Showing posts with label people. Show all posts
Showing posts with label people. Show all posts

My Guest Blogger: April

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I am very excited to introduce my guest blogger, April. April will be sharing her real life paranormal experiences and bizarre dreams on my blog. Last year I posted eight stories of paranormal events that happened to her. (I will link each post at the end.) April and I have been corresponding back and forth on facebook about those accounts and the many other weird stories and dreams she has experienced. She has written some of them down on paper and I asked if I could share them on my blog. She agreed and emailed me some of the stories already written. She was curious to find out if there were others that share the same occurrences.


I have known April since she was in elementary school and began hanging out with my daughter. They became close friends and soon April was joining us on camping and fishing trips. She would often spend the night and tell my kids some of her paranormal stories. There were a few times that my son would come out to the living room where I was watching TV and join me. He was scared because as he would put it, “April is telling her stories again and I got scared”. Another thing I remember when April was younger is that she loved watching “The X-files” and never missed an episode.

April’s first remembered experience was at the age of 4 years. (I titled the story, “The Orange Ball”.) Another story (I titled “After the Ouija Board…”) is about several experiences April had after using an Ouija Board. April’s Mother once told her that when using an Ouija board, you must ground your energy and shield, just like hooking up to a surge protector. Her Mother claimed that they came from a long line of psychics, ghost magnets and seers, but April doesn't agree. Instead she didn’t listen and had many strange experiences after using an Ouija board, but has since stopped using one.

April hasn’t had any problems with metals but with electronics, especially phones. They tend to act in an unusual manner whenever she is around. She also says that she has a tendency of “weird” follow her wherever she is at. At work she has the most computer issues and seems to get most of the weird cases. Along with the weird are the many paranormal experiences she has had. She has heard disembodied voices, seen things move, strange lights, and shadow figures. These strange occurrences are still happening to her today.

April doesn’t see dead people, but seems to have times of extra ordinary coincidences and a feeling that accompanies them. This feeling might last a few days or even weeks. During that time, she feels like she is in a dream state or auto pilot as she describes it, but can still function with the everyday things she has to do.

April works a full-time job as a fraud and risk analyst for a large company. She is an amazing artist and gets a kick out of finding funny videos on YouTube of people and animals. She is always laughing, especially at herself and tells funny stories of her past. She has always had a fascination with weather and loves watching the show “Storm Chasers”. (I thought she would be one herself.) She loves to read mysteries, nonfiction, and is a fan of Stephen King and the discovery channel. She is newly married with hopes of starting a family soon but for now her terrier mix, which she rescued, is her baby. She is a severe asthmatic and has gone into cardiac arrest on multiple occasions. (She has a story about one of her experiences which happen in the hospital before she woke up for a future post.)

That is a little bit of information on April. Look for her to do some guest posts on my blog.  Here are a couple of self portraits drawn by April:



Here are the posts I did on some of April's bizarre experiences with the paranormal:
The Orange Ball
Bloody Mary
The Wite-Out
Cottage 4: Mummified Body in Bathtub
The Dried Roses
Unseen Intruder
After the Ouija Board: The Visitor
After the Ouija Board: The Mysterious Call

Josh Gates at Comic Con

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Destination Truth's Josh Gates at Comic Con apparently missing his good buddy Jason Hawes (Ghost Hunters).  I would have loved to been there to meet him. (Aww, so sweet, lol)

(picture via Josh's tweet)

The Liaison of Big Nose Kate and Doc Holliday

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Mary Katherine Horony, Big Nose Kate, was born November 7, 1850 in Pest, Hungary. She was the long-time companion/common law wife of gunfighter Doc Holliday. She was the second oldest daughter of a Hungarian physician, Dr. Michael Horony. In 1860, he and his second wife Katharina and children traveled to the United States on board the ship Bremen. Her father was appointed the personal surgeon of Mexico’s Emperor Maximillian in 1862. After leaving that position and some traveling, the family made their home in Davenport, Iowa in a largely German community. Kate’s parents both passed away within a month of each other in 1865. After being moved around from place to place, Kate and her younger siblings ended up in foster care.

