This Month in History - The Birth of Peter Paul Rubens
In the month of June, on the 28th, in 1577, Flemish Baroque painter, Peter Paul Rubens was born. He was born to his Antwerp refugee parents in modern day Germany. His family was of the well-to-do bourgeois class with many members owning and operating grocery shops and pharmacies. Artistic as a child, Rubens began formal training at the age of 14 through apprenticeships under established Antwerp masters Tobias Verhaecht, Adam van Noort and Otto van Veen. At the age of 21, Peter was accepted into the Guild of Saint Luke as an independant master. By the age of 23, Rubens had traveled to Italy to hone his craft by studying classical antiquities and Renaissance masters. He quickly became the court painter for the Duke of Mantua. While in Italy, he studied artists like Titian, Caravaggio and Michelangelo, and in the process, was introduced to rich color palettes and dramatic renderings. By his return to Antwerp in 1609, Rubens had begun developing his signature Flemish Baroque style. Peter Paul Rubens does not have a single painting that he is most famous for, but instead is known for his multiple celebrated masterpieces that include a variety of religious, mythological and historical pieces of art. He produced approximately 1,400 paintings during his lifetime and became the most celebrated artist in Europe during the 17th century.
Haunted Middletown
Middletown is located in the state of Connecticut and was once a prosperous port. Wesleyan University is here and it has a couple of haunted locations, including the historic Samuel Russell House. There are several other haunted locations in the town and an awful murder has left behind spiritual residue. Join us for the history and hauntings of Middletown.
Some of the earliest people on the land that would become Middletown along the western bank of the Connecticut River where the Wangunk (wang gunk), a tribe of Algonquian-speaking Native Americans. In 1650, the first settlers, who were Puritans, came from nearby Connecticut colonies in 1650 and the General Court of Connecticut established the town of Mattabesett in 1651. They renamed it Middletown in November of 1653 because it was in the middle, between Windsor and Saybrook on the Great River. The soil here was rocky and tough to work, so life was hard and became tougher when the Pequot and Mohegan tribes arrived. The people of Middletown thought of the Mohegan as being "destroyers of men." Between the fighting between the Native tribes and smallpox wiping out many people, the indigenous people had their numbers dwindling so much that they sold off most of their land to the colonists. The town thrived and by the time of the American Revolution, Middletown was a huge and prosperous port. This meant it was key to the slave trade as well and by 1756, Middletown had the third-largest African slave population in the state of Connecticut. After the war, Connecticut abolished slavery. The port suffered economically during the War of 1812 because of trade restrictions and never recovered. Wesleyan University was established in 1831 and it became one of the United States' leading liberal arts universities.
Wesleyan University
The University was founded in 1831 by Methodist leaders and citizens of Middletown and had 48 students as their first class. There were also three professors, a tutor and a president. Tuition was $36 per year. The school was obviously named for John Wesley and that first president was Willbur Fisk, which pushed for a unique model that was a break from traditional European models of educating. These traditional models were about classical studies. Fisk wanted to have modern languages, literature and natural sciences.
Women were allowed to come to the college in 1872, but by 1912, the University was exclusively male again. And the reason why they did this was because so many women wanted to enroll that they thought the university would become entirely female. In 1937, the University became independent of the Methodist church. In 1970, the University was opened to women again. From 1888 to 1890, future President Woodrow Wilson taught history and political economy here. The campus covers 360 acres and has over 340 buildings. Several large buildings were former private residences and one of these is the Russell House. The Samuel Russell House was built in the Greek Revival style for Samuel Russell in 1828. This is one of the finest Neoclassical mansions in the northeast and is located at 350 High Street. Russell was born in 1789 in Middletown. For those of you interested in secret societies, his cousin William Huntigton Russeel founded Skull & Bones at Yale University. Samuel had a tough start to life. He was orphaned by the age of twelve and received no inheritance. He was unable to go to college, so he decided to become an apprentice and he learned under a maritime trade merchant. Russell became a trading representative of the Providence, Rhode Island firm of Edward Carrington & Company and he traveled to China. Eventually, he founded the trading firm of Russell & Company in Canton, China and he made a fortune between 1818 and 1831. Now, we would love to tell you that this was in goods like furniture and art and such, but it wasn't. Russell was importing Turkish and Bengal opium into the port of Canton. He was exporting fine teas and silks to Europe and the United States, but clearly, the opium was his money maker. While the house was being built, Russell was in Canton, so he left the management of the build to his second wife Frances. His first wife, Mary, had died at the age of 23 and Frances, her sister, stepped in to take care of the Russell's two children. Russell married Frances in 1825. He came back to Middletown in 1831 and he lived in the mansion until his death in 1862.
