By
Walter Lunt
Stories
of paranormal activity in Windham’s oldest burial ground are nothing new. A
great many residents say they believe the Anderson Cemetery is haunted by the
spirits of the town’s earliest settlers. Located off River Road near the Parson
Smith House, the ancient family style graveyard cradles the remains of numerous
early founders including Smith, Hunnewell and Anderson.
The Anderson Crypt at the Anderson Cemetary |
Distinctive
among the many monuments and headstones is the ominous, yet dignified Anderson
crypt. The historian Frederick Dole writes that its front “is said to be a
facsimile of the Washington tomb at Mount Vernon.” The door, once secured by a
combination lock, is now sealed with angular slate-like stone, fitted together
like pieces of a jig-saw puzzle. On either side are door-sized tablets,
engraved with the names of several descendants of Abraham and Lucy Anderson who
are interred there.
This
was the setting when two Windham town councilors (one former, one current) and several
companions decided to explore the historic burial ground. Carol Waig, Dennis
Welch, Welch’s son, Shawn and four others entered the cemetery one chilly
afternoon in the fall of 2013.
“We’d
heard all the (ghost) stories, but that’s not why we were there,” recalled
Waig, a Windham town councilor from 2010 – 2015, “…we were taking in the
history.”
As
dusk settled in, the first hint of something awry became evident. There was a “chill” in some spots, Waig said.
They encountered “ice-cold spots” as they walked the paths between headstones
and monuments. “Then, we’d go back (to those spots) and they were not cold.”
The group stopped to inspect the so-called “den,” A three-sided mound, open in
front, and topped with grass, once a receiving tomb that stored bodies until
warmer weather permitted digging. “There was (no unusual activity) there.”
Their
final stop was the front of the Anderson crypt. Welch (a current town
councilor), explained how Shawn began reading aloud the names of the Andersons
listed on the tablets. As he read, the group heard low-level “knocks,”
seemingly from within the crypt. Dismissed as environmental noise, Shawn
continued. And so did the knocking – only louder, and almost in cadence with
the reading. Finally, there came a very loud noise, definitely from within the
tomb.
According
to Waig, “it sounded like a car door slamming shut.”
At
this point, Welch said he looked into the faces of his six companions. They all
suggested the same thing: time to leave. And according to both Welch and Waig,
who shared identical stories in two separate interviews, they lost no time
returning to their vehicle.
As
stated earlier, the story is not unusual. Scores of visitors to the Anderson
Cemetery claim to have had similar experiences. In addition to the cold pockets
and the mysterious knocking, paranormal investigators have reported other
shuddery activity, such as the presence of orbs (light-emitting disks), strange
mists, apparitions and dark figures lurking among trees. One report,
unsubstantiated, involved a visitor who claimed to have been frightened out of
the cemetery by a “spirit” that followed him home and trashed some of his
furniture. He is said to have hired an exorcist.
A humorous reminder. No admittance to cemeteries after dark |
Maine
Ghost Hunters, a paranormal investigation team, reports a similar experience at
the Anderson crypt several years ago. Noting animals had burrowed into the
grass covered roof, the lead investigator concluded, “While we were all quite
entertained by the possibility that these knocks may have been in response to our
(attempts to communicate), the more likely and far more reasonable explanation
would be “animal related.” The team also observed that the origin of some “pretty
eerie howls” and other noises might be the natural and physical environment in
and around the cemetery – “the wind can grab the trees and react with the dips
and hills of the cemetery.”
Polls
conducted by the Associated Press and Gallop reveal that just 34% of Americans
believe in ghosts. The National Science Foundation calls the practice of
paranormal investigation “pseudoscientific.” And science historian Brian Regal
describes ghost hunting as “an unorganized exercise in futility.”
Still,
cemetery “victims” insist that, despite the lack of scientific evidence, what
they experienced was real.
Asked
if they had theories on the origin of the knocks at the Anderson crypt, Waig
and Welch were both circumspect.
“I’m
not really a believer,” said Welch, “but that really happened – not just to me
but (to my companions). I can’t explain it and do not try to explain it.”
Waig,
who experienced yet another unusual encounter at Anderson about a year later,
speculated “There may be things out there…sitting in purgatory, crying out for
attention. I have a strong faith in God (and) I don’t believe in demons. People
are afraid of what they don’t know. I regret not staying (at the crypt). We
might have found an answer.
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