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	<title>Texas Ghosts &#187; Texas Ghosts  T-arc, Texas Anomaly Research Center, Austin Texas</title>
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	<description>YOUR tales that go bump in the night...</description>
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		<title>The Ghost That Solved Its Own Murder &#8211; Greenbrier Ghost</title>
		<link>http://texasghosts.org/?p=342</link>
		<comments>http://texasghosts.org/?p=342#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 06:48:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>KWright</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Famous Hauntings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ghosts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[True Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greenbrier ghost solves own murder elva zona heaster shue]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://texasghosts.org/?p=342</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The true story of The Greenbrier Ghost &#8211; a remarkable case in which the victim&#8217;s spirit testified about its own violent death, and named the murderer! Her daughter was only 23. Yet Mary Jane Heaster watched through tear-soaked eyes as the body of her young daughter was lowered into the cold ground. It was a [...]]]></description>
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<h3>The true story of The Greenbrier Ghost &#8211; a remarkable case in which the victim&#8217;s spirit testified about its own violent death, and named the murderer!</h3>
<p>Her daughter was only 23. Yet Mary Jane Heaster watched through tear-soaked eyes as the body of her young daughter was lowered into the cold ground. It was a gray, dreary day in late January, 1897 as Elva Zona Heaster Shue was laid to rest in the cemetery near Greenbrier, West Virginia. Her death came much too soon, thought Mary Jane. Too unexpectedly&#8230; too mysteriously.</p>
<p>The coroner listed the cause of death as complications from childbirth. But Zona, as she preferred to be called, had not been giving birth when she died. In fact, as far as anyone knew, the woman was not even pregnant. Mary Jane was certain that her daughter&#8217;s death was quite unnatural. If only Zona could speak from the grave, she hoped, and explain what had really brought about her untimely passing.</p>
<p>In one of the most remarkable cases on U.S. court records, Zona Heaster Shue did speak from her grave, revealing not only how she died &#8211; but at whose hand. Her ghost&#8217;s testimony not only named her own murderer, but helped in convicting the culprit in a court of law. It is the only case on U.S. lawbooks in which the testimony from the spirit of a murder victim aided in resolving the crime.</p>
<p><strong>THE MARRIAGE</strong></p>
<p>Just two years before Zona&#8217;s death, Mary Jane Heaster had endured another hardship with her daughter. Zona had given birth to a child out of wedlock &#8211; a scandalous event in the late 1800s. The father, whoever he was, did not marry Zona, and so the young woman was in need of a husband. In 1896, Zona chanced to meet Erasmus Stribbling Trout Shue. Going by the name Edward, he was newly arrived in Greenbrier, looking to make a new life for himself as a blacksmith. Upon meeting, Edward and Zona took an instant liking to one another and a courtship began.</p>
<p>Mary Jane, however, was not pleased. Protective of her daughter, especially after her recent difficulty, she did not approve of her Zona&#8217;s choice in Edward. There was something about him she didn&#8217;t like. He was virtually a stranger, after all. And there was something she didn&#8217;t trust&#8230; perhaps even something evil that her daughter, blinded by love, could not see. Despite her mother&#8217;s protests, however, Zona and Edward were married on October 26, 1896.</p>
<p><strong>THE BODY</strong></p>
<p>Three months passed. On January 23, 1897, an 11-year-old African American boy named Andy Jones entered the Shue home and found Zona lying on the floor. He had been sent there by Edward to ask Zona if she needed anything from the market. He stood for a moment looking at the woman, at first not knowing what to make of the scene. Her body was stretched out straight with her legs together. One arm was at her side and the other resting on her body. Her head was tilted to one side.</p>
<p>At first Andy wondered if the woman was asleep on the floor. He stepped quietly toward her. &#8220;Mrs. Shue?&#8221; he called softly. Something was not right. The boy&#8217;s heart began to race as panic swept over his body. Something was dreadfully wrong. Andy bolted from the Shue house and rushed home to tell his mother what he had found.</p>
