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Gettysburg Ghosts Brave the Halloween Snowstorm of 2010

10/18/2015

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Gettysburg, Pennsylvania has the distinction of being considered one of the most haunted places on Earth. 

In July, 1863, one of the fiercest, most violent battles of the American Civil War raged for three full days in the rolling fields and forests surrounding the town. When the cannons and gunfire finally stopped on July 3, 8,000 soldiers would lie dead in those fields among the 60,000 bloody casualties. The carnage included 3,000 horses and one civilian casualty in the heart of the town; a woman who had been baking bread in her kitchen was shot in the head by a stray bullet that pierced her door.

Paranormal experts will tell you that this is the exact kind of trauma that is a catalyst for hauntings -- when people die so suddenly and tragically that they don't realize they're dead, or they don't want to accept it and just continue hanging around. 

I don't know about any of that, and I wasn't giving much consideration to it when I just happened to be in Gettysburg with my husband and our oldest daughter on Halloween weekend in 2010. 

At the end of that October, Brittany flew in from Denver to run the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, DC. Stephen and I would drive from Michigan to Pittsburgh to pick her up from the airport and drive her the rest of the way to the capitol city. We had never driven through Pennsylvania before and references to coal mines and steel mills had left us with the impression that outside of bucolic Amish country, that the rest of the state would be gray and dirty. Instead, we drove the whole way in a perpetual state of wonder. The peak fall foliage winding alternately through small towns and rolling woodlands rivaled Michigan for its rustic beauty.

By the time we rolled into Gettysburg, it was dusk and the quintessential Halloween eve for dinner in an old tavern and a slightly macabre tour through the historically preserved home of Jennie Wade (the woman who had died baking bread). Old leaves rustled appropriately under our feet, the half moon shone through overhanging tree branches over lanterned city streets, and even a mild wind gusted fresh leaves at an exhilarating rate. Jack o' lanterns glowed from random store windows and residential porches across the town.

The only thing that could have made it more perfect was the magic that happened on the dawn of the very next morning.

On October 31, 2010 the entire east coast of the US went from scarlet and gold to clean white overnight. We emerged from the hotel to a breathtaking winter wonderland. An abundance of big, feathery snowflakes were drifting earthward to cover the whole town in a downy blanket. Our only disappointment was that we had planned to drive the winding roads of Gettysburg National Cemetery on our way out of town to see the monuments, and we doubted the visibility.

In the end, we decided to go, anyway, anticipating a very different experience. And it was an ethereal one, looking over the fields and imagining how the first heavy snowfall, over one hundred and fifty years ago, late in the year of 1863 or early in 1864 might have covered the land and begun to heal the souls of the people. At least that's what I was thinking.

I was deep in introspection and looking off into the snow misted fields and rows of ivory headstones as far as the eye could see when Stephen pulled off the shoulder of the road. He and Brittany had spied the Peace Light Monument up ahead, the brilliance of its eternal flame shining through the falling snow, and they wanted to get out of the car to take a picture. I chose to stay in the car, but rolled down my passenger side window and took a single photo with my camera phone. Although a headstone faced the road directly parallel to the car, I snapped the camera at nothing in particular.  I just wanted to see if I could get a quality picture against the backdrop of the snow. I glanced at the picture and quickly determined that I couldn't -- it was snowing too hard -- and put the phone away. 
A few days and a few adventures later, Stephen and I dropped Brittany back at the airport and headed home to Michigan. It was at a Cracker Barrel near Pittsburgh that I first noticed it. We were talking across the table, sifting over the memories of the last few days, filing them away . . . and I lamented the fact that I wasn't able to get more pictures. I clicked the photo icon on my phone to take inventory and swiped over the few that I had taken, ending with the one of the headstone facing the road. I glanced quickly at it again and was about to put my phone away when something caught the edge of my eye. I looked closer. Directly to the left of the headstone, and about halfway down, the faces of two men, one just beyond the other, are staring directly at me. 
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    I'm Aerin Leigh.  I'm a once upon a time teacher and a forever reading cheerleader.  I'm a writer, a reading specialist, and a a believer in the power of words.  I've seen a little of the world, but my first love is Michigan.  I live here with my husband and two spoiled Boxer dogs, Merlot and Riesling.  We're happy empty nesters and we spend a lot of time in our hot tub. . . to stay warm.  Winter is my solace, but Summer has been my teacher and my friend.  I'm an occasional runner, and a constant connoisseur of wine and friendship and gel nails.  Anything that lights up is magic to me . . .  like fireflies, the glow of a storybook moon, Christmas lights under the stars, and my Colorado grandbabies' faces when they see me on Skype.  I embrace quirky things like Feng Shui and Acupuncture and prayer . . . because they just might work.  I'm a survivor of much and of many, but I leave my heart wide open.  My children are my role models, my current passion is possibility, and my God is good. 


    Come follow my leap of faith journey . . . There'll probably be a lot of crazy, but you just might get to witness a soft landing.  
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