Moment in Oddity - The Effigy of Sarah Hare
There is a most unique effigy that can be found inside the Hare Chapel of Stow Bardolph's Church of the Holy Trinity in the United Kingdom. The effigy is a bust made of wax in the likeness of a 55 year old spinster. She died in 1744 from blood poisoning after pricking her finger on a needle. Her name was Sarah Hare. Her will that was dated August of 1743 stated: 'I desire to have my face and hands made in wax with a piece of crimson satin thrown like a garment in a picture, hair upon my head and put in a case of Mahogany with a glass before and fix’d up so near the place were my corps lyes as it can be with my name and time of Death.' It is believed that Sarah's effigy is dressed in her own clothes and that perhaps the brown curls upon her head are from one of the wigs that she owned. It is unknown whether her replica was created pre or post mortem. Did Sarah Hare have a premonition of her death? It was said that her early demise was punishment for sewing on Sundays which was her habit. Her disturbingly life-like wax effigy is the only one of its kind in England except for those located at Westminster Abbey which certainly makes this unusual bust odd.
This Month in History - The Birth of George Richard Strauss
In the month of June, on the 11th, in 1864, composer George Richard Strauss was born in Munich, Germany. Richard was a musical child prodigy. His father Franz was a principal French horn player and was renowned for his talent. Franz began Richard's musical education at a young age. Richard began learning the piano at age four and the youngster began to compose his own musical pieces at the mere age of six. Richard may have studied musical theory and composition formally, but it was his father's love of the works of Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart and Schubert that heavily influenced his musical developement. Franz provided his son with advice, comments and constructive criticism. His father also featured Richard's compositions in performances by the Wilde Gung'l, an amateur orchestra Franz conducted from 1875-1896. When Strauss traveled to Berlin, he learned the art of conducting by observing Hans von Bülow during his orchestral rehearsals. Although Strauss is known for many operas and tone poems, his most widely known operas include Salome, Elektra, and Der Rosenkavalier, and his tone poems titled Don Juan, Death and Transfiguration and An Alpine Symphony. George Richard Strauss's accomplishments are too numerous to detail here. The talented German composer and conductor continued creating new pieces all the way up until a year prior to his death in 1949 at the age of 85.
Haunted Sault Ste. Marie (Soo)
Locals call it "The Soo." Sault Ste. Marie is the name of two cities that sit across the St. Mary's River from each other. One in Michigan and one in Ontario, Canada. For Michigan, this is its oldest city and was established by the French in 1671. The Upper Peninsula almost seems to be in a different world when it comes to the state of Michigan as it is separated from the mainland of the state by not only water, but also the island of Mackinac. The paranormal is strong here. For 16 years, the Michigan ParaCon was held in the Soo and the hosts of that continue to run paranormal events there. That's because there are several haunted locations here. Join us for the history and hauntings of Sault Ste. Marie!
The Upper Peninsula was home for centuries to a variety of indigenous groups. These included the Dakota, Lakota and Nakoda Sioux, also known as the Seven Council Fires. The Ojibwe migrated from the East Coast into the area starting in the 1300s and they pushed out the Sioux. The rapids of St. Mary's River inspired them to call what would become the Soo, Baawitigong, which means "at the cascading rapids." The first Europeans to settle would be the French and they changed the name to Saulteaux (soul toe), which means "rapids" in French, which developed into Saults de Sainte-Marie. (souls de sont marie) The first major structure was a Jesuit mission founded by French missionaries Claude Dablon and Jacques Marquette in 1668. That makes this city one of the oldest in the country. It IS the oldest permanent European settlement in Michigan. In 1671, French officials conducted an elaborate ceremony that proclaimed France's appropriation of the territory around Lake Superior in the name of King Louis XIV. They invited a bunch of tribes to witness this. We're sure they were thrilled.
The fur trade would take hold in the 18th century through the British-owned North West Company. The most influential European settlers at that time were the Johnstons. John Johnston was a Scots-Irish immigrant from Belfast who came to the Upper Peninsula to fur trade. He arrived in 1790 and after a while, his men abandoned him, so a prominent Ojibwe chief took him in. While there, Johnston noticed the chief had a beautiful daughter. He wanted to marry her, but the chief knew that these European men would abandon their native wives, so he told him to come back the next spring and then he could marry her. So Johnston did just that. Her name was - oh boy, clutch your pearls everybody as we try to pronounce this - Ozhaguscodaywayquay. (Oz hag us coe day way quay) Later she was baptized and took on the Anglicized name Susan Johnston. History would remember her as the Woman of the Green Prairie. The family would gain prominence with all parties in the area including Native Americans, First Nations, and Europeans from both Canada and the United States. The couple would go on to have eight children who learned fluent Ojibwe, English and French.