At the age of 16, Kate took off from the foster home and snuck onto a riverboat headed for St. Louis, Missouri. She met a dentist named Silas Melvin, had a child, but sadly lost both of them in the same year. She stayed there until 1874 when she set out for Dodge City, Kansas, and worked in a “sporting house”, under the name of Kate Elder. The house was run by Nellie Bessie Earp, wife of James Earp where Kate was labeled as being a prostitute or soiled dove. She listed herself as a dance hall girl and worked there until she moved to Fort Griffin, Texas. There she met a card dealer named, Doc Holliday, at John Shanssey’s Saloon. This is where she acquired the moniker of “Big Nose Kate” because of her prominent nose. She was sassy and willful with a nasty temper equal to Doc’s and said that no man or place owned her. She also proudly stated that she was a soiled dove/dancer because she loved it.

Her feelings for Doc were tested when he had to defend himself against a no-good cheating gambler. It was in 1877 when Doc was dealing when a local troublemaker named Ed Bailey who decided to test Doc’s known bad temper. During the game Bailey would pick up the discarded hands which were in violation of the Western Poker rules. After being told a couple of times to not do that, Doc grabbed the pot and didn’t show his hand which pissed off Bailey who pulled out his pistol from under the table. Before a shot was fired, Doc’s mighty knife was able to gash Bailey’s stomach open, spilling blood everywhere.

Since there wasn’t a distinct jail in the town, Doc was held in a local hotel room. Seeing that a vigilante group was being formed against Doc, Kate set an old shed on fire. Fearing that the fire would consume the entire town, all the lawmen were busy putting out the fire, leaving one man guarding Doc. With a pistol in each hand, Kate overpowered the guard, allowing the two of them to escape.

The pair wound up in Dodge City, Kansas, where they registered at a boarding house as Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Holliday. They decided to make a life together with him promising to hang up his gambling hat and her giving up being a prostitute and soliciting in saloons. Many times throughout their relationship the duo separated. The first time Doc left for Colorado, with Kate and his friend Wyatt Earp staying in Dodge City. After an altercation which left a man dead and Doc running from a lynch mob, he headed back to Dodge City, but Kate and Wyatt were gone.

Doc heard that Wyatt moved to Tombstone, Arizona, where the mining town was booming from all the silver strikes. On his way to Tombstone to meet up with his old buddy, Doc stopped off at Prescott, Arizona, where he was on a win streak at the tables. After winning $40,000, he ran into Kate who was also on her way to Tombstone and the twosome decided to travel together.

While Doc lived in Tombstone, Kate ran a boarding house in Globe, Arizona, which was about 175 miles away. She would visit often and stay with Doc but it wasn’t always fun. Kate would get drunk and belligerent, with things ending in physical violence. By early 1881, Doc was tired of the vicious behavior and asked her to leave and not to return.

There is nothing like a women’s scorn, especially if you are “Big Nose” Kate. After four masked men held up a stage and the driver was killed, Kate in one of her drunken binges outwardly blamed Doc as being one of the masked men. After the booze worn off and Kate realized what she had done, she retracted her statement and all charges against Doc were thrown out. He gave her money, put her on a stage, and told her to never come back to Tombstone.

In 1882, Doc moved to Colorado because he was suffering with tuberculosis. It was rumored that Kate also lived in Colorado with her brother who owned property in Glenwood Springs. Since her brother’s home was near Sulfur Springs where Doc would go for treatments, there were reports of he and Kate spending time together until his death in 1887.

A year after Doc’s death, Kate married a blacksmith, George M. Cummings, and the two lived in Bisbee and Pearce, Arizona. A year later, in 1889, she left her husband, moved to a small railroad town, Cochise, Arizona, and worked in the town’s hotel. By mid 1900, she met a man named Howard and was on the move again, but this time to the mining town of Dos Cabezas. When Howard died in 1930, Kate inherited his property and a year later wrote the Governor of Arizona, George W.P. Hunt, asking to be permitted to live in the “Arizona Pioneers Home”. Since Kate was not born in the United States she wasn’t eligible to be admitted, but lied about her place of birth. She claimed to have been born in Davenport, Iowa, and was later accepted to the home. She lived there until her death on November 2, 1940, which was 5 days shy of her 90th birthday.

