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Spooky
Lycoming County
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Almost every area has its own ghostly and haunted tales.
Lycoming County is no exception.
Many of these spooky tales are steeped in local Native
American legend and superstition. Even the area of the
valley of the West Branch of the Susquehanna River has
otherworldly aspects to it. The area once was known as
Otzniachson, or area of the "people of the Demon's
Den." Count Nikolaus Ludwig Zinzendorf, an early
Moravian missionary who explored this area in the mid-1700s,
wrote in his diary that the area was given the name Otzniachson
because "for it was here the Indians say the evil
spirits have their seats and hold their revels."
Staying with devil's theme in local geography there is
a "Devil's Cave" along Lycoming Creek near the
Wildwood Cemetery. There is a unique geological formation
of large boulders along Montgomery Pike called the "Devil's
Turnip Patch." And there is a road with a 90-degree
bend to it in Piatt Township called the "Devil's
Elbow."
Other Native American-related ghostly tales include that
of King Wi-daagh, a chief of the Andaste Indians. His
ghost is said to haunt the area of the Nippenose Valley
in the vicinity of Antes Creek. He haunts the area, in
part, to protest the bad deal he made when selling land
in his territory to emissaries of William Penn for only
a few trinkets in September 1700. A large column from
the Pennsylvania State Capitol was placed in tribute to
King Wi-daagh at the homestead known as "Lochabar"
along the banks of Antes Creek. An inscription on the
column commemorates the treaty. Visitors to this area,
especially in the autumn, can see a ghostly mist coming
off the emerald green waters of Wi-daugh's Spring giving
a very ominous and spooky sense to the place.
Also in the Antes Fort area are reports of haunted houses.
Col. Henry Antes, who founded Antes Fort, is blamed for
this. It is alleged that near the end of the Revolutionary
War, Antes engaged in an early form of biological warfare
against the Indians of the area. He and other white settlers
were having disputes with Indians and to end the dispute,
Antes is supposed to have purchased the blankets of several
people who had died of smallpox in the Harrisburg area.
He then "donated" these infected blankets to
some of the local Indians. Many people caught the disease
and died, and when a local Indian chief found out about
Antes' alleged atrocity he was outraged and vowed revenge
on Antes and those around him. This revenge is supposed
to have taken the form of the haunting of houses in the
Antes Fort area, according to an Oct. 29, 1988 Sun-Gazette
article.
Another interesting ghostly apparition related to Native
American lore is about the beautiful Indian maiden during
the mid-1800s who is the "Siren of Loyalsock Creek."
Sweet Cicely would lure raftsmen to their death on the
riffles of Loyalsock Creek with her sweet, haunting and
alluring voice. She reportedly sang because she was happy
although raftsmen supposedly murdered her.
There are several non-Native American-related spooky tales
of this area. The most famous involves the immortal American
author Mark Twain.
Twain came to Williamsport in 1869 to lecture. While walking
around downtown he was disturbed and disgusted by the
rundown condition of the some of the city's graveyards,
particularly the one located in Ross Park on Pine Street,
site of the former City Hall.
Most of the coffins and remains formerly held in that
graveyard were disinterred and placed in the Williamsport
Cemetery on Washington Boulevard. What remained at Ross
Park were decaying reminders of the former graveyard.
What Twain saw while sitting on the steps of the Pine
Street Methodist Church inspired him to write a short
story titled, "The Remarkable Dream."
In the story Twain has a conversation with a disgusted
skeleton that was picking up some of the other remains
from the rundown cemetery. Other "residents"
of the rundown cemetery join the skeleton to try to find
a more respectable final resting place.
Twain described hearing the "click clack" of
the skeleton. The skeleton in question told Twain, "We
are all leaving. We cannot tolerate the treatment we are
receiving at the hands of our descendants. They open new
cemeteries, but they leave us to our ignominy."
Twain's story first appeared in the Buffalo Express in
1870, a newspaper that Twain edited and was part owner.
Another strange tale involves the Thomas Taber Museum
of the Lycoming County Historical Society. Its provenance
is uncertain, so it may be apocryphal.
The tale involves the portrait of 3-year old Nellie Tallman
painted by her father, John. While she was being painted
she fell from a stool and broke her neck, an injury that
killed her. The portrait was later donated to the museum.
Shortly after the painting was donated it fell down and
was damaged. It was sent out to be repaired. Soon after
being returned, it fell down again. It was put back up
and fell down several more times. It was later moved to
Victorian Parlor of the museum and few days after being
placed there, it was found lying face down on the floor.
No explanations have been developed for why Nellie's portrait
kept falling down. Some assert that it is haunted.
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