Ghosts in the White House
Ghosts in the White
CONTENTS:
The most
famous address in America—1600 Pennsylvania Avenue—is also perhaps the country’s most famous haunted
house. Presidents, first ladies, White House staff members and guests have
reported feeling ghostly presences, hearing unexplained noises and even running
into actual apparitions—even on the way out of the bathtub, in one particularly
famous case.
Ghosts of Abigail Adams & David Burns
Abigail Adams and her husband John, the second president of the United
States (1797-1801), moved to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue from the former U.S.
capital in Philadelphia. At the time, Washington, D.C. was still just a town, built
mostly on swampy land on the banks of the Potomac River. Because the East Room
of the new White House was the warmest and driest,
Abigail used it to hang the wash. Her ghost, clad in a cap and lace shawl, has
reportedly been seen heading towards the East Room, arms outstretched as if
carrying laundry.
In 1824, Andrew “Old Hickory” Jackson was defeated by John Quincy Adams in one of the most contentious presidential elections in history.
Elected president four years later, the surly Jackson continued to hold grudges
against those who had supported his opponent. In the early 1860s, First Lady
Mary Todd Lincoln–who believed strongly in the occult, and reportedly held
séances in the White House to commune with the spirits of her dead sons–told
friends she had heard Jackson stomping and swearing through the halls of the
presidential residence. The Rose Room, Jackson’s bedchamber while he was
president, is believed by some to be one of the most haunted rooms in the White
House.
Jackson’s ghostly presence also showed up in the White
House correspondence of Harry Truman, America’s 33rd president. In
June 1945, just two months into his first term, Truman wrote to his wife Bess
of the spooky quality of his new residence: “I sit here in this old house and
work on foreign affairs, read reports, and work on speeches–all the while
listening to the ghosts walk up and down the hallway and even right in here in
the study. The floors pop and the drapes move back and forth–I can just imagine
old Andy [Jackson] and Teddy [Roosevelt] having an argument over Franklin
[Roosevelt].”
The Ghost of Abraham Lincoln
By far the most frequently reported sighting in the White
House over the years has been the ghost—or at least the presence—of the
celebrated 16th president, Abraham Lincoln, whose life was cut tragically
short by an assassin’s bullet in April 1865. Grace Coolidge, wife of President Calvin Coolidge (1923-29), was the first
person to say she had actually seen Lincoln’s ghost. According to her, the
lanky former president was standing looking out a window of the Oval Office,
across the Potomac to the former Civil War battlefields beyond. Lady Bird Johnson, wife of President Lyndon Johnson (1963-69), reportedly felt
Lincoln’s presence one night while watching a television program about his
death.
When Lillian Rogers Parks, the seamstress, once
investigated the sound of someone pacing an upper level of the White House,
another staff member told her the room in question had been unoccupied, and
“that was old Abe pacing the floor.” Psychics have speculated that Lincoln’s
spirit remains in the White House to be on hand in times of crisis, as well as
to complete the difficult work that his untimely death left unfinished.
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