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Thirteen Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey

Blue and white border surrounding black and white photo of a typical Halloween ghost shadow appearing on a door at the foot of a wooden staircase

    

“13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey” (Commemorative Edition)
Author: Kathryn Tucker Windham and Margaret Gillis Figh, with a new Afterword by Dilsy Windham Hilley and Ben Windham
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Pages: 124
Price: $29.95 (Hardcover)

In 1964 The Strode Publishers of Huntsville, Alabama released “Treasured Alabama Recipes” by Kathryn Tucker Windham. A great success, the book’s recipes were accompanied by stories that caught the public imagination. Strode was eager to have another book by Windham, stories this time, no recipes needed.

Windham chose to write up ghost stories from around Alabama, collaborating with folklorist Margaret Gillis Figh of Huntingdon College in Montgomery. Windham did text and photographs; the very attractive woodcut illustrations were done by Delores Eskins Atkins.

“13 Alabama Ghosts” was a hit, too, and when Strode went out of business the University of Alabama Press picked up the rights and the volume has been in print for 35 years, a perennial best-seller. Asked if he is a believer, Kathryn’s son Ben always replies, “Sure! Jeffrey sent me to college.”

It wasn’t only Jeffrey, either. Over the next few years there were six more “ghost” books—ghosts of Mississippi, Tennessee, etc.—and a compilation ghost book from NewSouth Books.

The six together have sold over 100,000 copies, an official at the UAP tells me; “Jeffrey” accounts for fully half of those sales. These books were really popular, so much so that a librarian in Selma is reputed to have complained that “Jeffrey” was the library’s most stolen book! Copies just keep flying off the shelves.

Not surprisingly, over the next few years the University Press will be re-issuing the ghost books in hardcover format, culminating in a boxed set of six. Windham died in 2011, and this present edition, a facsimile of the hardcover original, includes two new “Afterwords,” one by Ben and one by his sister, Dilsy.

The book had its origin in strange happenings at the Windham home in Selma. As Dilsy recalls, there were “loud and scratching noises …as though the midget demons of hell might have been turned loose all at once.” “Subsequent strangeness took the form of furniture rearranging…and freshly baked cakes flying…sailing off the dining room table.” Ben remembers one day as he was leaving “Suddenly, my suitcase jumped from my bed, flipped over twice in the air, and landed beside me.”

As of all this were not enough, Jeffrey seems to have posed for a picture or at least appeared in one in the Windhams’ living room. The photo is included in the volume for your inspection.

Jeffrey’s story is not told here. However, 13 other ghost stories are. My favorite maybe, because it is a little different and most creepy, is “The Return of the Ruined Banker.”

John McGee Parkman was president of First National Bank of Selma; during Reconstruction, he speculated with the bank’s funds in cotton, lost heavily, was arrested, escaped, perhaps drowned in the attempt and then returned to Sturdivant Hall.

Most ghosts make themselves visible, however vaguely. Many make noises, rattle chains and so on. But Parkman is more sensual. A guide at Sturdivant Hall reports: “He’s here again! He brushed against me in the upstairs bedroom. I never felt anything quite like it—his touch was clammy and frightening.” Other people have SEEN Parkman, but the pretty docents feel his touch.

Several of the ghosts left this world violently and so remain angry and restless. In Dale County, Bill Sketoe was unjustly hanged. The spot beneath his dangling feet is haunted. The anguished face of Henry Wells, also unjustly lynched, still stares down from the courthouse attic window in Carrollton.

As is only reasonable, ghosts favor mansions, and the most distinguished Great House in Alabama, Gaineswood, outside Demopolis, has its resident spirit. Evelyn Carter of Virginia was the sister of the widowed General Nathan B. Whitfield’s housekeeper. Evelyn was invited to spend winters at Gaineswood, to keep her sister company. She and Whitfield would play duets, Evelyn on piano and the general on bagpipes! All was well until Evelyn died of malaria or pneumonia or perhaps a broken heart and since it was winter and roads were icy, her body was stored under the stairs in the cellar until spring, in an airtight pine box. It seems Evelyn took offense. Residents at Gaineswood heard footsteps, then piano music. Evelyn’s body was taken to her native Virginia and buried but she stayed angry. “Evidently Evelyn could not forgive them for keeping her so long under the stairs in the cellar.” There’s a lesson here somewhere. The Huntingdon College Red Lady committed suicide in her room and won’t leave Pratt Hall. In Wilcox County a well digger was accidently killed in a cave-in. He appears occasionally and is heard to cry out: “Get me out of here. Please get me out.”

Perhaps the physically largest apparition is the steamboat “Eliza Battle,” burned on the Tombigbee in February 1858, “The greatest tragedy in Alabama’s river history.” Sometimes people see the whole steamer “rise up out of the troubled water” ablaze, victims shrieking, with the band playing.

Children have loved these stories for decades but it would be best to read them in the daylight, not at bedtime.

This review was originally broadcast on Alabama Public Radio. Don Noble is host of the Alabama Public Television literary interview show “Bookmark” and the editor of “A State of Laughter: Comic Fiction from Alabama.”

Don Noble , Ph. D. Chapel Hill, Prof of English, Emeritus, taught American literature at UA for 32 years. He has been the host of the APTV literary interview show "Bookmark" since 1988 and has broadcast a weekly book review for APR since November of 2001, so far about 850 reviews. Noble is the editor of four anthologies of Alabama fiction and the winner of the Alabama state prizes for literary scholarship, service to the humanities and the Governor's Arts Award.
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