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Mount Vernon |
In 2012, I visited Mount Vernon, the estate of George Washington when he was the first President of the U.S.
(click here to read my experiences). I'm not the only one who has encounters with ghosts at the estate, however. In part 1 of 2, here's an experience I received from Mady, who says:
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A bedroom inside Mt. Vernon |
I visited Mount Vernon in the summer of 2015. I was in Virginia/D.C. for
the fourth. It was my first time ever visiting and it was BOILING hot. I
mean like 98 degrees outside, and dry (compared to my native South
Florida).
It's hot. I'm wearing a tank top and sweating my a$# off. The house was
built in the early 1700s/late 1600s, so it's safe to assume adding
central cooling into the house might jeopardize its structural
integrity. So, the only breeze entering any room of the house came from
open windows.
But, I kept on enthusiastically through the house since I am a FANATIC
for the founding fathers and their complex, rich histories.
Now, some of the rooms (the ones with more important artifacts, I
suppose) have a plastic half-door over the door frames so as to allow
visitors to peer into the room (sticking their heads and torsos in) and
nothing else. Pretty standard stuff.
So the tour guide's taking us through the house, telling us about the
history of the estate and the purpose of each room, and- finally- we
reach George and Martha's bedroom. I'm SUPER excited at this point. I
knew that this is the room George slept in (as well as the one where he
died), and I was DYING to see what it looked like. I vaguely noticed
that everyone else in the tour group was standing around the room,
looking at it from afar in the hallway, but I paid that no mind.
Instead, I walked right up and peered past the half door. There, I saw
his bedroom. I was in the room past my chest. I was looking around and
felt it was absolutely FREEZING in the room. It wasn't like, mildly
cold. It was like I had just stuck my face into a freezer cold.
I was confused (because NO other room was like that) and trying to find a
source for the cold (a vent or an A/C unit outside the window) but
there was none. The tour guide was talking about Martha's experience
with Washington's ghost. Before I could ask more about it, I felt all
the hair stand up on the back of my neck.
I mean like. In a way I've NEVER experienced before. And, from the
center of the room, I felt somewhere staring at me. Like, intently
staring at me. I felt their eyes move closer and closer, as if this
spirit in the center of the room was walking towards me while staring me
down. It was an intimidating presence. I knew immediately that it was
him.
At this point, I was FREAKIN
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George Washington's Mt. Vernon Carriage |
G out. I tried to move away, but I found I
was paralyzed (at least from the waist up). I couldn't move at all. I
struggled and tried to move or at least look away but couldn't. I tried
to open my mouth and scream, but nothing but air came out.
Finally, after what felt like at least 30 minutes (but was probably more
like 2), the eyes left me, and I was able to free myself, and I nearly
fell trying to pull myself away. The tour guide looked at me like I had
two heads and I tried to ask him if there was A/C in that room and he
told me "no, of course not."
IN PART 2 OF GHOSTS AT MOUNT VERNON (NEXT BLOG) - You'll read about another person who felt freezing temperatures in that same bedroom!
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For more stories about hauntings I've experienced, check out my books "Ghosts and Spirits" and Lessons Learned from Talking to the Dead" by Rob Gutro on Amazon.com
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"Ghosts and Spirits" and Lessons Learned from Talking to the Dead" by Rob Gutro |