They Say There Are Ghosts in the Old Cecil County Jail

Although it’s been unused as a jail for over a quarter of a century, an inmate or two might still linger inside the unoccupied 19th-century Jail on North Street in Elkton. If they do, they are ghostly inhabitants since prisoners moved out of the aging lockup under the cover of midnight darkness in 1984. Or could it be the spirit of some other occupant since sheriffs, their families, and guards lived and worked there for generations?

Some 12 years ago, a lady who had just taken a job in the building when it had been transformed into offices for Cecil County Senior Services revealed to me that the place frightened her. At first, I thought this believable person was kidding as she mentioned creepy things like shadowy forms, shadows seeming to disappear into a dead-end, empty corridors.

On the evening when she came to talk to me about these troubling matters, she told of cold spots, things moving around, and unusual creaks and groans while working early evenings alone inside strong walls built to confine criminals. There were noises that rattled her nerves too. Men shouting, chains clattering, heavy footsteps reverting down unattended hallways, and metal iron-barred doors slamming shut in an otherwise empty building. It was all taking place in an ancient jailhouse built for hen-house robbers, horse thieves, drunkards, unruly types, cold-blooded murderers, and evildoers from another age.

What More Likely Spot for Spirits

As I listened, I had a chilling thought.  What more likely spot for spirits to linger but a place filled with centuries of violence and tragedy as thousands of people who ran afoul of the law passed through its steel-barred doors.  The long obsolete lockup was constructed six years after the end of the Civil War, an era when the gallows and whipping post were major parts of the criminal justice system.  During its 123 years as the quarters for hardened lawbreakers, three executions took place there.  Two other men agonizingly passed their last night on earth in cells before being taken outside town to forfeit their lives on the hangman’s gallows.

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Last hanging at the old Elkton jail.

Lots of other dreadful things took place there. The bloodiest day occurred in 1912 when a heartless shooting snuffed out the young life of a lawman as his wife watched. Sheriff J. Myron Miller was slain while attempting to take a pistol away from a prisoner. The dying officer was carried back inside, where he lingered briefly.

Those cold walls have silently witnessed plenty of other sorrowful incidents of violence, suicide, and lonely natural deaths. And as her story of unexplained goings-on or ghosts continued I intently listened while she talked frankly about things. Before the noise of those long-vanished prisoners could really get on her nerves, she would hurry to finish work, getting out of there before darkness descended on the place.

But in the depths of winter, that was a problem. On particularly troublesome cold, shadowy evenings, she tried something else. I know so and so she would shout back at those spectral mischief-makers. My perplexed look caused my source to add a childhood friend’s father sometimes got locked up for having a little too much fun on Friday evening outings in the decades between the World Wars. If those long-ago jailbirds were making the racket causing her distress she reasoned this would stop those scalawags. It worked she declared. The jail quieted down!

Once she heard a distinctly male voice painfully calling out a woman’s name. The next day I checked some old records and was surprised to find there was a connection between some of the names associated with tragic violence at this place. But how would my source know about those deeply buried facts?

The doubter in me contemplated what I heard about the jailhouse as I kept pitting logic against a convincing witness. Ghosts are not real I thought as I mulled it over and thought of some less dramatic tales I heard from other workers. Then there was the time I had a group for a walking tour of the town, including some ghost hunters. While I stood outside walls that have witnessed human tragedies talking about the history of this building, the crowd shrieked that a man was looking out a window at us. I turned but saw nothing so I assured the group that the building was vacant.

Things That Went Bump in the Night at the Jail

While attending an Elkton Historic District Commission hearing on a developer’s plan for adaptive reuse of the historic structure, motion after motion dragged on. With the commissioner debating weighty legal, procedural, and technical matters, a retired deputy sheriff, Ralph Newton, lightened things up by sharing some testimony about strange late-night occurrences.

Back in the 1960s, in the middle of a long Cecil County winter night when one elderly jailer, Elwood Racine, guarded seven prisoners, while Deputy Newton patrolled the county on the graveyard shift, the road man got an urgent radio call.  The turnkey needed help as someone was freely roaming the cell block.   But all the prisoners had been accounted for and securely locked down for a quiet, peaceful night in the old lockup from another era.

Deputy Smokey Elliott locks the cell block in the old jail sometime in the early 1970s. (photo by Dixon)

But something was wrong in the cell blocks; someone was roaming around. When the backup arrived, they both heard footsteps echoing through the cell blocks. They were sure a prisoner had managed to release himself from a cell.

Ready for a jailbreak or some other kind of trouble, the officers grabbed those big keys and cautiously opened that heavy steel-barred door, the one that secured the prisoners in the cell blocks.  A careful search failed to find anything on that quiet 1960s night as the handful of detainees slept soundly or wearily looked around, trying to figure out what the racket was about.  During that security check, the cautious lawmen couldn’t find anything wrong.

Periodically those heavy footsteps returned on other quiet Cecil County nights as if someone was descending the metal steps to the main cell block. At other times the officers would hear those heavy iron-barred doors slam shut.  These sorts of unnerving things occurred often enough, but those two lawmen working the graveyard shift never did find anything on those dark, lonely nights in the post-Civil War-era hoosegow.

