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V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

, F

all

2017

20

something along the lines of “I haven’t heard

any at the GAB, but I have about the Capitol

and the Governor’s Mansion.” Or “You should

tell the one about Old City Hall.” Or the

Supreme Court Building. Or even the grounds

itself. So, of course, I knew that I would have

to write a follow up. The fall issue seemed an

appropriate time to do it.

While it seemed that everyone had heard

stories, only a few hinted that they might have

witnessed anything unusual themselves. And

when it came time to for them to be shared

with me for the article, I didn’t end up with

many details. However, many suggested that I

read the book, “Policing the Paranormal—The

Haunting ofVirginia’s State Capitol Complex”

written by a former member of the Capitol

Police, Paul Hope. And finally, one Capitol

Police friend told me to read the chapter that

he himself had contributed.

So I got the book, and it was definitely

interesting. If you haven’t read it already,

I recommend adding it to your fall reading

list. According to Hope, many members of

the force as well as other regular employees

and inhabitants have experienced numerous

unexplained incidents over the years—not

just alone, but also in small groups. They’ve

learned to take it all in stride.

Ghost stories usually materialize in

places that have not only seen a lot of history,

but also experienced tragedy. And Capitol

Square has certainly had its share of both. The

Capitol and the Governor’s Mansion were

still standing after departing Confederate

troops burned the city’s warehouses and

factories, and I didn’t find any stories with

overt connections to the war. But there was a

story of a young woman dying in the Mansion

sometime during the Civil War era after

falling from a horse-drawn carriage.

In April 1870, during a Virginia Supreme

Court of Appeals hearing, the Capitol building

experienced its greatest tragedy when the

gallery in a large courtroom on the second

floor collapsed and fell to the main floor under

the weight of several hundred people who

had gathered to watch. The sudden impact

then caused the courtroom floor to give way

and fall 40 feet into the House of Delegates

chamber below, killing 62 people and injuring

another 251.

In February of 1972, the current Virginia

Supreme Court Building was Richmond’s

U.S. Federal Reserve Bank. One of the

bank’s security officers was killed by another

member of the bank’s guard in a shoot-out

in the basement. Several other officers were

injured, too.

And in January of 1989, a groundskeeper

was brutally murdered in the Carriage

House behind the Mansion by another

groundskeeper.

None of these stories seem to be directly

linked to the ghost stories that have followed,

except possibly the Mansion’s woman in white

and the Capitol’s disembodied voices.

Watching shadows fall across the grass

as the day fades away, taking note of lights

beginning to glow in the windows at dusk,

walking through mist on a foggy morning, or

waiting for the sun to come up at the dawn of

another day—if any of us takes time out of

our busy lives, we can enjoy moments like this

almost anywhere.

While working for the Capitol Studios,

I’ve been fortunate enough to glimpse

images like this around Capitol Square when

working late after streaming a regular General

Assembly Session, getting ready for a satellite

uplink with a legislator in the early morning,

loading equipment after dark for a State of

the Commonwealth speech, or waiting in the

early morning fog to broadcast the festivities

on Inauguration Day. These images can be

beautiful and memorable, and I’ve captured

some on camera. They can even be a little

spooky, but I’ve always considered them

normal. I’ve never seen anything that I thought

was out of the ordinary.

Only a few who work around Virginia’s

Capitol experience these types of visuals on

a regular basis—and sometimes a whole lot

more. These men and women have collectively

explored every nook and cranny in every

building nearby at every time of day or night

to keep the rest of us safe. So it would make

sense that they might see, hear and experience

more than the average person who works

there…especially during the appropriately

nicknamed “Graveyard Shift.”

They are Virginia’s Capitol Police,

members of the nation’s oldest police

agency, originally established in 1618 for

the protection of the Colonial Governor of

Jamestown, the first permanent English

Settlement. This group still watches over

the Virginia General Assembly, the oldest

elected legislative

body in North

America, as well

as Mr. Jefferson’s

Capitol, which has

served as Virginia’s

seat of government

since 1788. And

they still protect the

Governor and his

family at Virginia’s

Executive Mansion,

the oldest governor’s residence in the

country. So at the very least, the organization

itself has been the eye-witness to a whole lot

of history.

The Capitol Police are also probably

the most familiar with the ghost stories that

accompany their beat, but most people who’ve

worked in the area have heard at least some of

the tales as well. I had really only heard that

there WERE interesting stories, but I didn’t

know many specifics until now. The sights and

sounds over the years have included shadows

where they shouldn’t be, lights where they

couldn’t be, disembodied footsteps, walking

apparitions, faces in mirrors, whispering

voices, cool spots—and yes, even things that

go bump in the night.

For me, the quest to find out more started

with the imminent demolition of the former

General Assembly Building. I had wondered

if any ghost stories were connected to it. As

it turned out, I couldn’t find any. But even

though there seemed to be no spirit activity

in the GAB, everyone I talked to knew about

sightings in other buildings nearby. It turns out

that haunting tales can be found everywhere

else around Capitol Square.

Nearly every person I interviewed for the

last article answered my initial questions with

The GAB Walls

May Not Talk,

But Some Say Specters Walk–

On the grounds of Capitol Square

By Sarah Alderson

See

The GABWalls

, continued on page 23