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Historic and haunted: Visit Little Washington for Halloween tours and tales

Whether you love a good ghost story, want something fun and fright-filled to do or just love learning about history, Little Washington has you covered this Halloween season.
Posted 2022-09-02T01:51:49+00:00 - Updated 2023-10-06T11:46:26+00:00
Photo Courtesy of Guy Livesay

Whether you love a good ghost story, want something fun and fright-filled to do or just love learning about history, Little Washington has you covered this Halloween season. You have three more chances this season to walk through this picturesque town and learn about its haunted history.

Choose Oct. 7 or Oct. 28 for the Washington Haunts traditional walk with stops at the old Beaufort County Courthouse, St. Peter’s Church cemetery and the old houses along Water Street.

On Halloween night, join the Washington Haunts west side walk with stops at Turnage Theater, the Havens House, Brown Librar, and the US 17 Business Bridge (General Grimes story).

Tickets are $20 each, cash only. There are no advance sales and tickets are sold on-site beginning at 7:30 p.m. on the night of the walk. All ghost walks begin promptly at 8 p.m. from Harding Square, beside the Washington Visitor’s Center (102 Stewart Parkway), in historic downtown Washington.

Convicted ghost haunts old Beaufort County Courthouse

Terry Rollins, coordinator of Washington Haunts: the Historic Ghost Walk, says that hundreds of people showed up for the trial of Rev. George Carawan in the 1850s.

Carawan was found guilty of killing a male school teacher in Hyde County when he suspected the man was having an affair with his wife.

Rollins said, “Someone had smuggled in two guns to Carawan, and when he was found guilty, he stood up and started shooting. He then shot himself in the full courtroom and is said to have haunted the building ever since. People have heard what sounds like gunshots with no one else in the building.”

Washington's Turnage Theatre gives a funny feeling

Rollins says that the historic Turnage Theatre, located in downtown Washington, has multiple ghosts as well. “When they built the movie theatre in the early 1930’s, after the vaudeville theatre had closed, the story is that the man operating the projector hung himself in the projector box, and that his ghost still haunts the main theatre to this day.” Rollins says that many local newspaper reporters have claimed to feel a presence of something ‘not quite right’ in the vaudeville theatre upstairs.

When Rollins has led walks, he has had participants share photos that are hard to explain.

“Orbs of light in different places, figures in the windows that match historical persons, like at the courthouse. I’ve been outside the theatre telling stories when the lighted marquee will go out or suddenly flash for no logical reason.”

Fowle building residents report supernatural visitors

Jim Helms has had experiences with the supernatural as well. Helms has a computer business in the historic Fowle Warehouse building, and remembers when he lived in an apartment upstairs. “I woke up one night and saw a woman at the foot of the bed. She was wearing a Victorian style dress, had long hair, I think with glasses. She looked to be around thirty years old, and was leaning. Then she stood up and just evaporated, kind of like how a TV goes off.”

Helms never saw the apparition again, but did have another bizarre occurrence in the location. “I had been living in the apartment and found an ectoplasm, sticky stuff on my closet shelf. There were no leaks anywhere and no explanation for it. It continued for days. I cleaned it up and never saw it again.” Helms believes there are many spirits in the Fowle building because it has such a long history.

Franklin Bryan house protects current owners

Vann and Colleen Knight have lived in the historic Franklin Bryan House on East Main Street for about five years and have also had supernatural experiences. Colleen recounts, “Probably the scariest thing that’s happened was about 3 o’clock in the morning, I woke up and the temperature had dropped. It was suddenly so cold, and I felt someone sit on the edge of the bed. I immediately woke my husband, and he said that had happened to him, too.”

Photo Courtesy of Tracy Jones
Photo Courtesy of Tracy Jones

All of the other experiences that the Knights have had have really been positive.

They have been told by a medium that there are two entities in the house, a male and a female. The female was said to be wearing a red party dress in 1920’s style. At various times there has been the overwhelming smell of cigar smoke, and at other times the scent of lavender fills the air. The scents disappear as quickly as they arrive.

When the Knights were renovating the house, a subcontractor accidentally broke a window that had a specific, historic-style wavy glass. When the worker assured the Knights that he had a source for the same glass, a window on the other side of the house that had been replaced with a more modern pane, spontaneously broke, pushing outward from the house. Vann says, “Our theory is the ghosts wanted the wavy glass to replace the flat glass that had been put in.”

Other occurrences that have saved the house (and quite possibly the Knights’ lives), include an isolated strip of flooring with termites directly over two sparking wires under the floor, and a mysterious wet spot on the ceiling after painting that prompted the owners to check upstairs and found rotten flooring under the bathtub.

Our sponsor, Washington Tourism Development Authority, contributed to this article.

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