchen stove, and beat her daughters when they attempted to feed the slaves.
On April 10, 1834, a fire broke out in the LaLaurie residence on Royal Street, starting in the kitchen. When the police and fire marshals got there, they found a seventy-year-old woman, the cook, chained to the stove by her ankle. She later confessed to them that she had set the fire as a suicide attempt for fear of her punishment, being taken to the uppermost room, because she said "Anyone who had been taken there, never came back." As reported in theNew Orleans Bee of April 11, 1834, bystanders responding to the fire attempted to enter the slave quarters to ensure that everyone had been evacuated. Upon being refused the keys by the LaLauries, the bystanders broke down the doors to the slave quarters and found "seven slaves, more or less horribly mutilated ... suspended by the neck, with their limbs apparently stretched and torn from one extremity to the other", who claimed to have been imprisoned there for some months.
One of those who entered the premises was Judge Jean-Francois Canonge, who subsequently deposed to having found in the LaLaurie mansion, among others, a "negress ... wearing an iron collar" and "an old negro woman who had received a very deep wound on her head [who was] too weak to be able to walk". Canonge claimed that when he questioned Madame LaLaurie's husband about the slaves, he was told in an insolent manner that "some people had better stay at home rather than come to others' houses to dictate laws and meddle with other people's business".
A version of this story circulating in 1836, recounted by Martineau, added that the slaves were emaciated, showed signs of being flayed with a whip, were bound in restrictive postures, and wore spiked iron collars which kept their heads in static positions.
When the discovery of the tortured slaves became widely known, a mob of local citizens attacked the LaLaurie residence and "demolished and destroyed everything upon which they could lay their hands". A sheriff and his officers were required to disperse the crowd and, by the time the mob left, the Royal Street property had sustained major damage, with "scarcely any thing [remaining] but the walls".
The tortured slaves were taken to a local jail, where they were available for public viewing. TheNew Orleans Bee reported that by April 12 up to 4,000 people had attended to view the tortured slaves "to convince themselves of their sufferings".
The Pittsfield Sun, citing the New Orleans Advertiser and writing several weeks after the evacuation of Lalaurie's slave quarters, claimed that two of the slaves found in the LaLaurie mansion had died since their rescue, and added: "We understand ... that in digging the yard, bodies have been disinterred, and the condemned well [in the grounds of the mansion] having been uncovered, others, particularly that of a child, were found." These claims were repeated by Martineau in her 1838 book Retrospect of Western Travel, where she placed the number of unearthed bodies at two, including the child.

Late life and death
LaLaurie's life after the 1834 fire is not well documented. Martineau wrote in 1838 that LaLaurie fled New Orleans during the mob violence that followed the fire, taking a coach to the waterfront and travelling by schooner from there to Mobile, Alabama and then on to Paris. Certainly by the time Martineau personally visited the Royal Street mansion in 1836 it was still unoccupied and badly damaged, with "gaping windows and empty walls".
The circumstances of Delphine LaLaurie's death are also unclear. George Washington Cable recounted in 1888 a then-popular but unsubstantiated story that LaLaurie had died in France in a boar-hunting accident. Whatever the truth, in the late 1930s, Eugene Backes, who served as sexton to St. Louis Cemetery #1 until 1924, discovered an old cracked, copper plate in Alley 4 of the cemetery. The inscription on the plate read: "Madame LaLaurie, née Marie Delphine Macarty, décédée à Paris, le 7 Décembre, 1842, à l'âge de 6--."

LaLaurie in folklore
Folk histories of LaLaurie's poor treatment of her slaves circulated in Louisiana during the nineteenth century, and were reprinted in collections of stories by Henry Castellanos and George Washington Cable. Cable's account (not to be confused with his unrelated 1881 novelMadame Delphine) was based on contemporary stories in newspapers such as the New Orleans Bee and the Advertiser, and upon Martineau's 1838 account, Retrospect of Western Travel, but mixed in some synthesis, dialogue and supposition entirely of his own creation.
After 1945, stories of the LaLaurie slaves became considerably more explicit. Jeanne deLavigne, writing in Ghost Stories of Old New Orleans (1946), alleged that LaLaurie had a "sadistic appetite [that] seemed never appeased until she had inflicted on one or more of her black servitors some hideous form of torture" and claimed that those who responded to the 1834 fire had found "male slaves, stark naked, chained to the wall, their eyes gouged out, their fingernails pulled off by the roots; others had their joints skinned and festering, great holes in their buttocks where the flesh had been sliced away, their ears hanging by shreds, their lips sewn together ... Intestines were pulled out and knotted around naked waists. There were holes in skulls, where a rough stick had been inserted to stir the brains." DeLavigne did not directly cite any sources for these claims, and they were not supported by the primary sources.