Curly Bill Brosius: Wild West Outlaw

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Tombstone seems to have an endless supply of stories from the notorious bad-boys, sultry women, famous lawman and places around town. Everyone knows plenty about the Earps, especially Wyatt, but I find that the lesser know people of this once booming mining town have the more interesting stories. They have also carved their names in the history books of the American Wild West. Curly Bill Brosius is another of those slightly mysterious outlaws that you may know little about.

William “Curly Bill” Brocius (or Brocious) has left his mark in American Old West history as an outlaw, gunman and a member of “The Cowboys” outlaw gang of Tombstone during the early 1800’s. He was born in 1845 in Crawfordsville, Indiana and his middle name was Graham. There is only one known picture of Curly Bill (above picture) and that one hangs in the Bird Cage Theatre Museum in Tombstone. He is described as a tall stocky man with freckles and dark curly hair.

As part of the Cowboys, Curly Bill was known to have the fastest shot of the gang. He was known to be able to shoot a running jackrabbit, candle flames out without touching the candles, and quarters between the fingers of anyone who was crazy enough to offer their assistance. Curly Bill was a nasty drunk that enjoyed making people dance by shooting his gun at their feet. Sometimes when feeling particularly wild, he would have them strip naked first.

Some documents have Curly Bill entering the Arizona Territory by way of Texas in 1878, but his earlier life is still a mystery. On October 27, 1880, Wyatt Earp escorted him to Tucson for shooting a town Marshal, Fred White. He claimed that he was drunk and his gun accidentally went off while White tried to arrest him. White died two days after being shot and before he died, confessed that he felt the shooting was an accident. Curly Bill still spent a couple of months in jail but was later acquitted with a ruling of accidental death.

There are many stories told about Curly Bill where he was involved in other crimes such as a robbery where a man was murdered, and then later a prison escapes with another man, Robert Martin. Curly Bill’s rumored history puts him with Martin in the Jesse Evans gang; a bunch of derelict mix match criminals that Billy the Kid was briefly was a part of before becoming one of John Tunstall’s Regulators. He was believed to be a part of the many crimes committed by the Cowboy gang.

Curly Bills notorious ways were more known after meeting the Clanton gang. He once rustled cattle and even was a tax collector for a sheriff making other rustlers pays taxes on their stolen cattle. He was shot in the neck by a so-called friend after a heated exchange of words. Since the bullet went through his neck and out his cheek, he survived to continue on a murderous rampage. In July 1881, he and Johnny Ringo murdered two men all in the name of revenge for the Clanton gang. He led an ambush again a Mexican trail herd killing six men and torturing the others. Because there was no way to prove that Curly Bill was a part of the killings, no charges were ever brought upon him. Later he earned the reputation as “Arizona’s most famous outlaw” and loved the recognition.

After the gunfight at the O.K. Corral, there are stories that Curly Bill was present at the attempt on Virgil Earp’s life and the murder of Morgan Earp. There was no proof or eyewitnesses putting him at the scene of the crimes but the Earp Vendetta Ride still had him on their revenge list. It was on March 24, 1882 that Wyatt was able to sneak up on Curly Billy’s camp and kill him with one single double shotgun blast to the chest about 50 feet away. Curly Bill was able to get a shot off at Wyatt before dying, but only winged his coat.

There are other tall tales stating that Wyatt didn’t kill Curly Bill who heard about these stories years later. It was told that he changed his name and moved back to Texas until he died. There was a $2,000 bounty on his head, if he was seen alive. That bounty was never claimed. Other stories state that after his death, he was buried on the Babocomari River, near the McLaury ranch, on land believed to have been once owned by Frank Stilwell and five miles west of the ghost town of Fairbank. If he was buried there, his gravesite is lost by all the wild vegetation that has grown around that area over time. Whatever the truth may be about this notorious bad-boy, he and his dusty old hat were never seen again in Tombstone after March 24, 1882.

3 Men Missing Looking for the Lost Dutchman Mine

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For over five days now, three Utah men are still missing in the Superstition Mountains searching for the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine. For a few days they have been hiking the mountains in the day and returning to their motel room at night. The area they focused on was about 40 miles east of Phoenix where they would spend the day exploring the area looking for the elusive mine. Since they were only taking day hikes, they did not have the provisions and equipment to spend the night in the sweltering desert. Their vehicle was spotted Sunday in the parking lot where the trail begins. When they didn’t check in with their family on Sunday, they became alarmed and called authorities. With the soaring temperatures of about 115 degrees, they are not expecting a good ending to this story. Searchers have swept about 100 miles of the harsh desert and rugged mountain terrain looking for the three men. I will post what happens, good or bad, when there is finally a conclusion to this story. Lets hope for a good ending.

