September Now Sets In --- James Madison Scates Diary, Part 2

Sept. now sets in. On the 4th of this month I traveled up the Rappahannock over to Fredericksburg and over on the cars to the camp at Brooks Station having been on furlough home.  On the 11th day of September we struck our tents at Brooks Station and marched for Marlborough Point the distance of 7 miles and again pitched our tents.  Up to the 15th all is quiet and on this day I traveled over to Fredericksburg on the cars and back to Brooks Station.  All quiet up to October.  

On the 1st October I was appointed orderly Sergeant.  26th I had a furlough home [marginal note; not sure if he means September or October 26th.] October 4th on this day we receive orders to march for Aquia Village we was soon ready for the march with 24 hours rations cooked and packed in our haver sacks.  We started on our march about 5 o'clock the same evening and marched until 3 o'clock that night when one of our waggons got stuck in the mud on the road and while we was there we received orders to return as the yankeys had left the place when they landed and had gone again on board of their vessels --- We then kindled our fires and spread our blankets on the ground and slept on them until day and about 8 o'clock we again took up the line of march back to our camp resting at Stafford Court House and again at the hospital church we arrived at our camp at Marlborough about 6 o'clock in the afternoon of the 5th after a long and tiresome march counting this distance there and back at 30 miles.  

James Madison Scates

The weather being verymuch warmer than is often seen in October a good many of our men gave out and stopped on the road in our own company every man returned to his quarters in the ranks.  

On the 15th we struck our tents and moved our camp about 3 hundred _____ and on the 10th we began clearing to build winter / on the 14th we began to build our houses 15th the batteries at (Evansport?) opened fire on the vessels passing there which caus'd all vessels to stop a five - miles below the Battery.  It was quite amusing to we soldiers to see some forty or fifty vessels lying too and affraid to pass our battery.

On the 23rd the steamer Geo. Page left her place whare she was fitted up in aquia Creek and ran up the Potomac opposite our battery at Evans Port and was loudly cheered by our soldiers.

On the 24th our regiment was ordered to cook 3 days rations and hold our selves in readiness to march at a moments warning.  But the soldiers was not informed whare we was to march but on the 29th we was ordered to march.  We was soon ready and about 9 o'clock we started from our camp to meet the Enemy which we understood was about to land in Westmoreland County and that being the nearest to our homes that some of our men had been since they left for the service they marched with light hearts, expecting to soon have a chance to see their homes or some of their beloved friends.  We crossed over Potomac Creek and marched out about 4 miles in King George County and in crossing the creek and our little march had taken the day we then stopped for the night in the woods and had to stay thair to await further orders.  We had no shelter but the woods and but little cover and laying on the cold ground for our beds and in this condition we spent 4 days and nights and the last night we had to suffer from a heavy east rain.  Next morning the 1st of November we received orders to go back to our camp which we done in quick time through the same heavy rain.  It was a terrible time the wind being very high we crossed the creek veary slow it took the whole day to cross we was quite glad to get back to our camp wet and hungry as we all was our soldiers seemed to be cheerfull and full of high spirit for the cause of our belovd country.

On Sunday the 17th we moved winter quarters at Marlbrough nothing of any consequence has happened since we recrossed the Potomac Creek.  Except a steamer out in the river threw several shots at Col. Caric's regiments crossing the Potomac creek and up to the 19th day of December all was quiet with us we was then comfortably quartered and on this day we received orders to march to the Northern Neck in Northumberland County VA this being the homes of most of our soldiers we received the order with joy and early on the morning of the 20th we started on our march crossing over Potomac creek and marched to St. Francis Church in King George County in the distance about 14 miles and arrived about 6 o'clock that night.  The next day the 21st we rested and about 3 o'clock on the 22nd we again started on our march and marched to Bethlehem Church about 6 miles further and again rested or to await further orders.  And whilst here we took our Christmas.  And on the 27th we again took up the line of march for the hop yard to take the steam boat we arrived thare about 10:00 the same day marching about 12 miles when the boat came to take us off it was late in the evening and only ran about 12 miles down the Rappahanock and stopped for the night.  And about light we again started on our rout and we arrived at Circuts Point the same evening (28th) the distance of 55 miles from the hopyard and we landed thare and spent the night and at 1 o'clock we again took up our march for Farnham Church in Richmond Co.-- we arrived there about sunset the same evening marching about ___ miles and rested for the night.  At 8 o'clock next morning Sunday the 29th we again started on our march we marched over a level country about 12 miles and arrived at Northumberland Court house amid shouts and cheers of welcome by the citizens and here we lived well for soldiers until about the 4th of February 1862.