The Russell House was designed by architect Ithiel Town and built by David Hoadley of Curtis and Hoadley. Town was a big proponent of the Greek Revival style and Roger Hale Newton writes in his book "Town and Davis, Architects" that the Russell House was "indicative of the hand of Town in its undeniable sophistication." A professor named Talbot Hamlin says the house was "in the richest Greek vein" and "its Corinthian columns and open plan are urban and magnificent rather than in the simple old tradition."
On its basic level, Town was trying to create an imposing Greek temple with an interior plan suited to living and entertaining on a grand scale. And he really did seem to accomplish this with six full-height Corinthian columns supporting a heavy entablature and low flushboarded pediment. Pilasters support a high entablature over the double entrance door that is surrounded by side and overlights whose frames are decorated with fretwork. Stucco was made to look like large-block ashlar and was put over the brick masonry walls. The foundation was made from brownstone and there is a gabled roof. The rear portico was enclosed in 1855. A two-story north wing was added at that time too. Formal gardens were planted on the grounds. The interior has a spacious center hall with two rooms on either side and a stairway with a landing at the end of the hall. The walls were painted using Trompe-l'œil (Tromp olay), which is an artistic technique that creates a kind of optical illusion of three-dimensional space and objects on a two-dimensional space, so the walls look like they have paneling on the walls even though they don't. The fireplaces are breathtaking with Ionic columns on the sides holding up the mantelpieces and the fireplaces are made from marble. This mansion established a standard of luxury and elegance in Middletown. The house was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 2001. In 1937, Wesleyan University bought it and the mansion now houses the Department of Philosophy.
Students claim to hear doors slamming on their own and they have seen the full-bodied apparition of a woman wandering the halls. The University isn't shy about the Russell House being haunted. They released a video on the Wesleyan YouTube channel in 2014 that included tales about the spirits.
Public Safety (Psafe) officers were interviewed and they shared getting odd feelings in the house and hearing strange sounds and disembodied footsteps. One of the PSAs said, "I had to go down in the basement and while I'm in the basement I hear all the noises upstairs and I know for sure I was the only one in the building. Sometimes you hear footsteps going up the stairs, but you're the only person in the building and then you'll stop to make sure you know you're not freaking out, that it's not your footsteps echoing but no you'll hear like another like three, four, five more footsteps. When I set the alarm, if somebody was in there, the alarm would go off and there's been many nights that I've heard things that sound like a person but the alarm never goes off. One time, I try to you know test my nerve and you know say, was anyone here and I just only heard something fall. So ever since that day, I haven't done that. I just go there and do what I have to do and try to get out." The Thames Society of Paranormal Investigation did an overnight at the house and during the night, the cameras moved side to side on their own and footsteps were heard in the upstairs floors when no one was walking up there. These were also caught on video. Then the investigators asked if the spirits could knock on something and they did.
The Russell House isn't the only place that is haunted on the campus. The Anthropology Building on High Street has featured some experiences. The administrative assistant for the Anthropology Department is Donna Rak and she happens to be a psychic medium. She talked to Spencer Arnold who interviewed her for the The Wesleyan Argus in 2019.