The officers got used to those bumps in the night so they would shrug it off, assuming it was a ghost of a prisoner who had breathed his last in the old prison as he met the hangman’s noose or some other unsettled spectral type of thing.

Do Ghosts Still Lurk in the Jail

Do ghosts lurk inside the vacant brick and granite jail on North Street in Elkton? There are some true believers with some dramatic experiences. They believe there are ghosts in the building and the stories continue from occupants of the apartment building there now.

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Many said there were ghosts in the Cecil County Jail. This photo of the jail is fro the 1950s or early 1960s.

The Old Perryville Railroad Station Still Bustles With Activity As Conductors Shout All Aboard and Fast Acela’s Rush Past

Amtrak Acela rushes past Perryville Depot.
A northbound Amtrak Acela rushes past the Perryville Station.

The old P.W. & B. Perryville Railroad Station looks rather fine on a late summer day as an Amtrak Acela rushes past.  Built in 1904, the station continues serving commuters as about 14 Marc trains chug into the station each today and the conductors shout all aboard.  Each morning the parking lots fill, and the old depot hums with activity with passengers climbing aboard for the morning commute to Baltimore and Washington.

Perryville Railroad Station, important stop on Maryland's commuter rail system.
Built in 1905, the Perryville Railroad Station is an important stop on Maryland’s commuter rail system.

Historical Society Digitizes Cecil County Civil War Bounty Payment Ledger

One of our library volunteers, Steve Higham, has created a new online research resource to help those studying family and local history during the Civil War. 

Here is Steve’s Description of the manuscript he worked with over the summer.  “In the Civil War, the Federal government established quotas for each state as to the number of required enlistments. To meet these quotas, the states set quotas for the counties and authorized funds that the various counties could offer to entice volunteers to enlist. This payment (bounty) was paid to the volunteer at initial enlistment and a subsequent payment was made at a later date. In Cecil County, Maryland, most local enlistees received an initial bounty in September/October 1862 and the second payment (if still serving) was made later. A ledger was kept by Cecil County accounting for these bounty payments. The ledger indicated the name of the soldier, the locale and election district of the volunteer, his age, marital status and payee and payment date. Also shown is the date of the subsequent payment (if any) and the unit in which the soldier served.”

Here is the link to the Excel spreadsheet containing the names of the soldiers.  Steve carefully scrutinized the 19th century handwriting, entered the data into a spreadsheet, photographed the appropriate page and linked it all together.

At Cecil County’s history and genealogy library, our volunteer librarians are working to use web-based technologies to increase the study and understanding of the area’s history. Thanks Steve for giving your time to create this digital research product.

By-the-way, he is working on other online research materials and we will announce those as he finishes working on them.

Librarian Carol Donache and Steve Higham examine the Cecil County Civil War Bounty digital research product.
Librarian Carol Donache and Steve Higham examine the Cecil County Civil War Bounty digital research product.

Harvest Moon Rising Over the C & D Canal

With autumn set to arrive in a few days, the bright harvest moon of September illuminated Chesapeake City and the C & D Canal this evening.

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Moonlight reflects on the water in the C & D Canal basin in Chesapeake City.

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Chesapeake City was perfect for strolling and moon-gazing this evening as a harvest moon climbed above the horizon around 7 p.m.

 

The Flickr Commons Has Old Maryland Postcards

A postcard of the Mobil Gas Station in Perryville:  Source:  Boston Public Library Flickr Commons
A postcard of the Mobil Gas Station in Perryville: Source: Boston Public Library Flickr Commons

As a result of developing research materials for centuries many of the nation’s largest public libraries have vast collections of photographs and postcards from earlier times.  These items, which are helpful to those digging into the past, have always been available, safely preserved and stored away for visiting patrons.  But now access is greatly enhanced as many of these institutions implement online sharing platforms that support the organization’s mission by increasing access for education, research, and personal enrichment.

The Boston Public Library (BPL), following the example of the Library of Congress, is one of the institutions that has embraced this approach.  It has about 86,000 images on the Commons.  BPL’s photostream is organized into collections and sets. clustered by major topic and state.  It has many historical treasures, including posters, postcards, labels, sheet music, trade cards, and much more.   There are 189 Delaware and 380 Maryland postcards, for example.

The goal of the Flickr Commons is to increase access to publicly held photograph collections and provide a way for the general public to contribute information and knowledge.

Check it out.  You will find images there that will catch your interest as more institutions find innovative ways to share holdings found in the “world’s public photography archives.”  Beyond making the images available on the Internet, visitors are invited to contribute to the public knowledge by adding tags and leaving comments.

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Flickr, Google and Others are Out to Catalog the World’s Public Photo Archives.

