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At the same time that Sarah was growing
up, a young man was also maturing in another prominent New Haven family.
The young man’s name was William Wirt Winchester and he was the son
of Oliver Winchester, a shirt manufacturer and businessman. In 1857,
he took over the assets of a firm which made the Volcanic Repeater,
a rifle that used a lever mechanism to load bullets into the breech.
Obviously, this type of gun was a vast improvement
over the muzzle-loading rifles of recent times, but Winchester still
saw room for advance. In 1860, the company developed the Henry Rifle,
which had a tubular magazine located under the barrel. Because it
was easy to reload and could fire rapidly, the Henry was said to
average one shot every three seconds. It became the first true repeating
rifle and a favorite among the Northern troops at the outbreak of
the Civil War. Money began to pour in and Oliver Winchester soon
amassed a large fortune from government contracts and private sales.
He re-organized the company and changed the name to the Winchester
Repeating Arms Company.
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The family prospered and on September
30, 1862, at the height of the Civil War, William Wirt Winchester and
Sarah Pardee were married in an elaborate ceremony in New Haven.
Four years later, on July 15, 1866, Sarah
gave birth to a daughter named Annie Pardee Winchester. Just a short time
later, the first disaster struck for Sarah, as her daughter contracted
an illness known as "marasmus", a children’s disease in which
the body wastes away. The infant died on July 24. Sarah was so shattered
by this event that she withdrew into herself and teetered on the edge
of madness for some time. In the end, it would be nearly a decade before
she returned to her normal self but she and William would never have a
another child.
The Winchester House |
Not long after Sarah
returned to her family and home, another tragedy struck. William,
now heir to the Winchester empire, was struck down with pulmonary
tuberculosis. He died on March 7, 1881. As a result of his death,
Sarah inherited over $20 million dollars, an incredible sum,especially
in those days. She also received 48.9 percent of the Winchester Repeating
Arms Company and an income of about $1000 per day, which was not taxable
until 1913. But her new-found wealth could do nothing to ease her
pain. Sarah grieved deeply, not only for her husband, but also for
her lost child.
A short time later, a friend suggested that Sarah might speak to
a Spiritualist medium about her loss. "Your husband is here,"
the medium told her and then went on to provide a description of
William Winchester. "He says for me to tell you that there
is a curse on your family, which took the life of he and your child.
It will soon take you too. It is a curse that has resulted from
the terrible weapon created by the Winchester family. Thousands
of persons have died because of it and their spirits are now seeking
vengeance."
Sarah was then told that she must
sell her property in New Haven and head towards the setting sun.
She would be guided by her husband and when she found her new home
in the west, she would recognize it. "You must start a new
life," said the medium, "and build a home for yourself
and for the spirits who have fallen from this terrible weapon too.
You can never stop building the house. If you continue building,
you will live. Stop and you will die."
Shortly after the seance, Sarah sold her
home in New Haven and with a vast fortune at her disposal, moved
west to California. She believed that she was guided by the hand
of her dead husband and she did not stop traveling until she reached
the Santa Clara Valley in 1884. Here, she found a six room home
under construction which belonged to a Dr. Caldwell. She entered
into negotiations with him and soon convinced him to sell her the
house and the 162 acres which it rested on. She tossed away any
previous plans for the house and started building whatever she chose
to. She had her pick of local workers and craftsmen and for the
next 36 years, they built and rebuilt, altered and changed and constructed
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and demolished one section of the house after another.
She kept 22 carpenters at work, year around, 24 hours each day. The sounds
of hammers and saws sounded throughout the day and night. As the house
grew to include 26 rooms, railroad cars were switched onto a nearby line
to bring building materials and imported furnishings to the house. The
house was rapidly growing and expanding and while Sarah claimed to have
no master plan for the structure, she met each morning with her foreman
and they would go over the her hand-sketched plans for the day’s work.
The plans were often chaotic but showed a real flair for building. Sometimes
though, they would not work out the right way, but Sarah always had a
quick solution. If this happened, they would just build another room around
an existing one.
As the days, weeks and months passed, the house
continued to grow. Rooms were added to rooms and then turned into entire
wings, doors were joined to windows, levels turned into towers and peaks
and the place eventually grew to a height of seven stories.
Inside of the house, three elevators were installed
as were 47 fireplaces. There were countless staircases which led nowhere;
a blind chimney that stops short of the ceiling; closets that opened to
blank walls; trap doors; double-back hallways; skylights that were located
one above another; doors that opened to steep drops to the lawn below;
and dozens of other oddities. Even all of the stair posts were installed
upside-down and many of the bathrooms had glass doors on them.
It was also obvious that Sarah was intrigued
by the number "13". Nearly all of the windows contained 13 panes
of glass; the walls had 13 panels; the greenhouse had 13 cupolas; many
of the wooden floors contained 13 sections; some of the rooms had 13 windows
and every staircase but one had 13 steps. This exception is unique in
its own right.... it is a winding staircase with 42 steps, which would
normally be enough to take a climber up three stories. In this case, however,
the steps only rise nine feet because each step is only two inches high.