Arnold wrote, "She mentioned that she used to have a phone on the wall that would ring spontaneously, and when she picked up, no one was there. She called the phone department only to be told that there was no phone number associated with the phone on the wall. Additionally, a book on the rituals of East Timor would be pulled out on the shelf when no one claimed to have gotten it out. Shortly after, the department decided to clear out the attic of the building only to find a skull. While it’s fairly routine to discover a skull within the anthropology department, this one was actually unregistered, and they discovered that it had been dug up from one of the cemeteries. The skull was removed, and according to Rak, the book never moved and the phone never rang again."
Spiderweed Preserve
The Spiderweed Preserve covers 157 acres and has a 2.7 mile loop trail. About a half mile into the hike, one will find the stone ruins of the former summer home of Helen Lohman. She had donated the property to the Nature Conservancy over half a century ago. The home had once been two stories, but only has three outer walls that remain. People claim to run into dark energies here and the stone ruins have left people feeling as though they are being watched and feeling cold spots.
Harrie's Jailhouse
Harrie's Jailhouse is a restaurant located at 53 Warwick Street. This was opened by Carrie Carella and Heather Kelly of NoRA Cupcake Company and that's where the name Harrie comes from. The pub-style restaurant features gourmet sandwiches, bar snacks, and signature cocktails with a nod to the building’s history, such as The Capone and The Pen. Before this restaurant, another restaurant called Bread and Water was here, but a kitchen fire shut it down. The building is the historic 1850s Pameacha Jail that housed 12 cells. The Alms House was right next door. Like many old jails, the warden lived at the jail with his family. These quarters were at the front of the building. His wife cooked for the prisoners. Later this became the home of Leo B. Santangelo, who was the first Italian mayor of Middletown. The place is said to be haunted and Ghost Hunters investigated during Season 11. They caught an EVP of a child saying, "Let's play dress up." Patrons and ghost hunters believe the former holding cells are haunted by the friendly ghost of a little girl named Sarah. Sarah could be one of the 100 orphans that were housed in the attic of the Alms House. Heather Kelly said she has definitely felt and heard things, but she hasn't seen a ghost there.
The Connecticut General Hospital for the Insane
The hospital was opened in Middletown in 1868 and was the first public mental healthcare facility in Connecticut. The hospital grounds were designed by Calvert Vaux and Frederick Law Olmsted, and the initial buildings were designed by Frederick Clarke Withers.
In 1878, the Connecticut Valley Hospital Cemetery was established where those who were buried there only had numbers to mark their headstones. There are believed to be around 1,700 people buried here. Burials ended in 1957. By 1896, four groups of buildings had been built, making this one of the largest asylums in America. There are 80 structures on the property today that is laid out over 650 acres. Today, it is known as Connecticut Valley Hospital and is still a psychiatric care facility, operated by the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services. The surrounding woods and abandoned buildings have been explored by urban explorers who have reported seeing phantom figures and hearing disembodied voices. The cemetery is thought to be the most haunted location and that could be because only a handful of the burials have been connected to the person who was buried beneath a number.
The Murder of Lavinia Bacon
Lavinia Bacon was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Or maybe we should say she was in the right place because she was inside her home. A place she should feel safe. On the morning of September 24, 1843, Lavinia woke up feeling ill, so she sent her husband and three children off to church without her.
The family were living in a home built in 1760 by her husband Ebenezer's ancestors. This home still stands on Country Club Road. There was a farm nearby where Lucian Hall, a 26-year-old farm laborer, and his wife were living. Lucian was a never-do-well and had already spent time in jail for burglary. Since it was Sunday morning, he assumed the house would be empty with everyone at church. He climbed through an open window and started rifling through a desk, which got Lavinia's attention. She entered the room, surprising Lucian who decided he had to kill her because she recognized him. He grabbed a large butcher knife and stabbed her multiple times. Lucian stuffed the cash he found in the desk into his pockets and ran from the house, finding a barn to hide in. Two local drunks named William Bell and Bethuel Roberts were arrested because they were near the house. Several witnesses did come forward to say that they had seen Lucian Hall near the Bacon farm on the morning of the murder. All three men were put on trial and Lucian had some kind of crisis of conscience and told his lawyer that he couldn't let two innocent men go to the gallows. He made a full confession and was sentenced to be hanged on the afternoon of June 20, 1844, at the Middletown jail. Right before this, there had been a campaign to ban public executions and so a 15-foot wall was placed in front of the gallows and hall was only attended on the scaffold by local Episcopal and Baptist clergy. After the trap was dropped and Lucian was pronounced dead, the sheriff allowed the crowd to parade by the corpse while a military band played "Yankee Doodle Dandy." After the murder, claims of the house being haunted began. Through the decades, tenants of the house have claimed to hear disembodied footsteps at night, especially on the stairs and there have been sudden drops in temperature. A liquid that is the texture of blood has dropped from the ceiling and even outside from the roof.