Treasure seekers have been looking for the Lost Dutchman mine for more than a century with all kinds of tragic results. Read my post on the mysterious Lost Dutchman Mine.

The Legend of Gold Dollar

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Tombstone has many famous legends that once walked the dusty streets and left their mark in the Wild West history. One of the lesser known legends was that of a dancer named Gold Dollar. She was first known as Little Gertie but with her long golden blonde hair, fair complexion and earning a gold dollar as payment for services bestowed, she was given the moniker “Gold Dollar”. She danced at the Crystal Palace saloon which was located near the Bird Cage Theatre. This woman was tiny in stature but very feisty and not to be messed with. Most of the women of this era were very protective of their men and Gold Dollar was no different.
Gold Dollar had taken a shine to a local gambler, Billy Milgreen, who passed himself off as someone influential. They lived together and she considered him to be her man. She threatened harm to any woman that touched and flirted with him. The women of Tombstone were afraid the petite prostitute and stayed away from Billy.

Trouble came to town in the name of Margarita, an attractive Mexican woman. With her creamy bronze skin, this sensual, graceful, mysterious woman with long black hair immediately set her dark eyes on Billy. She took a job as a soiled dove at the Bird Cage Theatre where many of the men along with Billy, were mesmerized by her beauty.

Margarita was aware of Gold Dollar and Billy’s relationship, but it didn’t stop her from flirting with the handsome gambler. The wrath of Gold Dollar was soon bestowed upon Margarita when she got wind of the bitch’s intentions. Even though she threatened Margarita with “cutting out her heart” if she didn’t back off, and Margarita continued flirting with Billy. Knowing what Gold Dollar was capable of, he promised her that he would have nothing to do with Margarita and would ignore all her flirtations.

One evening, Billy got wind of a high stakes poker game at the Bird Cage and wanted in on the action. Gold Dollar knew that Billy made his living gambling and grudgingly allowed him to play. She was working at the Crystal Palace that night and made him promise to stay away from Margarita. Excited about playing the game, he agreed whole heartedly and ran off to the Bird Cage.

While Billy concentrated on his cards and the game, Margarita flounced gracefully across the floor towards him trying to get his attention. Billy wanted to honor his promise to Gold Dollar but had trouble keeping his mind on the game as Margarita strutted around the table. After trying to get the gambler’s attention, she decided to plunk herself in his lap and overwhelm him with kisses.

Some stories say that Gold Dollar didn’t trust Billy being able to fight off Margarita’s affections and went down to the Bird Cage to check things out for herself. Other stories are that someone told her the hussy was putting moves on her man and she ran to the Bird Cage in a fit of anger. She busted through the doors and rushed over to where they were sitting. She grabbed a fistful of Margarita’s hair and pulled her off Billy.

The mystery of these women’s past paled in comparison to how Margarita was really killed by Gold Dollar. Here is what tales have been spun about the murder. After she was pulled off Billy, Margarita fought back against the petite woman but was no match for her enraged temper. Gold Dollar pulled out a 4 inch stiletto and stabbed her in the side. Before the doctor could reach her, Margarita died from her wounds. Other stories are told that she did indeed stab her in the chest and almost cut out her heart just like she had threatened to do. Margarita fell down and died instantly. When they called for the Sheriff, Gold Dollar ran out of the Bird Cage and hid the stiletto outside the building.

No murder charges were brought upon Gold Dollar because the murder weapon was never found. She ended up quietly leaving town, followed by Billy months later. It is not known exactly how many years later the stiletto was found, but it was discovered behind the Bird Cage. That stiletto is on eminent display inside the Bird Cage Theatre.

Many that work at the Bird Cage Theatre feel Margarita’s ghost is still hanging around the building. The lingering smell of cheap lilac perfume can by detected by the employees and visitors from time to time.