<p>The local physician and coroner, Dr. George W. Knapp, was summoned. He did not arrive at the Shue residence for about an hour, and by that time Edward had already taken Zona&#8217;s lifeless body to an upstairs bedroom. When Knapp entered the room, he was astonished to see that Edward had redressed her in her best Sunday clothing &#8211; a beautiful dress with a high neck and stiff collar. Edward had also covered her face with a veil.</p>
<p>Obviously, Zona was dead. But how? Dr. Knapp tried to examine the body to determine cause of death, but all the while Edward, crying bitterly &#8211; almost hysterically &#8211; cradled his dead wife&#8217;s head in his arms. Dr. Knapp could find nothing out of the ordinary that would explain the death of what appeared to have been a healthy young woman. But then he noticed something &#8211; a slight discoloration on the right side of her cheek and neck. The doctor wanted to examine the marks, but Edward protested so vehemently that Knapp ended the examination, announcing that poor Zona had died of &#8220;an everlasting faint.&#8221; Officially and for the record, he inexplicably wrote that the cause of death was &#8220;childbirth.&#8221; Just as mysterious was his failure to notify the police about the strange marks on her neck that he was unable to examine.</p>
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<p><strong>THE WAKE AND THE GHOST</strong></p>
<p>Mary Jane Heaster was beside her self with grief. She felt that Zona&#8217;s marriage to Edward would come to a bad end&#8230; but not this. Were her apprehensions about Edward more dreadful than she imagined? Were her motherly instincts correct in not trusting this stranger?</p>
<p>Her suspicions deepened at Zona&#8217;s wake. Edward was acting strangely; not exactly like a husband in mourning. Some of the neighbors attending the wake noticed it, too. One moment he seemed grief-struck, another moment highly agitated and nervous. He had placed a pillow on one side of Zona&#8217;s head and a rolled up cloth on the other, as if keeping it propped in place. He refused to allow anyone near her. Her neck was covered by a large scarf that Edward claimed was her favorite and that he wanted her buried in it. At the end of the wake, as the coffin was being prepared to be taken to the cemetery, several people noticed an odd looseness of Zona&#8217;s head.</p>
<p>Zona was buried. Despite all of the strangeness surrounding her daughter&#8217;s death, Mary Jane Heaster had no proof of any kind that Edward was somehow to blame, or that Zona&#8217;s death was in any way unnatural. The suspicions and the questions might have been buried along with Zona and eventually forgotten had not some unexplained phenomena begun to take place.</p>
<p>Mary Jane had taken the rolled up white sheet from Zona&#8217;s coffin before it was sealed. And now, days after the funeral she tried to return it to Edward. In keeping with his peculiar behavior, he refused to take it. Mary Jane brought it back home with her, deciding to keep it as a memory of her daughter. She noticed. however, that it had a strange, indefinable odor. She filled a basin with water in which to wash the sheet. When she submerged the sheet, the water turned red, the color bleeding from the sheet. Mary Jane jumped back in astonishment. She took a pitcher and scooped some of the water from the basin. It was clear.</p>
<p>The once-white sheet was now stained pink, and nothing Mary Jane would do could remove the stain. She washed it, boiled it and hung it in the sun. The stain remained. It was a sign, Mary Jane thought. A message from Zona that her death was far from natural.</p>
<p>If only Zona could tell her what happened and how. Mary Jane prayed that Zona would come back from the dead and reveal the circumstances of her death. Mary Jane made this prayer every day for weeks&#8230; and then her prayer was answered.</p>
<p>Cold winter winds swirled around the streets of Greenbrier. As the early darkness crept into Mary Jane Heaster&#8217;s home every night, she lit her oil lamps and candles for light, and stoked the wood stove for warmth. From out of this dim atmosphere, so Mary Jane claimed, the spirit of her beloved Zona appeared to her on four nights. During these spectral visits, Zona told her mother how she had died.</p>
