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Ghosts of Lincoln
02-15-2024, 08:39 PM
Post: #1
Ghosts of Lincoln
Full title, Ghosts of Lincoln: Discovering His Paranormal Legacy.
Written by Adam Selzer, copyright 2015, with 301 pages of text. No index, but 25 pages of endnotes and bibliography.

This book turned out to be more interesting than I thought it would be.
The author treats the subject seriously and with skepticism. He examines the history and circumstances of the ghost stories, spiritualism and seances, Lincoln's dreams, and superstitions of the times.

From the Amazon web page
"Abraham Lincoln is one of the most haunted―and haunting―presidents in US history. Sightings of Lincoln’s ghost, as well as the ghost of his assassin, have been reported for more than 150 years. Visited by eerie premonitions, morbid dreams, and unusual events that seem too bizarre to be coincidence, Lincoln has become the source of dozens of myths and paranormal mysteries.

Investigating everything from obscure séance transcripts and nearly forgotten newspaper articles to the most peculiar paranormal claims, Ghosts of Lincoln digs deep into the annals of history and reveals the fascinating true stories behind the tales, rumors, and lore."


The stories behind the tales, rumor and lore may be true, but the tales, rumors and lore themselves were full of fraud, deception, and unreliable sources. I found the chapters about spiritualism and the seances the most interesting. One of the seances that Mrs Lincoln and allegedly President Lincoln attended, had a "dancing" and levitating piano. These and other events are recorded in the mediums (Nettie Colburn Maynord's) own book, "Was Abraham Lincoln A Spiritualist?"
https://archive.org/details/wasabraham00...7/mode/2up

There are several ghost stories about Lincoln, his funeral train, tomb, and sightings at the White House. In addition there is a chapter on the ghost of Booth and the conspirators.
Mr. Selzer debunks most of the claims of paranormal activity mentioned in this book. Here is the Amazon web site

https://www.amazon.com/Ghosts-Lincoln-Di...429&sr=1-4

This book presents an interesting look at the "paranormal legacy" of Lincoln. So if your interested in the less talked about, off the beaten path, non-traditional study of Lincoln, this may be the book for you.

So when is this "Old Enough To Know Better" supposed to kick in?
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02-16-2024, 05:29 AM
Post: #2
RE: Ghosts of Lincoln
(02-15-2024 08:39 PM)Gene C Wrote:  There are several ghost stories about Lincoln, his funeral train...

Here's one of my favorites:

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lincoln Death Train - A New York Ghost Story

retold by

S. E. Schlosser

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"I'd been transferred to the Hudson Division of the New York Central system, and was working the rails on the main line between New York and Albany. I was on the late shift to start with, since I was a bit of a night owl. After six weeks of stomping the tracks and mending the rails, I was feeling right at home in my new job.

Then, just before midnight on a clear spring night in late April, we got a report of some brush on the track near our station. I was sent out immediately to clear it away before the next train came. I had nearly an hour before the next train, and so I did not hurry as I walked along the rails. It was surprisingly pleasant and rather warm. Overhead, the clouds were obscuring the moon, but the light from my lantern made a cheerful glow in the night.

Suddenly, a chilly wind swept over the rails with a whoosh, like a wind just before a thunderstorm. It was so strong that it nearly knocked me over. I staggered backward, swearing and wind-milling my arms to try to keep my balance. I almost dropped the lantern, but managed to get my balance just before it slipped out of my hand.

Shivering in the sudden cold, I squinted down the track and saw a huge blanket of utter darkness rolling toward me. It blanked out the rails, the trees, the sky, everything. "Good lord, what is that?" I gasped. I leapt away from the track and started to run back toward the station, but the darkness swept up and over me before I had moved a yard. The lantern in my hand was snuffed out instantly.

I stopped, unable to see more than a few paces around me. To my right, the rails began to gleam with a strange blue light. I staggered backwards from the tracks, my pulses pounding in fear and dread. What was going on?

Then the headlight of a train pierced the thick darkness. It gleamed blue-white in the strange black fog, and when it appeared, the rails brightened in response. A huge steam-engine draped in black crepe approached, stacks bellowing forth a steady stream of smoke. The brass on the engine gleamed, and it pulled several flat cars along behind it. I stared into the windows of the engine, but couldn't see any crew.

Just at the edge of hearing came the faint sound of music and turned to look at the flat cars behind the engine. I gasped and back up so far that I bumped into the trunk of a tree growing near the tracks. There was a glowing orchestra of skeletons seated in a semi-circle. They were playing a nearly-soundless funeral dirge on glowing black instruments. A violinist played passionately; a skeleton lifted a flute to its lipless mouth; a lone drummer sat waiting patiently for his cue from the skeletal conductor.

Then the orchestra was gone and another glowing headlight pierced the blackness. I was trying unsuccessfully to push my way through the bark of the tree by this time. Another black crepe draped train was approaching. A funeral train, I thought. Again, there was no one manning the engine, and no one appeared on the flat car behind it. The only thing there was a single black-crepe draped coffin. But swirling in the air around the train were the ghostly figures of soldiers dressed in the blue uniforms worn by the North during the civil war. They lined up before my eyes, saluting the solitary coffin as it passed. Some of the ghosts staggered under the weight of their own coffins; some limped on one leg or sat in a wheeled chair, legless. Their eyes were fixed upon the flat-car and the black-creped coffin. Then they were joined by soldiers from the Southern army, and all these lads saluted too, honoring the one who had fallen.

That's when I knew what I was seeing. This was the funeral train of Abraham Lincoln. I straightened up and saluted myself, having done my bit for the North many years ago.

The steam train moved slowly away and with it went the darkness and the chill and the clouds that had obscured the moon. In my hand, the lantern sprang back to life. I blinked a few times and brushed away a tear. As the world around me brightened, I saw the reported brush littering the tracks right in front of me. Mechanically, I cleared it away and made sure the track was safe for the next train. Then I went back to the station.

The next morning, all the clocks on the Hudson Division were six minutes behind and all the trains were running six minutes late. When I asked the stationmaster about it, he shook his head and told me not to worry. It was caused by the Lincoln Death Train, which had stopped time as it ran by in the night."
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02-17-2024, 09:16 AM
Post: #3
RE: Ghosts of Lincoln
Here is a link to "Houdini and Abraham Lincoln's Ghost" by Jason Emerson from Feb. 04, 2019 Linkedin

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/houdini-a...on-emerson

So when is this "Old Enough To Know Better" supposed to kick in?
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