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Exhibits in the Haunted
Museum are based on the work of Troy Taylor from his
book, Ghosts by Gaslight!

Click on the Cover for More About the Book!




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The Eddy Brothers Home in Chittenden, Vermont
According to newspaper and Spiritualist accounts of 1874,
some very strange things were happening on a small Vermont farm near the
town of Chittenden. Allegedly, all manner of bizarre phenomena was said to
be taking place in the home of William and Horatio Eddy, two middle-aged,
illiterate brothers, and their sister, Mary. The Eddy’s lived in a unkempt,
two-story building that was reported to be infested with supernatural beings
of such numbers that had never been reported before, or since. The events at
the farm were said to be so powerful and so strange that people came from
all over the world to witness them. Spiritualists began calling Chittenden
the "Spirit Capital of the Universe".
Needless to say, not everyone was convinced of the
legitimacy of the reported events on the Eddy farm. Once such man was a
successful attorney named Henry Steel Olcott. Prior to hearing of the Eddy
brothers, Olcott had no interest whatever in the burgeoning Spiritualist
movement. However, one day as he returned to his office from lunch, he
picked up a copy of the Spiritualist newspaper, the Banner of Light.
In the paper, he read a graphic account of the strange happenings that were
being reported in Chittenden, Vermont. It’s unlikely at that time that
Olcott had any idea how a simple newspaper article was going to change his
life.
It is important that we establish the fact that Henry
Olcott was not connected in any way to the Spiritualist movement, nor was he
a proponent of the paranormal. What might have prompted him to pick up a
copy of the Banner of Light that day is unknown. Olcott was born in
New Jersey in 1832 and attended college in New York City, studying
agricultural science. While still in his early ’20’s, he received
international recognition for his work on a model farm and for founding a
school for agriculture students. During this same time, he published three
scientific works. He went on to become the farm editor for Horace Greeley’s
newspaper, the New York Tribune.
When the Civil War broke out, Olcott enlisted in the
Union Army. He was appointed as a special investigator to root out
corruption and fraud in military arsenals and shipyards. He was soon
promoted to the rank of Colonel and after the war, was part of a
three-person panel that investigated the assassination of President Lincoln.
After the war, Olcott studied law and became a wealthy and successful
attorney.
So how would an agriculturist and military investigator
go on to become one of the first American psychic researchers?
After buying a copy of the Spiritualist newspaper, Olcott
read with interest the reports from the Eddy farm. Although skeptical, he
knew that if the stories were true, "this was the most important fact in
modern physical science," he later wrote. A short time after first reading
the story, Colonel Olcott traveled to Vermont, accompanied by a newspaper
artist named Alfred Kappes. Together, they planned to investigate the
strange events at the Eddy farm and if the stories were a hoax, they would
expose the Eddy brothers in the Daily Graphic newspaper as nothing
but charlatans. If the Eddy’s were true mediums, Olcott would announce the
validity of Spiritualism to the world. In either event, Olcott was
determined to be fair and open-minded in his judgments.
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Olcott and Kappes
traveled to the secluded town of Chittenden, located within the Green
Mountains. The trip out to the farm was uneventful, but the first
meeting with the Eddy brothers was anything but ordinary. The two
distant and unfriendly farmers were rough-hewn characters with dark hair
and eyes, and New England accents so thick the New York attorney and
writer could scarcely understand them. |