Mustered in to Servis --- James Madison Scates Diaries, Part I

 Jas. M. Scates                                                                                      
 
                                    

1861

Richmond County

Virginia

______________________________________________________

1861 -- Memories of Sergt. Jas. M Scates

Member of the Farmers Fork Grays. This company was mustered in to servis on the 4th day of June 1861.  We started from our own homes on the 8th day of June and met in company at Westmoreland Courthouse. We started in company and marched to Carter's Wharf taking the boat at that place in Richmond County.  We traveled up the river about       miles and landed at the hop yard in King George County and marching from there to King George Court house the distance of      miles and camped there for the night.  On Sunday the 9th after going to preaching we drilled in company drill for a while.  and again rested for the knight.


On Monday morning the 10th we was ready again to take up the line of march for Mathias Point the distance of        miles in the same county arriving there hungry and tired about 3 o'clock that evening and pitch our tents, the distance of 17 miles from the court house. All was quiet up to the 15th. All was then ordered out before breakfast to meet the enemy but they did not land, and the next day was the same thing but they would not land.  On the 16th the cavalry from our regiment boarded and burned a yankey vessel off Hoes Ferry, takeing out what they could carry to the shore in the boat with about $30 cash. On the 17th we had a skirmish on the banks shooting at the yankeys on the tug from the shore.  She fired a good many guns at us through(w)ing shot and shell at us with out affect.  There was 1 man killed on the tug he was seen fall by us. After this all was quiet again up to the 2nd when the yankeys landed at Hoes Ferry and burned his dwelling house.  We was again thrown in motion to meet them but they left before we arrived.  They carried away his servant of the house.  24 quiet and on the 25th the old Pawnee came off the point at Mathias and began a heavy cannonading thro(w)ing the bombs and balls all over our camp one bomb shell passed through the house of which 30 of our men of our company was camped but luckily there was but one man in the house and was not hurt. The same ball passed on cutting off a railing post and bursting at the spring where there was about 25 men around the spring but no one was hurt a small piece of the shell (  ) one man but did not hurt him. While she was bombing our camp we was carried under cover of the hill. She then ceased firing when some of the yankeys landed and came upon 2 of the cavalry pickets taking their horses but the men escaped.  They then swam the horses to the ship and hoisted them on board also taking one negro from Mr. Gaines.  

On the 26 all was quiet the 27 came and with it the first sight of a battle I ever saw the steamers (red stack and freeborn?) came off the point and commenced a heavy cannonading for a while and then landed men on the point for the purpose of erecting a battery of sand bags and dirt.  We then marched down under cover of the woods to dislodge them.  We were sent in different directions and soon came upon them when the riflemen began a sharp fire upon them.  The hour was quite serious for none of us eaver was in battle but we soon drove them from their breast works killing we have since learned 24 of them with out receiving a single fire from their small guns.  Happy to say not one of us was hurt.  Some of them escaped to the steamer leaving behind them all of their utencils for building the battery.  We got from them the bags for the battery their shovels, spades, and picks & also the rope that they used in raising the boats to the shore from the tugs and a spy glass a good many things was after wards found amongst them 2 rifles.

"Engagement between the Gunboat Flotilla, Freeborn and Reliance, under the Command of Captain James H. Ward, and Secession Force at Mathias Point, Va., on the Potomac River -- Death of Captain Ward." 27 June 1861.
      A line engraving, based on a sketch by an Officer of the Expedition, published in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 1861,   depicting USS Thomas Freeborn, Ward's flagship, in the left foreground with USS Reliance to her right.