The story was further popularised and embellished in Journey Into Darkness: Ghosts and Vampires of New Orleans (1998) by Kalila Katherina Smith, the operator of a New Orleans ghost tour business. Smith's book added several more explicit details to the discoveries allegedly made by rescuers during the 1834 fire, including a "victim [who] obviously had her arms amputated and her skin peeled off in a circular pattern, making her look like a human caterpillar," and another who had had her limbs broken and reset "at odd angles so she resembled a human crab". Many of the new details in Smith's book were unsourced, while others were not supported by the sources given.
Today, modern retellings of the LaLaurie myth often use deLavigne and Smith's versions of the tale to found claims of explicit tortures, and to place the number of slaves who died under LaLaurie's care at as many as one hundred.

LaLaurie Mansion
The New Orleans house occupied by Delphine LaLaurie at the time of the 1834 fires stands today at 1140 Royal Street, on the corner of Royal Street and Governor Nicholls Street (formerly known as Hospital Street). At three stories high, it was described in 1928 as "the highest building for squares around", with the result that "from the cupola on the roof one may look out over the Vieux Carré and see the Mississippi in its crescent before Jackson Square".
The entrance to the building bears iron grillwork, and the door is carved with an image of "Phoebus in his chariot, and with wreaths of flowers and depending garlands in bas-relief". Inside, the vestibule is floored in black and white marble, and a curved mahogany-railed staircase runs the full three storeys of the building. The second floor holds three large drawing-rooms connected by ornamented sliding doors, whose walls are decorated with plaster rosettes, carved woodwork, black marble mantlepieces and fluted pilasters.
Subsequent to LaLaurie's departure from America, the house remained ruined at least until 1836, but at some point prior to 1888 it was "unrecognisably restored", and over the following decades was used as a public high school, a conservatory of music, a tenement, a refuge for young delinquents, a bar, a furniture store, and a luxury apartment building.
In April 2007, actor Nicolas Cage bought the LaLaurie House through Hancock Park Real Estate Company LLC for a sum of $3.45 million. The mortgage documents were arranged in such a way that Cage's name did not appear on them. On November 13, 2009 the property, then valued at $3.5 million, was listed for auction as a result of bank foreclosure and purchased by Regions Financial Corporation for $2.3 million.
Wikipedia.org

History of Delphine LaLaurie
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Mme. Marie Delphine Lalaurie and her third husband, a doctor, Leonard Louis Lalaurie, purchased the grand home at 1140 Royal Street in the early 1830s. Upon moving in, she began to outfit the home with the finest of appointments -- costly furniture, silver and gold plates and paintings by noted artists. She would entertain and dispense hospitality from the downstairs drawing room.
She was born Marie Delphine, daughter of Louis Barthelemy Chevalier de Maccarthy. She was first married on June 11, 1800 to Don Ramon de Lopez y Angulo. When he died on March 26, 1804 in Havana, Cuba, she married Jean Blanque in 1808, who died in 1816. From there she married Dr. Lalaurie on June 12, 1825.
The circumstances of the deaths of her first two husbands are unknown and the whereabouts of Dr. Lalaurie at the time of the fire and subsequent to his wife's flight from town remains a mystery.
Mme. Lalaurie was well-known for her spectacular parties and galas which she gave frequently at her home. She was one of the most well-known women in New Orleans society of the time. Renowned Voodoo Queen Marie Laveau lived in New Orleans at the same time, just a few blocks from the Lalaurie House. Although the nature of their relationship is unknown, undoubtedly these two women met and knew each other.
It was said that Mme. Lalaurie's manners were sweet, gracious and captivating. She was born in the society's upper circles. She was accustomed to and acculturated to the good life. Yet there were persistent rumors that she treated her servants with disdain and in a cruel, abusive manner.
And still, those who visited her said that she was kind to her servants. If one of them tremble in her presence or startled at the sound of her voice, she would soothe and endeavor to reassure her. Nevertheless, the stories of barbarity increased. The smothered indignation on Royal Street grew.