William & Horatio Eddy |
Olcott would later learn that the brothers were descended
from a long line of psychics. Mary Bradbury, a distant relative, had been
convicted of witchcraft at Salem in 1692. She had escaped the village with
the help of friends. Their own grandmother had been blessed with the gift of
"second sight" and often went into trances, speaking to entities that no one
else could see. Their mother, Julia, had been known for frightening her
neighbors with predictions and visions although her husband, Zepaniah,
condemned her powers as the work of the Devil. Julia quickly learned to hide
her gifts from the cruel and abusive man.
However, the supernatural could not be hidden once the
couple began having children. Strange poundings began shaking the house,
disembodied voices were heard in empty rooms, and occasionally, the children
even vanished from their cribs. They were likely to be discovered anywhere
in the house and even outside. As William and Horatio got older, their
strange powers strengthened. On many occasions, Zepaniah would see the boys
playing with unfamiliar children - who would vanish whenever he approached!
When these “visitors” vanished, he would take his boys to the barn and beat
them with a rawhide whip as punishment. The strange children returned again
and again though, earning the young Eddy boys countless beatings.
Eventually, they would grow to both fear and hate their father.
The boys soon learned they were unable to attend school.
The initial attempts were marked by inexplicable happenings and disturbances
as invisible hands threw books, levitated desks and caused objects like
rulers, inkwells and slates to fly about the room.
Zepaniah tried everything he could to stop the
disturbances, although this mostly consisted of him beating and abusing the
youngsters. The strange events continued though. When he realized that he
couldn’t stop the weird antics, he grew furious. Each time the boys fell
into a trance, he would berate and verbally abuse them. He would try to
rouse them by pinching and slapping them until they were black and blue.
Once, on the advice of a sympathetic Christian friend, he doused the boys
with boiling water. When this didn’t work, he also allowed this friend to
drop a red-hot coal into William’s hand. He had hoped to "exorcize his
devils". The boy never awakened from his trance, but he bore a scar on his
palm for the rest of his life.
On occasion though, the spirits would attempt to defend
the boys, appearing in front of Zepaniah and scaring him from the house.
Needless to say, these eerie and frustrating happenings were more than the
man could stand. So, tiring of the boys but realizing their money-making
potential, he sold the Eddy brothers to a traveling showman, who for the
next 14 years, took them all over America, Canada and Europe. As part of the
performance, he would challenge audience members to try and awaken the boys
from their trances. These audiences made their father’s abuse look tame. The
Eddy’s were locked into small wooden boxes to see if they could escape and
hot wax was poured into their mouths to see if they could produce “spirit
voices” when they were unable to talk. The skeptics poked, prodded, and
punched the sleeping brothers, leaving them scarred and damaged for the rest
of their lives. On several occasions, they were even stoned and shot at by
angry mobs. William Eddy bore a number of bullet scars on his body.
According to writer John Mason, “They were mobbed in Lynn, Massachusetts and
stoned at South Danvers. On a second trip to Danvers they were shot at. They
were ridden on a rail out of Cleveland and barely escaped a coat of tar and
feathers.”
Only after their father died were the boys able to return
home. They moved onto the family farm with their sister, Mary, and opened
the house as a modest inn called the Green Tavern.
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Front and Rear Views of the Eddy Home, penned by Olcott during his
investigations
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These things were
all learned later. On his arrival, Olcott was only able to gain a
first impression of the belligerent and unfriendly men. They were
certainly not the deceitful con men he had expected. So, what were
they?
On Olcott’s first
day at the farm, he was witness to an outdoor séance. In the bright
moonlight of a warm summer evening, a group of ten participants
traveled down a path and into a deep ravine. They assembled in front
of a natural cave, formed by two large stones that had collapsed atop
one another, forming a large arch. Olcott later learned that it was
called "Honto’s Cave", in honor of the Native American spirit who
often appeared there. Olcott suspiciously investigated the cave and
but that no exit could be found at the back of the rocks. He
determined there was no way that anyone could slip in or out of the
cave without being seen.
Horatio Eddy acted as the medium
for the séance. He sat on a camp stool under the arch and then was
draped in a makeshift "spirit cabinet" formed by shawls and branches
that had been cut from small saplings. As Horatio rested there, a
gigantic man, dressed as a Native American, emerged from the
darkness of the cave. |
While the medium addressed
this spirit, someone cried out and pointed up toward the top of the cave.
Standing there, silhouetted against the moon, was another gigantic Indian.
To the right, another spectral female had materialized on a ledge. In all,
10 such figures appeared during the séance. The last, the spirit of William
White, the late editor of a Spiritualist newspaper, emerged from within
Horatio’s cabinet. He was dressed in a black suit and white shirt was
supposedly recognizable to some who had read the newspaper and recognized
his picture from it. He vanished at the same time the others did. Moments
later, Horatio appeared from the cabinet and signaled that the séance was at
an end.
After the bizarre display was over, Olcott and Kappes
carefully searched the cave and the surrounding area for footprints in the
soft earth. They found no trace that anyone had been there.
Olcott found the séance to be convincing but was sure
that he would be able to more easily detect fraud within the controlled
setting of the Eddy house. He and Kappes thoroughly examined the large
"circle" room, which was located on the second floor of the farmhouse. He
drew maps, charts and diagrams and took numerous measurements, sure that he
would find false panels, secret doors or hidden passages. However, he found
nothing out of the ordinary. He was determined not to give up though and he
convinced the newspaper to hire men to come to Chittenden and examine the
place. Using carpenters and engineers as consultants, another thorough
search was conducted. The experts also found nothing strange. After this,
Olcott and Kappes were finally convinced that the walls and floors were as
solid as they seemed. Because of this, what Olcott witnessed during the
nights that followed became even stranger.
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Each séance was
basically the same. On every night of the week, except for Sunday,
guests and visitors would assemble on wooden benches in the séance room.
A platform, which had been assembled there, was lit only by a kerosene
lamp, recessed in a barrel. William Eddy, who acted as the primary
medium, mounted the platform and entered a small cabinet. A few moments
later, soft voices began to whisper in the distance. Often, it would be
singing, accompanied by spectral music. Musical instruments came to life
and soared above the heads of the audience members, disembodied hands
appeared, waving and touching the spectators and odd lights and
unexplained noises appeared and filled the air. |

