You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
None
For more than half a century, the Franklin Castle's dark fa ade has lured curiosity seekers from around the world. Behind its iron gates, this Victorian-era structure harbors rumors of everything from insanity to mass murder. Disembodied voices echo from empty rooms, doors open and close of their own accord and cold spots drift about the manse. Witnesses swear to sightings of a woman in black and a young girl in white, believed to be the ghostly apparitions of the wife and daughter of the original owner, Hannes Tiedemann. Using previously unpublished photographs, interviews, family accounts, floor plans and nearly forty years of research, authors William G. Krejci and John W. Myers finally reveal the true and definitive history of Cleveland's notorious Franklin Castle.
None
None
None
None
Ghost Stories. Haunted Hikes. Pictures of the places. GPS/Addresses to Visit--Read the stories and visit the places too! Screaming Bridge over Maud Hughes Road in Butler County Lincoln Ghost Train Franklin Castle in Cleveland Ghostly Bride in a White Gown along Trebein Road in Greene County Anna Bell’s Grave in Hardin County The Maplehurst Mansion Ghost in Mt Vernon Harrod Cemetery Hatchet Man One-legged Captain at Benjamin Joy Cemetery Bessie Little Bridge, Frankenstein's Castle, and Johnny's Grave in Dayton Stumpy Hollow Bloody Mary near Mansfield Ghost Hollow near Portsmouth and over 70 spooky ghost stories from Ohio. Sit back and enjoy ghost stories and folklore of Ohio with Jannette Quackenbush, who has written over 20 ghostly books from New Orleans to Pennsylvania with many of the stories passed on directly to the writer. "My books are not about my journeys. They are about my readers' journeys. I want my readers to see the places I saw, read about them, and visit them too. That is why my books offer the richest and most robust ghost stories, lots of area pictures, and GPS to visit the legendary places if they are able . . "