The blog Indicommons has a lot of additional information about the the Flickr approach.  Check it out for details, but here are some points the site makes

  • “The Commons . . . expands creative freedom and enriches culture by pushing cultural media outside of the confines and limitation of physical media and by making this media available . . .”
  • “Participating institutions benefit from greater exposure of its collections through Flickr’s high profile and it’s large user base.”
  • “The Commons also allows participating institutions to harness the limitless power of the crowd to mine otherwise inaccessible data.”
  • “The Commons provides educators and their students a wealth of historical imagery and information from around the world. It also allows educators and their students to participate in the historical research and tagging.”

 

Boston Public Library's Flickr Commons.
Boston Public Library’s Flickr Commons.

Vietnam Mailbag at the Rising Sun Library Sept. 17th

Press Release – Cecil County Public Library

A multimedia program by journalist Nancy Lynch and Vietnam Veteran Rick Lovekin, who frequently corresponded with Lynch.  From 1968-1972, Lynch ran a column in the Wilmington News Journal called “Vietnam Mailbag.”  In 2008 she published a book of the letters. Lynch will share corespondences from local soldiers in Delaware and Cecil County.

Date: 9/17/2013

Start Time: 7:00 PM

Library: Rising Sun Branch Library

Contact Number: 410-658-4025

Presenter: Nancy Lynch

Enjoying the Past in Charlestown’s Historic District

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Charlestown Town Hall and Post Office

As the summer of 2013 fades away, this fine autumn-like Saturday presented the perfect opportunity to delve into the past that is all around us in our communities across Cecil County.  Since I was in North East and the weather was perfect, I took a brief detour to  Colonial Charlestown to roam some old  streets while studying buildings constructed long ago.  It is a fine place to contemplate our natural and built environments and the history that is all around us here as the attractive 150-acre historic district is well preserved.

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The Charlestown Town Hall and Post Office was constructed in 1878. The building served as an elementary school site until June 14, 1961, according to the town web-site.

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the “St. John’s Methodist Episcopal Church” was constructed in 1856.

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The 107 House was restored by Colonial Charlestown, Inc.

Sprecher Takes Audience Back to a Special Time and Place – Elkton & Cecil County in the 1960s

Milford Sprecher

With the arrival of October it is time for the return of the Historical Society of Cecil County’s popular winter 2013-14 speakers series.  This year the county’s heritage-keepers open with “Elkton in the 1960s,” a talk by Milford Sprecher.

Delivered for the first time, it captures the spirit of those years locally, providing views and perspective of someone who came of age in the county seat during that pivotal time, a period of change in the nation and in Cecil County.  The opening of I-95, integration, urban renewal, and tragedy all affected Elkton as it affected the nation.

On this enjoyable track back through time to a special place, Elkton and Cecil County, the speaker will share enduring memories that were acquired long ago.  The talk is richly illustrated with dozens of local photographs from the 1960s, many of them rarely viewed.

Milford Sprecher was born in Elkton and educated in the local schools. He graduated from Western Maryland College and received his Master’s degree from Johns Hopkins University. He currently lives in Takoma Park, Maryland and looks back fondly on his formative years in Elkton.

The free event takes place on Saturday, Oct 5th at 2 p.m. the Society’s library at 135 E. Main Street in Elkton.  Look for additional topics on the first Saturday of each month during the cooler weather months.

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An Elkton Fire Department carnival about 1960. Source: Robinson Collection, Historical Society of Cecil County.

New Exhibit and Programs Recall Cecil County in the 1960s

Now that the 1960s are history and not just nostalgia the Historical Society of Cecil County is opening an exhibit this fall that studies and celebrates the happenings of that era locally.  It was a time that brought many transformations to this corner of northeastern Maryland and our curator, Lisa Dolor, and a talented group of volunteers are capturing those intriguing times in gallery displays.

The museum staff has been busy pouring over some 40,000 local photographs, hundreds of objects from the decade, and the history books for a couple of months, planning the attractive interpretive panels.  While this group of volunteers works on the creative, visual aspect for our special 1960s series, others are putting together lectures and articles focusing on the county during those ten years, a time when everything changed.

Look for a detailed update shortly.

Curator LIsa Dolor is busy designing an exhibit an autumn exhibit that examines Cecil County in the 1960s.  It appears she has a little help on this afternoon as Elvis has stopped by.
Curator Lisa Dolor is designing another exhibit for the Society.  The autumn opening examines Cecil County in the 1960s and it appears she has a little help on this Sept. afternoon. Elvis has stopped by to check out plans for the interpretation of the 1960s in Cecil County.

911 Sure Makes It Easy: Phone Book in 1950s Lists 11 Cecil Co. Numbers for Reporting an Emergency

If a Cecil County resident needed to call for emergency help back in the 1950s they had better have a telephone book handy or have taped the number to the phone.  The process of reaching the correct call-taker during a fire or medical incident to request assistance was complicated. People had eleven different potential strings of numbers that might have to be dialed, depending on which of the county’s volunteer fire companies was responsible for the area.

Cecilton published three different numbers, depending on the time of day in 1951. At 8 p.m. another set was designated and if it happened that no one answered the directory said you could dial the operator.

It just wasn’t as easy as dialing those three easy to remember digits and having calls answered by professional public safety communications officers standing ready, around the clock, to efficiently aid callers in an emergency, while promptly getting aid to residents.