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While all of this seems like madness
to us, it all made sense to Sarah. In this way, she could control
the spirits who came to the house for evil purposes, or who were outlaws
or vengeful people in their past life. These bad men, killed by Winchester
rifles, could wreak havoc on Sarah’s life. The house had been designed
into a maze to confuse and discourage the bad spirits.
The house continued to grow and by 1906, it had reached a towering
seven stories tall. Sarah continued her occupancy, and expansion,
of the house, living in melancholy solitude with no one other than
her servants, the workmen and, of course, the spirits. It was said
that on sleepless nights, when she was not communing with the spirit
world about the designs for the house, Sarah would play her grand
piano into the early hours of the morning. According to legend, the
piano would be admired by passers-by on the street outside, despite
the fact that two of the keys were badly out of tune.
The most tragic event occurred within the house
when the great San Francisco Earthquake struck. When it was all
over, portions of the Winchester Mansion were nearly in ruins. The
top three floors of the house had collapsed into the gardens and
would never be rebuilt. For the next several months, the workmen
toiled to repair the damage done by the earthquake, although actually
the mammoth structure had fared far better than most of the buildings
in the area. Only a few of the rooms had been badly harmed, although
it had lost the highest floors and several cupolas and towers had
toppled over. |
The expansion on the house began once
more. The number of bedrooms increased from 15 to 20 and then to 25. Chimneys
were installed all over the place, although strangely, they served no
purpose. Some believe that perhaps they were added because the old stories
say that ghosts like to appear and disappear through them. On a related
note, it has also been documented that only 2 mirrors were installed in
the house.... Sarah believed that ghosts were afraid of their own reflection.
On September 4, 1922, after a conference session with the spirits in the
seance room, Sarah went to her bedroom for the night. At some point in
the early morning hours, she died in her sleep at the age of 83. She left
all of her possessions to her niece, Frances Marriot, who had been handling
most of Sarah’s business affairs for some time. Little did anyone know,
but by this time, Sarah’s large bank account had dwindled considerably.
The furnishings, personal belongings and surplus
construction and decorative materials were removed from the house and
the structure itself was sold to a group of investors who planned to use
it as a tourist attraction. One of the first to see the place when it
opened to the public was Robert L. Ripley, who featured the house in his
popular column, "Believe it or Not." The house was initially
advertised as being 148 rooms, but so confusing was the floor plan that
every time a room count was taken, a different total came up. The place
was so puzzling that it was said that the workmen took more than six weeks
just to get the furniture out of it. The moving men became so lost because
it was a "labyrinth", they told the magazine, American Weekly,
in 1928. It was a house "where downstairs leads neither to the cellar
nor upstairs to the roof." The rooms of the house were counted over
and over again and five years later, it was estimated that 160 rooms existed.....
although no one is really sure if even that is correct.
Today, the house has been declared a California
Historical Landmark and is registered with the National Park Service as
"a large, odd dwelling with an unknown number of rooms." Most
would say that such a place must still harbor at least a few of the ghosts
who came to reside there at the invitation of Sarah Winchester. The question
is though, do they really haunt the place? Some would say that perhaps
no ghosts ever walked there at all.... that the Winchester mansion is
nothing more than the product of an eccentric woman’s mind and too much
wealth being allowed into the wrong hands.
There have been a number of strange events
reported at the Winchester House for many years and they continue to be
reported today. Dozens of psychics have visited the house over the years
and most have come away convinced, or claim to be convinced, that spirits
still wander the place. In addition to the ghost of Sarah Winchester,
there have also been many other sightings throughout the years.
In the years that the house has been open
to the public, employees and visitors alike have had unusual encounters
here. There have been footsteps; banging doors; mysterious voices; windows
that bang so hard they shatter; cold spots; strange moving lights; doorknobs
that turn by themselves.... and don’t forget the scores of psychics who
have their own claims of phenomena to report.
No investigation or ghost hunt conducted. This
is a documentary report.
Photographs
Click on the thumbnails
to view the larger image
GHOSTS OF THE OLD WEST by Earl Murray
(1998)
HAUNTED HOUSES by Richard Winer and Nancy Osborn (1979)
PROMINENT AMERICAN GHOSTS by Susy Smith (1967)
AMERICAN WEEKLY Magazine (April 1928)
HAUNTED HOUSES OF CALIFORNIA by Antoinette May (1990)
GHOST STALKERS GD. TO HAUNTED CALIFORNIA By Richard Senate (1998)
HAUNTED HOUSES USA by Delores Riccio and Joan Bingham (1989)
HAUNTED PLACES: THE NATIONAL DIRECTORY by Dennis William Hauck (1996)
GREAT AMERICAN MYSTERIES by Randall Floyd (1990)
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF GHOSTS AND SPIRITS by Rosemary Ellen Guiley (1992)
THE GHOSTLY REGISTER by Arthur Myers (1986)
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