The Séance Room inside of the Eddy Home
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Then, the first spirit form emerged from the cabinet.
They came one at a time, or in groups, numbering as many as 20 or 30 in an
evening. Some were completely visible and seemed solid. Others were
transparent and ethereal. Regardless, they awed the frightened spectators.
The spirits ranged in size from over six feet to very small (it’s worth
noting here that William Eddy was only five feet, nine inches tall). Most of
the ghostly apparitions were elderly Yankees or Native Americans but many
other races and nationalities also appeared in costume like Africans,
Russians, Orientals and more.
Where had they come from? Olcott pondered. He had
examined the spirit cabinet and platform and had found no trap doors, nor
hidden passages. In fact, there was no room in the cabinet for anyone other
than the medium himself. Olcott was familiar with the workings of stage
magicians and fraudulent mediums, but could find none of their tricks
present at the Eddy house.
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An interior view of the Eddy's spirit cabinet
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The apparitions not
only appeared but they also performed, sang and chatted with the
sitters. They also produced spirit articles like musical instruments,
clothing and scarves. In all, nearly every type of supernatural
phenomena was reported at the Eddy farmhouse. These included rappings,
moving physical objects, spirit paintings, automatic writing, prophecy,
speaking in tongues, healings, unseen voices, levitation, remote
visions, teleportation and more. And of course, the full-bodied
manifestations of which Olcott observed more than 400 during the weeks
he visited the house. He concluded that a show like that which he had
seen would have required an entire company of actors and several trunks
of costumes.
Yet, Olcott’s inspection of the premises revealed no
place to hide either actors or props. The idea of stage actors was further
dispelled by the convincing manner of the spirits. One woman spoke, in
Russian, to the alleged spirit of her deceased husband. A number of other
dialects were also heard. How was this possible when the Eddy’s could barely
read and write, and were scarcely capable of speaking coherent English? |
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In addition, such an elaborate show would have cost a
fortune to produce each night. They would have had to pay actors, invest
in costumes and hire someone to create the "marvels" of the spirits.
This would have been impossible given that the brothers were almost
penniless. Most of the visitors who came to the farm did not pay and the
rest only gave $8 per week for room and board at the inn. No admission
was ever charged for the séances. In Olcott’s mind, fraud would have
been physically and financially impossible!
The investigator’s ten-week stay on the Eddy farm was
surely a test of endurance. He left disliking the house, the food, the
weather and the Eddy brothers. However, he was also convinced of the
fact that the two men could make contact with the dead. Not only did Colonel Olcott chronicle his visit in the
newspaper, but he also wrote a massive book called People from Other
Worlds. The book, over 500 pages long, is full of precise drawings of
the apparitions, the grounds, the house and even detailed plans of its
construction, proving that no hidden passages existed. |

Drawings done by Olcott of cross-sections of the spirit cabinet.
According to his account, he was unable to find any fraud to explain the
bizarre manifestations
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He also recorded over
400 different supernatural beings and collected hundreds of affidavits and
scores of eyewitness testimony to the amazing events. He also reproduced
dozens of statements from respected tradesmen and carpenters who had
examined the house for trickery. A modern reader would have to look very
hard to discover anything that Olcott did not investigate.
Eventually, the Eddy brothers and sister Mary, went their
separate ways. Their bickering and feuding had driven them apart. Horatio
moved out and took a house across the road, where he took up light
gardening, occasional séances and doing magic tricks for local children.
Mary moved to the nearby village of East Pittsford, where she became a
full-time professional medium. William dropped out of public life altogether
and became a bitter recluse on the family farm.
The first of the Eddy’s to die was Horatio on September
8, 1922. William lived for another 10 years. He never married and refused to
ever participate in Spiritualism again. He died on October 25, 1932 at the
age of 99. If either of the men had any secrets about the weird events at
their home... they took the secrets with them to the grave.
So, what really happened on the Eddy farm in Chittenden,
Vermont?
To read this story today, we are first inclined to
dismiss the events as fanciful tales from another time, but can we really do
that? The credentials of Colonel Olcott prohibit us from dismissing the
story out of hand. His extensive documentation, along with his investigative
skills, suggests that the events were not part of a hoax. Olcott remained
skeptical and analytical throughout his ten-week stay at the farm, and yet
he came away convinced that the Eddy’s had the power to contact, and
communicate with, the dead.
Colonel Olcott came away from Chittenden a believer.
So whatever you choose to believe, it cannot be denied
that something amazing and mysterious occurred in Chittenden in 1874
although what this may have been, we may never know for sure.
© Copyright 2002
- 2008 by Troy Taylor. All Rights Reserved.
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