It’s October 1958, and the Millard family is thinking about Halloween,
especially the children. In addition to the spooky costumes and candy, the
Millard’s wonder if the ghost will return to the small bell tower attached to
the ell of their colonial home on Windham Center Road. The five Millard
children, their father and a friend told a reporter that if the ghost were to
return, Halloween might be the obvious time.
It seems an early owner of the house, Nathan Goold, for whom it is named, was a captain in the Windham militia. Goold built an ell with a bell tower attached. The bell was to be rung in case of danger during the War of 1812. It was said, and passed down through the decades, that after the bell was removed, footsteps on the squeaky floorboards in the tower could be heard when no one was there. It was further rumored that certain people, only those with ears tuned into the supernatural, would hear the clanging of the tower bell. Again, when no one was there.
The Goold House ghost apparently remained absent on that Halloween night in 1958, but the family remained wary due to other occurrences during their 30 years in the house.
The Millard’s eldest son, Michael (today known as Max Millard), recently shared
memories of living in the house during his childhood years. “We loved the house
from the moment we moved in. (It) was a magical place that seemed designed for
large families with children.” All the same, he remembers some scary moments,
“Because of the (old Goold family graveyard located behind the house), our
house felt as if it were full of spirits. The ell was a dark place that we used
mostly for storage, and none of us dared to go there while darkness reigned.”
Max remembers a time in the early 1960s when his father had a bedroom built for
him on one end of the ell. “When I lay there at night, I would sometimes hear
footsteps clunking up the stairway toward my room. Lying in bed, the covers
over my head, …I would picture the ghost of William Goold (son of Nathan Goold)
come gliding through the door. To this day, I remember those footsteps clearly
and I don’t think they were my imagination.”
Asked by the reporter back in 1958 if the family believed in ghosts, most said
yes. The father, Ben, seemed almost giddy about the prospect of a spiritual
encounter. He commented, “I’m looking forward to meeting the old gent.”
Next time, more on the history and heritage of the Goold family, and the house
that was home to several of their generations. <
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