<p>Edward was cruel and abusive to her, Zona said. And on the day of her death his violence went too far. Edward became irrationally angry at her when she told them she had no meat for his dinner. He was overcome with rage and lashed out at his wife. He savagely attacked the defenseless woman and broke her neck. To prove her account, the ghost slowly turned its head completely around at the neck.</p>
<p><strong>THE PROOF</strong></p>
<p>Zona&#8217;s ghost had confirmed her mother&#8217;s worst suspicions. It all fit: Edward&#8217;s strange behavior and the way he attempted to protect his dead wife&#8217;s neck from movement and inspection. He had murdered the poor woman! Mary Jane took her story to John Alfred Preston, the local prosecutor. Preston listened patiently, if skeptically, to Mrs. Heaster&#8217;s story of the telltale ghost. He certainly had his doubts about it, but there was enough that was unusual or suspicious about the case, and he decided to pursue it.</p>
<p>Preston ordered Zona&#8217;s body exhumed for an autopsy. Edward protested the action, but had no power to stop it. He began to show signs of great stress. He said publicly that he knew he would be arrested for the crime, but that &#8220;they will not be able to prove I did it.&#8221; Prove what?, Edward&#8217;s friends wondered, unless he knew she had been murdered.</p>
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<p>The autopsy revealed &#8211; just as the ghost has said &#8211; that Zona&#8217;s neck was broken and her windpipe crushed from violent strangulation. Edward Shue was arrested on charge of murder.</p>
<p>As he awaited trial in jail, Edward&#8217;s rather unsavory background came to light. He had served time in jail on a previous occasion, being convicted of stealing a horse. Edward had been married twice before, each marriage suffering under his violent temper. His first wife divorced him after he had angrily thrown all of her possessions out of their house. His second wife wasn&#8217;t so lucky; she died under mysterious circumstances of a blow to the head. Once again, Mary Jane&#8217;s intuition about this man was verified. He was evil.</p>
<p>And maybe he was a bit of a psychopath. His jailkeepers and cellmates reported that Edward seemed to be in good spirits while in jail. In fact, he bragged that it was intention to eventually have seven wives. Being only 35 years old, he said, he should easily be able to realize his ambition. Apparently, he was certain that he would not be convicted of Zona&#8217;s death. What evidence was there, after all?</p>
<p>The evidence against Edward may have only been circumstantial at best. But he didn&#8217;t count on the testimony of an eyewitness to the murder &#8211; Zona.</p>
<p><strong>THE TRIAL</strong></p>
<p>Spring had come and gone, and it was now late June when Edward&#8217;s trial for murder came before a jury. The prosecutor lined up several people to testify against Edward, citing his peculiar behavior and his unguarded comments. But would that be enough to convict him? There were no other witnesses to the crime, and Edward had not been placed at or near the scene at the time the murder allegedly took place. Taking the stand in his defense, he vehemently denied the charges.</p>
<p>What of Zona&#8217;s ghost? The court had ruled that prosecuting testimony about the ghost and what it claimed was inadmissible. But then Edward&#8217;s defending lawyer made a mistake that perhaps sealed his client&#8217;s fate. He called Mary Jane Heaster to the stand. In an attempt, perhaps, to show that the woman was unbalanced &#8211; maybe even insane &#8211; and prejudicial against his client, he brought up the matter of Zona&#8217;s ghost.</p>
<p>Seated on the witness stand in front of a packed courtroom and an attentive jury, Mary Jane told the story of how Zona&#8217;s ghost appeared to her and accused Edward of the foul deed &#8211; that her neck had been &#8220;squeezed off at the first verterbrae.&#8221;</p>
<p>Whether or not the jury took Mary Jane&#8217;s &#8211; or rather Zona&#8217;s &#8211; testimony seriously is not known. But they did hand down a verdict of guilty on the charge of murder. Normally, such a conviction would have brought a sentence of death, but because of the circumstantial nature of the evidence, Edward was sentenced to life in prison. He died on March 13, 1900 in the Moundsville, W.V. penitentiary.</p>
<p><strong>THE QUESTIONS</strong></p>
<p>Was the jury swayed, even a little, by the story of Zona&#8217;s ghost? Was there even a ghost at all? Or was Mary Jane Heaster so convinced that Edward Shue had murdered her daughter that she made up the story to help convict him? In either case, without the story of Zona&#8217;s ghost, Mary Jane may never have had the courage to approach the prosecutor, and Edward may never have been brought to trial. And Zona&#8217;s ghost would have remained unavenged.</p>