Later, the Soo would come under British colonial rule. After the War of 1812, a US–UK Joint Boundary Commission came together to figure out what would be Canadian and what would be American using St. Mary's River. Through this, the United States banned Canadian traders from America. That kind of separation lasted through to the end of the 19th century when American and Canadian communities in Sault Ste. Marie were each incorporated as independent municipalities. The US built Fort Brady in 1822 to help protect the locks. In 1866, this old fort was abandoned and a new one was built upland and completed in 1893. During World War II, the fort was used to train troops in cold weather battle. After the war, the fort became surplus so it was sold to the Michigan College of Mining and Technology. In 1966, Fort Brady became the site of the Lake Superior State College of Michigan Technological University. Today, it's known as Lake Superior State University.
The locks have become a tourist attraction, but also serve a very important purpose. The falls of the river became a choke point for trade through shipping. Ships would have to be portaged around the rapids to get to Lake Superior. This was a long process, so then it was decided to just take the cargo itself around the rapids. So a ship would be unloaded, cargo portaged and loaded back onto another ship. Then it was decided to build a lock. This first American lock was called the State Lock and it opened in 1855. That lock has been expanded over the years and is known as the Soo Locks. The locks move nearly 86 million tons of cargo every year and allow freighters to travel between Lake Superior and the lower Great Lakes. The Canadian side built their own passage way in 1895, the Sault Ste. Marie Canal. The locks at this canal were the first in the world to run on their own power station. The Canadian Pacific Railway came through the city to help bypass the locks as well around 1888. The Canadian Sault Ste. Marie incorporated as a village in 1871. The Michigan side incorporated as a village in 1879. The two cities would join forces during World War II to protect the locks from Nazi attacks.
The twin cities not only share a history, but they share a haunting reputation. Here are some of the haunted locations on the Michigan side of things:
The Second Childhood & Adults Too Shop
This was a thrift shop that was located at 221 W. Portage Avenue, but is permanently closed now. Portage Avenue got its name from the need for an overland portage around the rapids and is part of the Sault Ste Marie Historic Commercial District, which contains a total of 150 buildings. These are buildings with Italianate, Late Victorian, Richardsonian Romanesque and Commercial Brick styles. This is from the National Register of Historic Places Application, "Sault Ste. Marie was a roaring frontier river
town catering to crowds of sailors, laborers, Indians, and tourists looking for exciting times, and cheap liquor flowed like water. Then in August of 1886, following a hot, dry spell, fire broke out in a pile of wood chips next to a bakery and quickly spread through the wooden structures. When the conflagration was finally put out, most of Water Street lay in charred ruins. Merchants rebuilt, though some relocated to Portage and Ashmun Streets. Exactly a decade later, in August 1896, a gasoline stove in a restaurant blew up. Within hours, the flames, fanned by gale force winds, raced down Water Street consuming nearly every structure on the south side, over- half the businesses in town. That finished Water Street-as the City's commercial center and the businesses moved to Portage and Ashmun Streets. At this point, a narrow thoroughfare known as Plank Alley formerly ran south to Portage Avenue. Lined with saloons and paved with two inch planks, sixteen feet long, it comprised the main route to Water Street in the early days." So that's how Portage Street became a prime spot and clearly fire was an issue in the heart of the city. The original structure that is now the thrift shop is believed to have been built by a sea captain and his family ran a store out of it. That captain's spirit is said to haunt the place and his disembodied footsteps have been heard often on an upper floor. There was a doll dressed as a Christmas caroler that got moved to different locations in the store overnight.
Palace Saloon
The Palace Saloon is a three-story stone building located at 200 W. Portage Avenue and serves up Mexican and American cuisine. The building was built in 1903 and was originally The Brunswick Hotel. The name came from the bar that was installed. Apparently Brunswick was a company that made pool tables and bars and this was brought in by the railroad. This was a speakeasy during Prohibition. A man named Sam was the first owner to start the Palace Saloon and it passed through his family.This restaurant has activity throughout the building from the basement to the top floor. A full-bodied apparition of a man in black who has a wide brimmed hat has been seen sitting in one of the booths, #3, many times. A lady with a big hat in 1920s attire is seen sitting with him sometimes. Employees said that contractors working in the basement ended up leaving because footsteps walking above them when no one was in the building were so unnerving they couldn't take it. A waitress was so scared when she was there one night and heard lots of footsteps that she actually called the police to come because she thought someone had broken in. And people have been touched on their back. An employee was really spooked after something he couldn't see brushed past him on the stairs. Some people believe that the owner Sam is a spirit here.