One day the street was filled with the wild rumor that Mme. Lalaurie was seen by the neighbors cowhiding a little girl in the courtyard. The terrified young thing fled across the yard, into the house and up the winding stairway from gallery to gallery followed by her infuriated mistress. She rushed out onto the belvedere and darted up to roof, with Mme Lalaurie hot on her heels.
In another instant the child reached the edge of the roof -- falling with a dull thud to the courtyard below. She was lifted up and borne into the house a silent, crushed, lifeless mass of humanity. In the old yard there was a shallow well that is now a mere pit and neighbors assert that the night the young girl fell to her death, she was buried by torchlight in the well.
The legend goes that on April 11, 1834, a slave goaded by the cruelties heaped upon her, set fire to Mme. Lalaurie's kitchen. Some say the old woman had a dream the night before that she was fleeing the house in flames.
As the flames grew larger and hotter, word of the fire spread through the streets and soon the house was thronged with people over to assist Mme. Lalaurie in saving her valuables. There were among the crowd citizens of high standing, many of whom bore eyewitness to the scenes that followed. The fire was gaining rapidly, the kitchen was in flames and the upper stories were filled with smoke. Mme. Lalaurie seemed only interested in retrieving her plates, jewels and robes before they were burnt to a crisp.
The questions about the whereabouts of the servants began to filter through the crowd of assistants. "Where are all Mme. Lalaurie's servants that they do not help in the efforts to save?" Mme. Lalaurie met the questions with evasive answers. "Nevermind the servants, save my valuables. This way gentlemen, this way."
Someone began whispering that the servants were chained and locked up behind barred doors in the slave quarter and were sure to perish in the flames. The whisper became a loud voice -- vengeful and threatening. "The servants! The servants?" rose from a hundred different voices. "There are human beings locked in those rooms who will be roasted alive in the flames."
"The keys! The keys!" said a Creole gentleman; two or three men rushed forward clamoring for the keys, but they could not be found. "Who will follow me through the smoke and flames?" cried a brave Creole. A dozen or more men volunteered. The iron bars between the wing and attic were broken away, the doors were burst open and two old women with heavy iron collars upon their necks and irons upon their feet were brought out. By this time the fire was subdued.
The crowd continued to search the house. The garret was explored and more victims were brought out - gaunt and wild-eyed, loaded down with chains and crippled from the attitudes in which they had been chained to the floor.
The local press of the time said the story was like "covering one of those atrocities the details of which seem to be too incredible for human belief." They hesitated to report the atrocities at the house because of their graphic nature, but found it necessary to hold Mme. Lalaurie accountable and up for public ridicule, calling her a wretch.
A silence fell upon the neighborhood -- an ominous silence that proceeds the outburst of the smoldering wrath of an outraged public. In the morning an idle crowd began to form in front of the Lalaurie mansion. The numbers increased towards midday and by evening the throng was so dense that standing room was almost impossible upon the pavement of the street in front.
They hissed and hooted and some cried out for the owner's scalp. Mme. Lalaurie did not mistake the meaning and conceived and executed a plan to flee for her life. At the time of her daily ride in her carriage it drove up before the door and Mme. Lalaurie, dressed in her usual elegant style, stepped out on the sidewalk and entered the vehicle.
In a split-second the horses took off at full speed away from her house -- the last time she would be there. Mme. Lalaurie was taking her last drive in the fashionable quarter and it was a drive for her very life. It took but an instant for the crowd to recover from her quick thinking and in another moment they were at her back, yelling, hooting and screaming: "Stop that carriage!" "She is running away!" "Drag her out." "Shoot her." "Shoot the horses!"
But the mob's efforts were in vain. The coachman drove furiously at break neck speed. The horses had borne their mistress before and would not fail her now. Fashionable New Orleans stopped its carriages and watched in blank amazement the flying vehicle and the uproarious, uncontrollable mob. No human speed could keep up with those horses; the crowd breathless and panting, was left in the distance.
The carriage reached Bayou St. John and a schooner that was moored near the bank. She paid the captain a handful of gold and the vessel set sail for Mandeville. Mme. Lalaurie, it is said, took refuge for 10 days near the Claiborne Cottages in Covington. Some say she then made her way to Mobile or New York and then to Paris. However, there have been persistent stories that she never left the Northshore. Alas, what really happened remains a mystery as here, the trail goes cold...
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