<p>A highway historical marker near Greenbrier commemorates Zona and the unusual court case surrounding her death:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Interred in nearby cemetery is<br />
Zona Heaster Shue</strong></p>
<p>Her death in 1897 was presumed natural until her spirit appeared to her mother to describe how she was killed by her husband Edward. Autopsy on the exhumed body verified the apparition&#8217;s account. Edward, found guilty of murder, was sentenced to the state prison. Only known case in which testimony from ghost helped convict a murderer.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Chloe of the Myrtles Plantation</title>
		<link>http://texasghosts.org/?p=86</link>
		<comments>http://texasghosts.org/?p=86#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2011 04:42:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>KWright</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Famous Hauntings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ghosts]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Possibly the most well known of the Myrtles supposed ghosts, Chloe was reportedly a slave owned by Clark and Sara Woodruff. According to one story, Clark Woodruff had pressured or forced Chloe into being his mistress. Other versions of the legend have Chloe listening in at keyholes to learn news of Clark Woodruff&#8217;s business dealings or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_87" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 382px"><a href="http://texasghosts.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/chloe_myrtles_plantation.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-87 " title="chloe_myrtles_plantation" src="http://texasghosts.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/chloe_myrtles_plantation.jpg" alt="chloe myrtles plantation" width="372" height="236" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Chloe at Myrtles Plantation</p></div>
<p>Possibly the most well known of the Myrtles supposed ghosts, Chloe was reportedly a slave owned by Clark and Sara Woodruff. According to one story, Clark Woodruff had pressured or forced Chloe into being his mistress<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 11px;">.</span> Other versions of the legend have Chloe listening in at keyholes to learn news of Clark Woodruff&#8217;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.</p>
<p>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 whom was getting the favor of the mistress was a suspect with some saying she was getting revenge on the Woodruffs<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 11px;"> </span>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 hanged by the other slaves, and thrown into the Mississippi River, either as punishment or to escape punishment by Clark Woodruff for harboring her.</p>
<p>The historical record does not support this legend. There is no record of the Woodruffs owning a slave named Chloe, 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.<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: 11px;"> </span>Regardless of the factual accuracy of the Chloe story, some believe a woman wearing a green turban haunts the plantation.</p>
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		<title>The Bell Witch</title>
		<link>http://texasghosts.org/?p=22</link>
		<comments>http://texasghosts.org/?p=22#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Sep 2011 04:05:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>KWright</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Famous Hauntings]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://prod12/texasghosts/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The tormenting spirit of America&#8217;s best-known poltergeist case ADAMS, TENNESSEE, in 1817 was the site of one of the most well-known hauntings in American history &#8211; so well known that it eventually caught the attention and then the involvement of a future president of the United States. Known as The Bell Witch, the strange and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>The tormenting spirit of America&#8217;s best-known poltergeist case</strong></p>
<p>ADAMS, TENNESSEE, in 1817 was the site of one of the most well-known hauntings in American history &#8211; so well known that it eventually caught the attention and then the involvement of a future president of the United States.</p>