The Hotel Ojibway
The Hotel Ojibway is said to be the finest building in the city and has stood here since 1927. The hotel sits overlooking the Soo Locks. The hotel originally had and Egyptian architectural style and decor and was a luxury hotel offering the finest in amenities at the time with a barber shop and beauty shop. It opened with a grand gala on New Year's Eve in 1927. The pollen-free air blowing in over Lake Superior brought hay fever sufferers looking for relief. In 1947, a couple who managed the hotel, Leon and Beatrice Deglman, bought the hotel. Leon eventually passed and Beatrice took over managing by herself until her death. Famous people like boxers Jack Dempsey and Joe Louis have stayed here as well as President George H.W. Bush in 1992. Today, the hotel is run by Wyndham and features over 100 guest rooms. There seems to be several spirits here. One of them is the spirit of a tall man wearing a top hat. Guests and employees have reported seeing this full-bodied apparition wandering through the lobby area. He is always very well dressed and some people think he is Leon. The most haunted location is Room 616 and guests see and hear a woman in this room. People believe that this is Beatrice. Other activity includes doors opening on their own and housekeeping gets some help. Rooms are sometimes made up when the maid arrives to turn over the room after a check-out. Guests report their suitcases unpacking themselves. Michigan Paranormal Soul Tribe investigated in 2022 and they said, "During our short Estes Method session at the Ojibway Hotel, we believed we were speaking with a male and female couple. While trying to ask questions about who they were, the man tried to silence the woman by talking over her multiple times."
Antlers Restaurant
The Antlers Bar & Restaurant is located at 804 E. Portage Avenue and is kind of an odd looking building. It looks like it is tall enough to be two stories, but there are only windows at the bottom of the building on the front. On the side of the building there are what look to be windows on the second level, but they are all closed up. It looks as though an addition was added to the other side at some point and this is just one level. The outside is covered in stone. The interior gives a log cabin vibe and has 200 mounted animals. The original name of this location was The Bucket of Blood Saloon and it was built in 1903. During Prohibition, this became a speakeasy and brothel hidden behind the front of an innocent little ice cream parlor. The owners were arrested when the police realized that a lot more money was being made than what an ice cream shop would be pulling for revenue. The history of the restaurant goes back more than four generations. Owners include Tony Rogers, Jack Brulle, Al Lelievere, the Kinneys - who were two cops from Detroit and are the ones to accumulate most of the taxidermy - the Cunninghams and finally the Szabo family who still owns it today. There are thought to be two spirits here who are female. They are not named, but one is believed to have been a lady of the evening who may have been murdered here and the other was either a bartender or waitress. The activity usually involves electronic devices that turn on and off by themselves, like the televisions, and one night the jukebox turned itself on and started playing "The Star Spangled Banner" after the place had shut down for the evening. The spirits also open and close doors, cause the lights to flicker, and sometimes even push unsuspecting visitors on the stairs. A & E featured this location on an episode of "My Ghost Stories" in 2012.
The Satisfied Frog Pub
The Satisfied Frog was located at 209 W. Portage Avenue, but is permanently closed now. It looks like that happened in March 2025. We're not sure what it is today. The building was built in 1897. Reported activity here includes nickels turning up on a formerly vacant bar. The most well-known spirit here is of a little girl. She has been heard and seen and likes to hang out towards the back of the building. A picture taken several years ago featured a picture of a young woman who had a gnarled, disembodied hand gripping her shoulder, but there was no other woman in the picture. Nobody knows where this hand came from.
Museum Ship Valley Camp
The Museum Ship Valley Camp is located in the downtown area. The Valley Camp is an actual 550-foot long freighter that worked for 50 years before being parked in the marina and reopened as a museum. The ship was built in 1917 and never had anything happen aboard it that would lead to haunting activity, but it does have several artifacts on board that could lead to activity. Two lifeboats from the tragic sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald are featured in a display at the museum. The Edmund Fitzgerald was the largest ship to sink in Lake Superior. Gordon Lightfoot wrote and composed the song "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" in 1976. Verse 4 goes:
"When suppertime came the old cook came on deck sayin'
"Fellas, it's too rough to feed ya"
At seven P.M. a main hatchway caved in, he said
"Fellas, it's been good to know ya"
The captain wired in he had water comin' in
And the good ship and crew was in peril
And later that night when his lights went outta sight
Came the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald
And Verse 5:
Does anyone know where the love of God goes
When the waves turn the minutes to hours?