US Navy History and Heritage Command photo # NH 59242

28 quiet on the 29 we moved our camp pitching our tents in another field not over 2 miles distants I have the name of this place camp hoe all was then quiet up to the 4th of July when we was called out about 2 o'clock in the night telling us that we was surrounded by the enemy but as we all found it to be no more than to be our camp again. We all had our breakfast quite early calling out so early was I suppose for the purpose of seeing how quick we all would get in ranks and be ready for motion. We pitched our tents the same evening after a march of about 5 miles and about 8 miles from the Main Point and in the same county calling the camp by the name of camp hoe. all was again quiet only those tugs ____ pass the point and firing at our pickets but to no affect.  Up to the 18th of July when we struck our tents at camp hoe and having orders for Brooks Station late in the evening we started on our march and stopping for the night at St. Pauls Church and having to wait for some of the baggage waggons until late in evening of the 19th when we again took up the line of march to Brooks Station and when in about 8 miles of that place we met a dispatch ordering us back to ____ Point in King George County.  We marched until 3 oclock in the night having to march back we could get at the Georges distance of     miles we stopped for the balance of the night in Potomac Church.  Early next morning the 20th we again took up the line of march. when we stopped to cook our breakfast we was only 2 miles from the place we ate our supper the night before. after traveling over an uneaven country what was most pleasing to the most of us we could often see the blue ridge mountains far away from us. after breakfast we marched for ______ Point. we arrived there about 11 oclock crossing over Potomac Creek we landed on Marlbrough Point in Stafford County whare we saw the bones of the Soldiers killed in some ancient battle learning the same day that this point was the place chosen for the city of Alexandria. Thare is yet viserable outer wals of an old house _____of balls supposed to have been fired in the war of 1812.  After we landed on this point we received orders to march to Acquia Creek the distance of 3 miles where we again stationed. the march from Mathias Point to Acquia Creek is said to be the distance of 30 miles by land beside marching about 12 miles out of our way on the 21st. we could hear the tremendous cannonading and roaring of the battle of Manassas. a good many of us had the Measels. on the 8th of August I was taken with them. occasionally a steamer would through a ball towards us. On the morning of the 16th of August Capt Walker opened fire from the _________ and 2 of his small rifle pieces from the shore on the steamer out in the Potomac River throwing the balls over around and into them striking the Pocahontas several times knocking a hole in her stern and cutting the rigging off her bow twice when they all left the place amediately from where they lay for some time only firing at him twice.  On the 19th we left Acquia Creek and took up the line of march for Brooks Station arriving at the place the same evening about 2 oclock and pitched our tents in a heavy rain and on the wet ground. we had to set up all night the land was too wet to spread our blankets on ground but we soon after made ourselves quite comfortable.. All balance of the month quiet.


(To Be Continued)

Presley Carter Balderson

I wrote earlier about my great-great grandfather Presley Balderson and his 3 brothers who were all members of the 40th VA Infantry regiment during the Civil War (The AWOL Season, 5/12/16.)

As a recap, Presley, the youngest of the 4,  enlisted in Warsaw, VA on June 4, 1861 along with his older brother William, into Company D.  Charles and James had enlisted 10 days earlier into Company B; they were both musicians, and both were shoe/bootmakers.  Presley was first sent to Chimborazo Hospital beginning a month after the death of William (wounded fatally at Gaines' Mill on June 27, 1862) and Charles' illness and discharge (in mid-late July 1862.) This was immediately following the regiment's engagement at Cedar Mountain, and he may have been the one casualty listed on the muster list.  The reason for his hospitalization was "debilitas," in other words, weakness or feebleness: exhaustion.  He remained in the hospital until October 23-- a period of over 2 months, after which he was furloughed and instructed to report back for duty on December 1.  He was absent without leave for the month of December, but returned in January, along with his brother James.   Presley was readmitted to Chimborazo in May of 1863 after receiving a gunshot wound through the left shoulder at Chancellorsville. This wound is renowned in family lore because of the harrowing treatment it received from the surgeon:  a red hot poker was driven through it. It's moments like this that can change the trajectory of the future.  The furlough that followed meant that Presley missed the events in Gettysburg, which proved close to disastrous for his regiment.   

Earlier this week, I was poking around at some research and found two wonderful things:  First, a labeled copy of an unlabeled photograph that I have at home.  I love the photo; it's more casual and candid than the posed formal photos you usually see from this era.  The man in the photo has always reminded me of my dad, Carson...just something about his height, build, and kind face.  I knew that he must be a Balderson, but I didn't know which one, or even from what decade the photo might be.  The labeled photo confirmed that it is none other than Presley Carter Balderson and his wife Mary Ann Coates Balderson.  This dates the photo to sometime before 1904, when Mary died while sweeping the floor at home.  