<p>Known as The Bell Witch, the strange and often violent poltergeist activity that provoked fear and curiosity in the small farming community has remained unexplained for nearly 200 years, and is the inspiration for many fictional ghost stories, including the recent film, The Blair Witch Project. The facts of The Bell Witch case share little in common with the mythology created for The Blair Witch Project, except they both attracted a great deal of public interest. And because it really happened, The Bell Witch is far scarier.</p>
<p><strong>The Historical Record</strong></p>
<p>One early account of The Bell Witch haunting was written in 1886 by historian Albert Virgil Goodpasture in his History of Tennessee. He wrote, in part:</p>
<p>    A remarkable occurrence, which attracted wide-spread interest, was connected with the family of John Bell, who settled near what is now Adams Station about 1804. So great was the excitement that people came from hundreds of miles around to witness the manifestations of what was popularly known as the &#8220;Bell Witch.&#8221; This witch was supposed to be some spiritual being having the voice and attributes of a woman. It was invisible to the eye, yet it would hold conversation and even shake hands with certain individuals. The freaks it performed were wonderful and seemingly designed to annoy the family. It would take the sugar from the bowls, spill the milk, take the quilts from the beds, slap and pinch the children, and then laugh at the discomfiture of its victims. At first it was supposed to be a good spirit, but its subsequent acts, together with the curses with which it supplemented its remarks, proved the contrary. A volume might be written concerning the performance of this wonderful being, as they are now described by contemporaries and their descendants. That all this actually occurred will not be disputed, nor will a rational explanation be attempted. </p>
<p><strong>The Vengeful Ghost</strong></p>
<p>What was the Bell Witch? Like most such stories, certain details vary from version to version. But the prevailing account is that it was the spirit of Kate Batts, a mean old neighbor of John Bell who believed she was cheated by him in a land purchase. On her deathbed, she swore that she would haunt John Bell and his descendents. The story is picked up by the Guidebook for Tennessee, published in 1933 by the Federal Government&#8217;s Works Project Administration:</p>
<p>    Sure enough, tradition says, the Bells were tormented for years by the malicious spirit of Old Kate Batts. John Bell and his favorite daughter Betsy were the principal targets. Toward the other members of the family the witch was either indifferent or, as in the case of Mrs. Bell, friendly. No one ever saw her, but every visitor to the Bell home heard her all too well. Her voice, according to one person who heard it, &#8220;spoke at a nerve-racking pitch when displeased, while at other times it sang and spoke in low musical tones.&#8221; The spirit of Old Kate led John and Betsy Bell a merry chase. She threw furniture and dishes at them. She pulled their noses, yanked their hair, poked needles into them. She yelled all night to keep them from sleeping, and snatched food from their mouths at mealtime. </p>
<p><strong>Andrew Jackson Challenges the Witch</strong></p>
<p>So widely spread was the news about The Bell Witch that people came from hundreds of miles around hoping to hear the spirit&#8217;s shrill voice or witness a manifestation of its vile temper. When word of the haunting reached Nashville, one of its most famous citizens, General Andrew Jackson, decided to gather a party of friends and journey to Adams to investigate.</p>
<p>The General, who had earned his tough reputation in many conflicts with Native Americans, was determined to confront the phenomenon and either expose it as a hoax or send the spirit away. A chapter in M. V. Ingram&#8217;s 1894 book, An Authenticated History of the Famous Bell Witch &#8211; considered by many to be the best account of the story &#8211; is devoted to Jackson&#8217;s visit:</p>