The searchers all say they'd have made Whitefish Bay
If they'd put fifteen more miles behind her
They might have split up or they might have capsized
They may have broke deep and took water
And all that remains is the faces and the names
Of the wives and the sons and the daughters
The bulk carrier got its start when the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin contracted with Great Lakes Engineering Works to make the ship. The keel was laid on August 7, 1957. The name Edmund Fitzgerald comes from the President of Northwestern Mutual at the time. The ship had three central cargo holds and the interior was said to be fairly luxurious with deep pile carpeting, tiled bathrooms, drapes over the portholes, and leather swivel chairs in the guest lounge. Passengers had two guest staterooms to choose from. Even the crew quarters were nicer than most ships with air conditioning and a large galley and fully stocked pantry. The pilothouse was outfitted with "state-of-the-art nautical equipment and a beautiful map room." On the day before the sinking, November 9, 1975, the Fitzgerald was carrying a full cargo of taconite ore pellets. She embarked from Superior, Wisconsin and was heading to a steel mill near Detroit. A severe storm blew up the next day with near-hurricane-force winds. This caused larged waves that reached as much as 35 feet high. The Fitzgerald began to sink a little after 7pm near the twin cities of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, and Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and she sent out the message, "I have a bad list, lost both radars. And am taking heavy seas over the deck. One of the worst seas I've ever been in." This didn't include a distress signal. The Captain of the Fitzgerald, Ernest M. McSorley, sent one last message that read, "We are holding our own." But they were not. All 29 crew members perished. No bodies would ever be recovered and the cause of the sinking was never known. Those who have studied the wreck have reasoned that maybe she was just swamped too much or ran aground on a shoal or a combination of things. Many new regulations were put in place after the sinking.
Visitors and investigators have reported hearing coughing sounds and have seen shadowy figures along the decks of the Valley Camp at night. Maranda Crawford, the Sault Historic Sites Office Manager, recalled in an article by UP Matters, "One time I was up in one of the coal passer’s bedrooms and it was before we were open for the season, we were cleaning the room and stuff, and one of the lights was blinking. So, I unscrewed it and set it on the bed and not touching anything on the bed, it lit up and went out and I have never been back in the room since." Tim Ellis of the Upper Peninsula Paranormal Research Society told the Course of Horror Blog, "Over the years we have had the chance to investigate the Valley Camp and during those times witnessed a number of weird and unexplainable things. We have witnessed what are known as shadow figures twice on the ship. Once in the theater room walking back and forth, and the other in the galley area where the workers would have eaten their meals. It was standing in the doorway and then gone as fast as we saw it. One member had a piece of coal thrown at him in the coal room area, when no one was behind him that could have thrown it. But our biggest catch there was the Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP) we captured. Two of our people were down in the coal room area asking questions and doing an audio recording. On playback you hear a cough in the background and you hear one of our guys say….”Did you hear that? Some just Coughed.” Then the other person says, “or it sounded like someone coughing.” And just as she is saying that, we captured a male voice saying right over the top of her words, 'I am coughing.'"
Haunted House
Jade wrote about a home that she lived at located at 408 Dillion Street, "I no longer live in the home but after moving out all of my family slowly started to let out strange things that happened to us while we stayed there. My brother had the most experiences, one where he was even carried downstairs in the night by something he could not see. He also saw what he thought to be a soldier in the basement while he was sleeping and heard his name being called out from the basement multiple times. I myself never saw anything but I always had the feeling of being followed or watched when I was in the basement or in the kitchen (specifically if the door to the basement was open) We also since moving in had seen lights flicker and dim for no reason and experienced it still until the day we left. I have heard from many friends and people I knew that the house is indeed haunted and is known to be. I have never been able to find any history on what could possibly be residing in the home and as I no longer live there i can not find an investigator to help. But if there is any information about this house that would be helpful my family and I would very much appreciate it."
Sault Ste. Marie in Ontario has its haunted locations as well. Paranormal Survivor shared a story in Episode 3 of Season 2 about a psychic who used a Ouija board in her home with a group of friends and unleashed nightly shadow figures and one of her friends started speaking in a strange tongue. She even claimed that spirits dueled on her lawn. The psychic told "The Sault Star" that it was the scariest experience of her life. There are haunted locations here too.