On the same day, I found the obituary shown below, which is lovingly written and detailed, AND adds important information about Presley's service during the war as well as his character.  I didn't know about his participation at the Bloody Angle (the Muleshoe) during the Battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse, although I had heard a snippet about him supposedly rescuing the colors at some battle; I figured it was at Chancellorsville.  So it was great to read his story as he told it just before he died.  ---Yet another instance where fate intervened, the universe watched over him, and he summoned the courage to do his best for his regiment ("team.") And he was rewarded with survival, and a long life.  He outlived Mary Ann by 21 years, and lived to the ripe age of 88.  He met his death with courage and a peaceful heart, it seems.


IV. Beneath the Surface






I. 

 

September 19, 2013 was a slow day at work.  I had been doing some research on the first people to live in my current house back in the 1930s, and decided to look up a Kent County News story of an incident concerning the builder’s father.  I was following a trail whose steps I no longer remember, gathering facts that seem trivial now, which gave my mind some mild entertainment in the form of eavesdropping on the past.  I found the article I was looking for, detailing an incident of the builder’s father as a teenager, getting into a fistfight with a former teacher on the street, back in the spring of 1883.  Typical Kent County stuff, maybe.  I dropped a dime into the machine and printed out the page, as my eyes scanned the other headlines on the page, headed with the date of publication May 17, 1883.  “The strawberry season is not far off.”  “The Sale of Bellevue.”  And then:  

  

A MADMAN’S TRAGIC ACT. 

KILLING HIS INTIMATE FRIEND. 

REVOLVER AND KNIFE BOTH EMPLOYED. 

Charles R. White Shot Down by Charles E. Hanson while the Former was Making a Call on the Latter at His Home. 

[Reported for the Baltimore Sun.] 

 

Interesting.  I read on:  “Mr. Charles R. White, of Howard Co., was shot and instantly killed on Wednesday by Mr. Charles Edward Hanson, an intimate friend and neighbor.”  Howard County, my home county on the western shore.  Wait.  I know these people! 

 

 

II. 

 

Elkridge, Maryland is my hometown.  Twenty or more years ago, you may never have heard of it, but that has changed as its popularity has risen as a convenient commuter town.  Located directly on the US Route 1 corridor between Baltimore and Washington, DC, the face it shows to most people is one composed of strip shopping centers, convenience stores, car dealerships, and the occasional vintage motel with antique signage.  On the southeastern side of this main artery are undulating streets lined with homes built during the last one hundred years or so, leading down to some of the oldest established railroad line in the country, and the Patapsco River.  On the west, another winding road leads up into what used to be farmland, later became  threaded with neighborhoods tucked off into the woods and hills, from which other, newer branches now extend with smaller, more expensive, densely-packed, tree-deprived properties. 

 

Growing up, I lived in one of the older of these wooded neighborhoods.  At my high school, Elkridge was falsely stereotyped as the domain of rednecks and working-class families, typified by the auto-shop boys with Confederate flag stickers adorning their muscle cars, its string of Route 1 motels and trailer parks, and the only outdoor motorcycle bar in the state.  It was, in fact, a regular small town filled with all kinds of people and families, many of whom had roots in the town going back for generations. 

 

Although the Elkridge of my youth was an unpretentious place, looking on the surface like a thousand other pass-through towns in the crowded mid-Atlantic, it is in fact the oldest settlement in what is now Howard County, dating to about 1700.  Once part of Anne Arundel County, which at that time extended from the Chesapeake Bay to the fall line, Elkridge was once an international port, with ocean-going vessels docking regularly just below the spot where US Route 1 crosses the Patapsco into Baltimore County.  Its main exports were tobacco and iron, the latter from a series of mines, forges, and furnaces established in the area by the Dorsey family, the first family to settle and spread their properties out upon the Ridge between the Patapsco and Patuxent Rivers. 

 

Those of us who grew up in Elkridge, especially thirty or more years ago when it was a much smaller and more intimate community, were taught the details of its history before we left elementary school.  We also knew about the secret treasures hidden away in the woods and lanes of the area:  the Thomas Viaduct, the oldest and largest curved multi-arched railroad bridge in the country, still in use; the Russian cemetery; the ruins of one of the Dorsey furnaces in Patapsco State Park; and the isolated foundations of the home of Colonel Charles Marshall, Robert E. Lee’s traveling secretary throughout the Civil War.  This last landmark was far up in the woods behind my house, and a favorite destination of my sisters and me, where we collected evergreens at Christmastime and daffodils in the spring, in the buried remnants of the old formal gardens, nearly a mile from the nearest house but close to the noise of traffic from Interstate 95.  And then, there was the most special place of all.  Belmont, the hidden heart of the community, in the most isolated spot of all, tucked away in the green jewel box of its 80 acres, nestled far from the nearest road, in the protective arms of the State Park.  Belmont had been the home of the Dorsey family, the massive landholders and proprietors of the iron furnaces and forges, first founders of this community on the Ridge, and later, the Hanson family, of which Charles Edward “Ned” Hanson, who murdered his intimate friend and neighbor on May 16, 1883, was a member. 