<p>    Gen. Jackson&#8217;s party came from Nashville with a wagon loaded with a tent, provisions, etc., bent on a good time and much fun investigating the witch. The men were riding on horseback and were following along in the rear of the wagon as they approached near the place, discussing the matter and planning how they were going to do up the witch. Just then, traveling over a smooth level piece of road, the wagon halted and stuck fast. The driver popped his whip, whooped and shouted to the team, and the horses pulled with all of their might, but could not move the wagon an inch. It was dead stuck as if welded to the earth. Gen. Jackson commanded all men to dismount and put their shoulders to the wheels and give the wagon a push, but all in vain; it was no go. The wheels were then taken off, one at a time, and examined and found to be all right, revolving easily on the axles. Gen. Jackson after a few moments thought, realizing that they were in a fix, threw up his hands exclaiming, &#8220;By the eternal, boys, it is the witch.&#8221; Then came the sound of a sharp metallic voice from the bushes, saying, &#8220;All right General, let the wagon move on, I will see you again to-night.&#8221; The men in bewildered astonishment looked in every direction to see if they could discover from whence came the strange voice, but could find no explanation to the mystery. The horses then started unexpectedly of their own accord, and the wagon rolled along as light and smoothly as ever. </p>
<p><strong>Attack on Jackson?</strong></p>
<p>According to some versions of the story, Jackson did indeed encounter The Bell Witch that night:</p>
<p>    Betsy Bell screamed all night from the pinching and slapping she received from the Witch, and Jackson&#8217;s covers were ripped off as quickly as he could put them back on, and he had his entire party of men were slapped, pinched and had their hair pulled by the witch until morning, when Jackson and his men decided to hightail it out of Adams. Jackson was later quoted as saying, &#8220;I&#8217;d rather fight the British in New Orleans than to have to fight the Bell Witch.&#8221; </p>
<p><strong>The Death of John Bell</strong></p>
<p>The torment of the Bell house continued for years, culminating in the ghost&#8217;s ultimate act of vengeance upon the man she claimed had cheated her: she took responsibility for his death. In October 1820, Bell was struck with an illness while walking to the pigsty of his farm. Some believe that he suffered a stroke, since thereafter he had difficulty speaking and swallowing. In and out of bed for several weeks, his health declined. The Tennessee State University in Nashville, Tennessee, tells this part of the story:</p>
<p>    On the morning of December 19, he failed to awake at his regular time. When the family noticed he was sleeping unnaturally, they attempted to arouse him. They discovered Bell was in a stupor and couldn&#8217;t be completely awakened. John Jr. went to the medicine cupboard to get his father&#8217;s medicine and noticed it was gone with a strange vial in its place. No one claimed to have replaced the medicine with the vial. A doctor was summoned to the house. The witch began taunting that she had place the vial in the medicine cabinet and given Bell a dose of it while he slept. Contents of the vial were tested on a cat and discovered to be highly poisonous. John Bell died on December 20. &#8220;Kate&#8221; was quiet until after the funeral. After the grave was filled, the witch began singing loudly and joyously. This continued until all friends and family left the grave site. </p>
<p>The Bell Witch left the Bell household in 1821, saying that she would return in seven years time. She made good on her promise and &#8220;appeared&#8221; at the home of John Bell, Jr. where, it is said, she left him with prophecies of future events, including the Civil War, and World Wars I and II. The ghost said it would reappear 107 years later &#8211; in 1935 &#8211; but if she did, no one in Adams came forward as a witness to it.</p>
<p>Some claim that the spirit still haunts the area. On the property once owned by the Bells is a cave, which has since become known as The Bell Witch Cave, and many locals claim to have seen strange apparitions at the cave and at other spots on the property.</p>
<p><strong>An Explanation?</strong></p>
<p>A few rational explanations of The Bell Witch phenomena have been offered over the years. The haunting, they say, was a hoax perpetrated by Richard Powell, the schoolteacher of Betsy Bell and Joshua Gardner, with whom Betsy was in love. It seems Powell was deeply in love with the young Betsy and would do anything to destroy her relationship with Gardner. Through a variety of pranks, tricks, and with the help of several accomplices, it is theorized that Powell created all of the &#8220;effects&#8221; of the ghost to scare Gardner away.</p>
<p>Indeed, Gardner was the target of much of the witch&#8217;s violent taunting, and he eventually did break up with Betsy and left the area. It has never been satisfactorily explained how Powell achieved all these remarkable effects, including paralyzing Andrew Jackson&#8217;s wagon. But he did come out the winner. He married Betsy Bell.</p>
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