Windsor Park Hotel in Ontario
The Windsor Hotel on Queen Street was built in 1895 by the architects Findlay and Foulis. The hotel was expanded in 1919 and again in 1931. That addition raised the hotel to nine stories and made this the tallest building in the city until 1974. This was a luxury hotel until bankruptcy shuddered its doors in 1996. Dr. Lou Lukenda bought the building and opened it as the Windsor Park Retirement Residence. In 2010, Algoma University bought the building to use as a student residence, which they had to sell for a bargain in 2015 because of declining enrollment and a tight budget. This next owner restored the building to be used as senior residences again. An anonymous woman wrote, "About nine year's ago a friend of mine and her mom were working there as maids. They got me, my sister and my mom jobs there as maid's. I was told about the hotel's history my first day working there, but like most people, didn't believe it at first. As part of the job, we had to push large metal stands full of sheets and towels and cleaning stuff. My first day on the job, I was told about the second and fourth floor of this hotel. The second floor had one large suite called the Victoria Room that was used for large meetings. It was said that a young woman was killed in there and that her spirit never left. I was told that no matter how hard the hotel tried to rent that floor out, no one would stay on it. The 4th floor was famous for a ghost everyone called Joe. I was told shortly after the hotel was built that he had stayed on the 4th floor and died from a gas leak in his room. I was also told you could tell when he was nearby because you would be able to smell heavy cigar smoke and hear whistling whether it was on the floor or in the room or in the elevator. Once again I didn't believe it. My first shift I had to clean the fourth floor. There were only four rooms on that floor and not one guest in any of them. In all the time that I worked there, I had cleaned the room where Joe died. I had experienced the heavy cigar smoke, the whistling and once I couldn't get the door to open even though it was not locked and there were no other people on that floor. When I finally got ready to leave, I was told everyone that worked there went thought the same thing I had. And that it was very rare when someone agreed to take a room on the 4th floor. The elevator also sometimes has a mind of its own and goes to the 4th and 5th floors on its own. A security guard who worked here in 2015 when the building served as an Algoma University residence, claimed that the fifth floor gave him the feeling that an eerie presence was there at times and he even said that a CCTV camera caught a flash of a fast-moving incandescent person.
The Algonquin Hotel
The Algonquin Hotel is located at 864 Queen Street East and was built in 1888 by local politician and businessman William H. Plummer. This is the only large hotel from the Victorian era that survives in the city. The hotel stands four-stories and the architecture features a central tower with a conical roof and was designed by architect J.B. Sweatts. This is a smaller hotel with only nine rooms. Ghost lore connected to the hotel claimed that a young man died in a fire on the third floor and that his spirit still wanders the building, mainly the basement. He sometimes appears on the top floor as well. Pilar Fiser, who has worked at the Algonquin since 2009, told the Penticton Herald in 2024 that she had "an unexplainable incident that occurred while the bar was closed due to COVID. Around 3 a.m., the alarm — designed to trigger only when something significant activates it — rang out. Upon checking, she found that all the doors to the bar were securely locked and there was no one inside, prompting her to review the security footage. The footage revealed something white moving back and forth in the bar. 'It was like a – I don’t know how to describe it – almost like a hollow,' said Fiser. 'It was nothing from outside, no light coming in through the windows.'" Fiser also said that she sometimes feels a presence in the basement and she thinks that it is a lost soul, but a good one.
Sault Ste. Marie Canal
The Sault Ste Marie Canal we mentioned earlier was designated a National Historic Site in 1987 and this includes all the buildings that go with the canal, many of which were constructed from red sandstone excavated during the construction of the canal. In 1897, the Superintendent’s Residence was built. Also added was the powerhouse, the Administration Building, the Canalmen’s Shelter and Stores Building. The website Northern Ontario Travel reports about the canal, "The Superintendent’s Residence and Administration Building are both known as a hub of paranormal activity. The ghost of a young girl, in a frilly dress and with a cute-as-a-button smile, has been seen within both. Sometimes she giggles and disappears, other times she is a silent witness to a world that is no longer her own. Some have reported hearing a crying child, the sound so despondent that it rends the heart. Ghost hunters and lovers of the paranormal can visit, if they dare."
An anonymous person shared, "A place where I lived from age 5-6 was on Wallace Terrace here in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. We lived in the upstairs apartment, which had a long stair case on the back roof that lead to the ground and one inside the apartment that lead to the front door and one small apartment downstairs. My mother used to tell me I would tell her of people in the closet crying. Later she said she had heard that a man had killed his two small children in my closet and then killed himself in there. I had lived in this place again many years later and I moved out not too long after moving back in. This place has now been turned into four apartment all in the same house.
The twin cities of Sault Ste. Marie harbor history and quite possibly some spirits. Is Sault Ste. Marie haunted? That is for you to decide!