 

Belmont was built in the 1730s, and was owned and lived in by Dorseys and their descendants, including the Hansons, for more than two hundred years.  In 1965, it ended its days as a privately-owned estate, and began a new life as a small, exclusive conference center.  Whole families of high school-aged sisters and brothers in Elkridge, including mine, became part of the Belmont family, securing coveted jobs as waitresses and house boys.  I spent nearly ten years working there, from high school until several years after college, in food service, housekeeping, and finally in the offices, sharing the position of Marketing Coordinator with a childhood friend and wife of Belmont’s former executive chef.  People outside of our community knew little to nothing of the existence of this place, with the exception of the lucky groups who came to stay, a large proportion of them connected with Federal and local governments, including foreign dignitaries and even sometimes people important enough to require Secret Service detail.  Belmont’s isolation was one of its chief marketing points. 

 

When you first came to work at Belmont, you were scrupulously trained by the senior generation of staff members in how to deliver the highest quality of service.  These were the motherly women from town who cooked breakfast and lunch every day; the executive chefs, always from “elsewhere,” who had special and entertaining personalities; the gruff, businesslike housekeepers, tending to be past middle age and firmly entrenched in the community; and the grounds and maintenance men who seemed to know everything about the place…and did, since they lived in houses right on the property.  Precision, perfection, discretion, and courtesy, doing things “the Belmont way” were required in all aspects of food and beverage service and housekeeping. 

 

Fortunately, it was not only an interesting place to work, but a companionable place, with coworkers feeling like family members and, after a while, the house feeling like home.  Very soon after you completed your first shift, as you relaxed in the staff room after dinner with your coworkers, you began to hear the stories, legends, and rumors about the house, and the people who had lived and visited there. 

 

As new employees in the 1980s, my friends and I all heard about the Dorseys during those staff room storytelling sessions.  Caleb Dorsey, the builder, met his wife Priscilla while fox hunting in the area, and their initials are still carved in stone beside the front door.  Another Priscilla Dorsey, their granddaughter, eloped with Alexander Contee Hanson, a congressman and later a senator who was nearly killed in a Baltimore riot at the beginning of the war of 1812.  Guests to the home during this time included Henry Clay, statesman and Speaker of the House, who had a favorite chair beside the fireplace in the drawing room.  It was after Alexander Hanson’s untimely death from his lasting injuries in 1819 that the estate fell upon hard times. 

 

If you were to consult local history sources or books containing descriptions of colonial homes in the region, you might notice that in most histories of Belmont, the years between 1819 and 1913 are barely mentioned, or condensed into one or two lines:  “Hanson’s son Grosvenor enjoyed gambling, and the estate was nearly lost.  In 1913, two of Grosvenor’s nine children, now both old ladies, resided at the decrepit mansion on the hill,” or something along those lines.  Yet, every member of the Hanson family--- Priscilla and the Senator, their son Grosvenor and his wife Annie Maria, the latters’ nine children who had lived to adulthood, as well as four more children who died in infancy, or young--- is buried in the old cemetery at the edge of the woods beyond the formal gardens, surrounded by a wrought-iron fence. 

 

The tales and rumors told in the staff room of this part of the house’s history were darker, and began to intersect with the countless stories of employees and guests who claim to have experienced strange events and even seen uncanny things while staying or working at the house.  It was rumored that one of the families who lived in the house had a son who was either crazy, monstrous, or had severe developmental disabilities, and he was often locked in the room in the cellar where the extra chairs are kept.  This is the same room in the basement where two employees from the phone company were servicing the telephone connections in the early 1990s, when they suddenly left without completing the job, telling the manager on duty that they wouldn’t be returning.  There was something very wrong down there, they said, and it didn’t involve the phone lines.  None of Belmont’s employees liked going into the basement, which was built of local stone and multichambered, running the length of the five sections of the house. 

