{"id":22472,"date":"2021-10-28T11:00:41","date_gmt":"2021-10-28T15:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=22472"},"modified":"2024-11-04T14:46:44","modified_gmt":"2024-11-04T19:46:44","slug":"the-great-amherst-mystery-1888","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2021\/10\/28\/the-great-amherst-mystery-1888\/","title":{"rendered":"The Great Amherst Mystery, 1888"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Nicole Baker ~<\/em><\/p>\n

The Great Amherst Mystery<\/em><\/a> by Walter Hubbell recounts his personal experience of what has been purported to be one of the most widely witnessed poltergeist phenomena in history. Hubbell observed these events and the family in their home from June 1879 through August 1879. Hubbell believed he was an authority on the \u201cillusive effects\u201d that stage performers like himself would use to entertain and trick audience members into believing performed magic acts. With a background in professional acting, he believed he would be able to decipher any trickery afoot or deception tactics being used in the widely reported Amherst haunting and expose the mystery to be a fraudulent act put on by the afflicted family.<\/p>\n

\"An<\/a>Truth, it has been said, is often stranger than fiction. What I have written is the truth, and not fiction, and it is very strange<\/em>. \u2014Walter Hubbell, 1888<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

On the afternoon of August 28, 1878, nineteen-year-old Esther Cox went out driving with Bob McNeal, a local young man. During their drive, Bob suddenly pulled the buggy over in a remote area and pointed a revolver at Esther, commanding her to get out of the buggy. Unsure of what nefarious plans Bob had in store for her, Esther was terrified and refused. Esther\u2019s refusal made him increasingly irate, but luckily she was saved by the sounds of another wagon approaching in the distance. Fearing being caught, Bob put away the revolver and drove Esther back home. Locals described Bob as cruel, and even went so far as to say he would skin cats alive and watch them run about in pain for amusement. He was said to have left Amherst shortly after the incident but was still alive in 1879.<\/p>\n

Within a month after this frightening attack, mysterious events at the Teed cottage in Amherst, Nova Scotia<\/a> began to occur. While several ghostly entities would be identified throughout Esther\u2019s coming ordeal, it is worth mentioning that the chief ghost, sharing several traits in common with Esther\u2019s attacker, would come to be known as Bob. During the three months Walter Hubble spent observing these events, he was unable to come to any firm conclusions in his attempt to supplant the supernatural explanations with more mundane reasoning. Hubbell\u2019s theory was that the \u201castral body\u201d of Bob McNeal had been tormenting Esther at the behest of the demon called Bob Nickle. Hubbell believed that after the attack, the demon attached itself to Esther instead and was the most active spirit.<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
The “Haunted House” in Personal Experiences in Spiritualism<\/em>, 1913
University of California Archives, Internet Archive<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Esther Cox lived in a small house with her married sister Olive and Olive\u2019s husband, Daniel Teed, along with their two young sons Willie and George. Esther\u2019s sister Jennie and brother John and Daniel\u2019s brother, also named John, lived with them as well.<\/p>\n

The nearly year-long haunting of Esther included a wide range of activities including objects disappearing and reappearing in other locations, spontaneous fires, disembodied voices, and unexplainable physical ailments. The voices would eventually identify themselves as Maggie Fisher, her sister Mary Fisher, Peter Cox, Jane Nickle, Eliza McNeal, and Bob Nickle. Relating one of these attacks, Jennie described her sister Esther as appearing with \u201cher short hair almost standing on end, her face blood-red and her eyes looking as if they would start from their sockets, while her hands were grasping the back of a chair so tightly that her finger-nails sank into the soft wood\u201d. Esther\u2019s account was that she was so swollen, she felt like she would burst, and her skin had become incredibly hot.<\/p>\n

When a local doctor named Dr. Carritte was called to the Teed cottage several days later to examine Esther\u2019s strange symptoms, he diagnosed her with nervous excitement<\/a> and prescribed her a sedative to help treat it. In his account Walter Hubbell reports that Dr. Carritte attempted this medical intervention for Esther Cox with strange effect:<\/p>\n

He informed me that on one occasion he had given her one ounce of bromide of potassium, one pint of brandy and heavy doses of morphia and laudanum on the same night, without the slightest effect on her system\u2026 He stated, on this same evening, that all the medicine was neutralized by the ghosts.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

In December of that year, Esther was diagnosed with diphtheria and during this time, all paranormal activity ceased. However, once she returned home, small fires began to start around the house, including one in the cellar. All family members, including Esther, were visible and accounted for when the fire started. Shortly after the fire, a ghost appeared to Esther and insisted that if she did not leave the house that very night, he would set the loft on fire and burn them all to death. The family knew that Esther had to leave, and they were able to find temporary shelter for her at John White\u2019s home.<\/p>\n

Both the Teed cottage and the White home experienced a lull in ghost activity. But soon the previous pattern began to repeat. First, the ghosts began to make contact with Esther in the White home. Then the fires started. In fear of losing his home to a fire, John White convinced Esther to accompany him to work at the dining-saloon. Still, the ghost followed her and showed off his abilities to many guests and strangers. At one point, a knife belonging to John\u2019s son was taken from his hands and instantly stabbed Esther in the back, twice. Afterwards, the knife was locked away in the cash register at White\u2019s dining-saloon.<\/p>\n