Indian Hill Cemetery
Indian Hill Cemetery is said to be the most scenic and serene area in Middletown. The cemetery was founded in 1850 and was a part of the Rural Cemetery Movement. It is filled with trees and winding pathways, as well as the burials of some of the descendants of the first settlers. This is located on a hill adjacent to Wesleyan University.
Before the cemetery was here, the Wangunk people had built fortifications on the hill. Eventually settlers got the land and they made it their cemetery, where the elite of the city wanted to be buried. In 1867, a chapel was added to the cemetery. This was a gothic revival brownstone that was built by the wife of Samuel Russell in his memory. The original bell was forged at the Troy, New York Meneely Bell Foundry in 1868 and is still in the chapel's belfry. There are Connecticut politicians buried here including Governors and William Manchester. Manchester enlisted in the Marine Corps during World War II and fought in the Battle of Okinawa. He became a journalist and wrote a three-part biography trilogy about Winston Churchill. Manchester also wrote a book with a detailed account about the assassination of JFK. He concluded that Oswald acted alone, but he had been commissioned by the Kennedy family. Jackie actually filed a lawsuit to prevent its publication even though she had authorized it. They settled the suit in 1967. He died in 2004 at the age of 82.
There is another grave for Little Johnny that is dated to 1870. Johnny was quite young when he died and his parents couldn't afford much for a memorial so there is a little brownstone headstone with the words "Little Johnny" and nothing more.
Stewart Alsop was a prolific political writer who had been born in 1914. He was a grandnephew of Teddy Roosevelt and graduated from Yale University in 1936. He enlisted in the British Army because his high blood pressure wouldn't let him join the US Army, but he eventually transferred to that and did missions in France for which he won the Croix de Guerre (Quwah du gar "like gary") with Palm. The French Cross. After the war, Alsop became a reporter and he partnered with his brother in writing a syndicated Washington column for The New York Herald Tribune. In 1962, he became a contributing editor for national affairs for The Saturday Evening Post. Later. he became the magazine's Washington editor. Alsop was diagnosed with an unusual form of leukemia and it eventually killed him. He wrote a memoir about his battle called "Stay of Execution" in 1973. Alsop wrote at the end of that memoir "a dying man needs to die as a sleepy man needs to sleep, and there comes a time when it is wrong, as well as useless, to resist." Towards the end of his battle, he asked the doctor if he could be given something other than morphine because of the sedative effect. The doctor suggested heroin. he died in 1974 at the age of sixty. Dr. Joseph Barratt is buried here and he was described as a complicated man. That's a nice way of saying mentally ill. He had been a physician, botanist, and geologist. Some fossilized remains were found in the Portland brownstone quarry and Barratt was sure they were dinosaur footprints. he held onto that belief for 30 years, even though no paleontologists agreed with him. He took to asking random people on the street to lay down on the sidewalk so he could compare the indentations with the human figure. By1880, he had been committed to the Connecticut Hospital for the Insane. Barratt died there two years later. His friends paid for his monument and chose a brownstone from the quarry with a dinosaur footprint and had the following inscription put on it, "The Testimony of the Rocks."
People who visit the cemetery claim that they hear disembodied whispers and they have seen shadowy figures wandering the grounds at dusk.
Middletown is one of the earliest settlements in America with one of the more prestigious universities in the country. Are these locations in Middletown haunted? That is for you to decide!