 

We were told that somebody was once shot on the front porch because he had borrowed his cousin’s horse without permission.  This is the same area of the house that is featured in Belmont’s “official” ghost story, published in several places, of a phantom coach which drives up the circular drive and stops at the front door, horses stamping, while an invisible person stomps up the porch steps, enters the house, and marches toward the kitchen wing.  I’ve never met a person who has experienced this official phenomenon, although a friend of a friend’s mother heard it one night many decades ago.  Instead, kitchen employees were plagued with trays of glasses that smashed while safely stored in glass-fronted cupboards, carefully counted silverware and plates which disappear and reappear in a few minutes’ time, mysteriously exploding wine containers, a strange ‘mist’ which hovers about the dining room chandelier after the lights are extinguished, and other frustrating events which seem to escalate when especially important guests are in residence.  Objects have even been seen flying across the dining room by employees working alone (me,) with both doors to the room closed.   

 

A woman wearing white has often been seen, usually appearing as a real, solid woman clad in Victorian clothing, in a particular bedroom by more than one guest, or setting quietly in the corner of an adjoining bedroom by an employee who was checking the rooms one evening before the arrival of an important group.  She may be the same person whose misty, white-clad form was seen on several occasions standing at a small bridge over a stream in the early morning hours. 

 

 

III. 

 

September 26, 2013, a week after my discovery in the Kent County News, I took the time to contact several of my fellow former Belmont friends, with whom I’ve never lost touch.  I couldn’t wait to tell them that by pure chance, I had stumbled upon an incredible story that filled in many of the lost details of the scraps of history we had heard about the troubled years of our former workplace.  After finding the article about the May 1883 murder in the Kent County News, I consulted the Baltimore Sun from the same time period, where I found a series of articles describing, in true Victorian fashion, full details of the murder, inquest, funeral of the deceased, testimonies of both families, and Ned Hanson’s trial.  Along with census records of the decades leading up to and following the murder, these articles helped me piece together a strange, sad story of this family who had lived at the heart of our community a hundred years before any of us had been born, in the very house that, in retrospect, had played a huge part in our coming of age, early adulthoods, and for some of us, even in the formation of our own families.  What’s more, the story oddly lined up in certain places with some of the strange, unexplained phenomena for which the house had become known. 

 

The murder was not the result of an argument about a horse, as we had always been told.  The truth was much less comfortable. 

 

At the time of the murder, several Hanson siblings, all adults, were living at Belmont.  Mrs. Hanson had died ten years earlier.  Her husband, in the years following her death, had allowed the property to fall into disrepair.  What’s more, he had altogether ceased maintaining the family cemetery, superstitiously believing that doing so would hasten his own death.  This seemed to work for him for a few years only; he had passed away three years earlier.  Living at the house in 1883 were Priscilla Hanson, age 37; Charles Edward “Ned” Hanson, age 35; Grosvenor Hanson, age 27; Annie “Nannie” Hanson, age 25; and Florence Hanson, age 23.  Three other brothers lived and did business in Baltimore.  

 

According to Ned Hanson’s own testimony at court proceedings, the spirit of his sister Mary, who had died when he was fifteen years old, had appeared to him.  She warned him to be on his guard against Charles Ridgely White, who was prepared, she said, to shoot him on sight.  Furthermore, he testified that ten years earlier, he had received similar instructions from his mother at her death, although she had revealed that Mr. White was responsible for the death of this same sister, and she instructed him to take revenge.  Oddly, though, Ned had not even been present at his mother’s deathbed.  It seems that 20th century employees were not the first to be treated to ghostly visitations at Belmont. 

 

Reports of the court proceedings state that at a little before noon on May 16, 1883, Charles Ridgely White drove to Belmont to see Ned in order to get some seed corn.  With him in his carriage were one of his daughters and a female cousin who was visiting from Washington.  White was then living on one of his properties, Tutbury, adjacent to the Belmont property and only a mile distant.  Their families had been great friends for a long time and were, in fact, related.  When Mr. White arrived at Belmont on May 16, only Priscilla and Annie were at home.  Shortly thereafter, Ned Hanson entered the house from another entrance, and learned that Mr. White had come to call.  He then walked into the dining room and picked up a bread knife which was lying on the sideboard.  He crossed the room and walked out onto the front porch, stepping down to where Mr. White stood talking to his sisters.  As he did so, he pulled out a pistol and fired three shots at Mr. White, all of which found their mark.  He then rushed at the body, cutting a 4-inch gash in the throat with the bread knife, partially severing the windpipe.  He then walked calmly back into the house, through the dining room and into the kitchen, where he washed the blood from the knife, returning it to its place on the sideboard.  He then retired to his room, and waited for his brothers John and Grosvenor to return from Baltimore. 

 

Mr. White’s body was carried into the house.  A jury of local lawyers and physicians was assembled, and an inquest and post-mortem examination were held at the house that evening. 

 

Ned’s family had been uneasy about his mental state ever since he had returned from California in the 1870s.  After a subsequent attack of sunstroke, he had suffered occasional hallucinations and paranoid delusions that he was being followed by a party of men determined to kill him.  Testimony given at the courthouse said that he was generally an intelligent person, friendly and personable, fond of a joke and a great storyteller.  Prior to this incident, he had never been violent, although he had been known to have explosive fits of temper during discussions of politics.  It was also noted during the investigation that Ned’s sister Priscilla, a little over a year older than him and one of the witnesses of the murder, had long suffered from periods of “madness.”  Because his behavior at the time of the murder was uncharacteristic, and because of the lack of a solid, earthly motive for the deed, it was determined at the inquest and at the formal trial in Ellicott City that although Ned had killed Charles R. White, he was not responsible by reason of insanity. 

 

Charles Edward “Ned” Hanson, in June, 1883, was committed to the Maryland Hospital for the Insane, now Spring Grove, in Catonsville.  He remained there until his death in 1931 at the age of 83. 

 

A few years later, sometime prior to 1900, his sister Priscilla was also committed to the Maryland Hospital for the Insane.  As noted earlier, Ned and Priscilla, along with their parents, grandparents, and ten brothers and sisters, are now laid to rest in the Hanson family burial ground at Belmont.  Every last one of the siblings had died unmarried, with no descendants to mourn them. 

 

 

IV.  

 

When I think of Ned’s reported movements on the afternoon of May 16, 1883, I can’t help but notice that his footsteps crossed and recrossed the dining room and kitchen, as he retrieved, washed, and replaced the bread knife he employed as one of his murder weapons.  This is the same area of the house prone to unexplainable disturbances involving glasses, dishes, and silverware.  Could Ned be the disturbed person who had spent so much time in that basement room, and still made everyone who visited the cellar uncomfortable?  I can’t help but wonder, if there is such a thing as a spiritual manifestation, whether the woman in white who was sometimes seen and felt on the upper floor is Mary Hanson, Ned’s sister.  Or perhaps she is their mother, Annie Maria, the mother of a dozen children who either died young, died insane, or merely witnessed the downfall of their family’s fortune as they grew old.   

 

And I can’t help but wonder if there is some kind of link between insanity and paranormal phenomena, whether a fragile psyche is more permeable to other layers of time, more susceptible to glimpses of what has gone on before, or is just less guarded against these perceptions.  I wonder, then, what it means when some of us are witnesses to what appear to be attempts by deceased people to communicate.  I wonder if some locations are inherently more ‘thin’ than others, existing independent of linear time, with layers of time blending and intersecting in a way that sometimes becomes perceptible to those who visit.  My Belmont friends wonder, too. 

 

 

 

V. 

 

Belmont is now owned by the County, and after a thorough restoration effort, has once again opened its doors to the public as a nature preserve and conference center, hosting parties and weddings in its graciously appointed rooms and formal gardens.  There are more places like Belmont that haven’t yet been paved over, where the layers of time and history are sometimes made visible to those who visit.  Their histories are still known by those acquainted with old Elkridge, who grow older and fewer as time passes and more houses and roads are built, and more and more new people move in.  Beneath the surface, the old Elkridge is still there.  Underneath the known histories, beyond the bits of “official” lore, are the remains of flesh-and-blood people whose real stories have been all but forgotten.  The layers of time are just waiting to be peeled back, their secrets to reveal, for those willing to stop and look, before all traces are gone. 



Author's note:  This piece was written for a writing class I took in the summer of 2015, based on a project I had been working on for a couple of years.  For me, this is still an "open case...", an unfinished story of events not entirely known or understood.  "The Howard County Tragedy," also in this blog, is a later version of this piece.  I think I prefer this one.

In 2020, I shared this piece, its postscript, and some photos and research notes with someone working on a book of Howard County ghost stories, published in the summer of 2022.  She used it as a source and this blog is noted in her bibliography. (Shelley Davies Wygant.)

Lost and Found

(Note:  this article was written in December of 2023 for the winter/spring issue of Washington College Magazine.)   (Headline) Lost by a tee...