The Infamous Ike Clanton

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Joseph Isaac (Ike) Clanton was a pivotal player of one of the most famous events in Wild West history, the gunfight at the O.K. Corral. He along with his younger brother Billy has chiseled their place in American Old West history. He was born on June 1, 1847 and one of seven children. His father, Newman Haynes Clanton was known as Old Man Clanton by many and was a day laborer, a gold miner, a farmer, and by the late 1870’s, a cattleman in the Arizona Territory. His mother was Maria Sexton (Kelso) Clanton and died in 1866 in a mining center.

After his mother’s death, Ike stayed with his father and brothers, Phineas (Fin) and Billy after they moved to Tombstone. His father ran a small lunch counter and then a ranch which Ike worked on. The Clanton boys earned a bad reputation and were accused of cattle rustling, banditry and murder. Ike didn’t gain fan as a notorious bad boy until his many conflicts with the Earps and Doc Holliday. He was an ill tempered, heavy drinking loudmouth that was constantly bad talking about the Earps.

The problems between the Earps began right after Wyatt arrived in Tombstone in November 1879. Wyatt’s horse was stolen and a year later he found out that it was in Charleston on the Clanton’s ranch. After getting ownership papers proving the horse to be his, Wyatt and Doc headed out to their ranch. They were met by 18 year old smart mouth Billy, who was somewhat threatening to steal more of his horses. He finally retrieved his horse, which seemed to anger Wyatt and Ike as well. After that, the Clantons and the Earps both exchanged accusations that each was committing the many crimes happening in and around Tombstone.

On October 25, 1881, Doc Holliday confronted Ike about a stagecoach robbery which angered him. Ike got very drunk and belligerent and shortly afterwards, an argument with Holliday ensued. Morgan and Virgil threatened to arrest the both of them if they didn’t stop, so they did. They left the scene, Doc to get some sleep, but Ike stayed up through the wee hours playing cards with Tom McLaury and Virgil Earp. When the game was over and the other boys went to bed, but Ike kept drinking and was seen carrying his rifle in the middle of town, yelling like a fool, threatening Doc and the Earps. Virgil and Morgan were able to get the jump on Ike, knocking him out and throwing his filthy butt in jail. He was fined for carrying a weapon in the city, paid the fine and had a heated exchange of words with the Earps as he left.

Ike, along with Tom McLaury, later met up with his younger brother Billy and Tom’s brother, Frank, in back of the O.K. Corral. They were angered by what the Earps did to Ike and made strong threats against them. The Earps got wind of the threats, headed down the street towards the O.K. Corral, and was joined by Doc Holliday. They went there to retrieve the McLaury’s and Clanton’s weapons, and a few minutes later history was made. At 3:00 pm on October 26, 1881 in a vacant lot behind the O.K. Corral, a gunbattle ensused and at the end, three men were dead. There were reports by witnesses that Ike was unarmed and was able to skinned out unharmed along with Billy Claiborne, but his little brother Billy and the McLaurys were not as lucky. Afterwards there was a hearing against the Earps who were accused as being murderers.

In his usual fashion, Ike tried to spin the story making it look like the Earps and Holliday went to the corral with the intent to purposely murder all of them. He painted them as cool blooded killers and lied about other incidences from the past further making them look like liars and thieves. However, the Earps had a better defense and with all that Ike tried to do to get them convicted of murder, the charges were eventually dropped.

In December of 1881, Ike along with his brother Fin and Pony Diehl, attacked Virgil Earp in an attempt to assassinate him. Virgil didn’t die but was disabled for life. Ike was arrested but his friends provided him with an alibi, so the judge had no choice but to dismiss the case. There attempt to kill Virgil failed but in March of 1882, Ike along with Frank Stilwell and others, attacked Wyatt and Morgan leaving Morgan mortally wounded. He eventually died from his wounds causing Wyatt to remove Virgil from Tombstone for his safety. After Wyatt killed Stilwell, the Earp Vendetta Ride went after Ike and the other cowboys involved in the slaying of Morgan and the second attempt on Virgil’s life. Ike escaped again but his hell raising days were not over yet.

After getting caught cattle-rustling with his brother Fin, they were trapped at the Jim Wilson’s Ranch on Eagle Creek, near Springerville, Arizona by Detective Jonas V. Brighton on June 1, 1887. Fin surrendered quietly but not Ike. He was shot twice with the fatal blow going through his heart. He fell off his horse and hit the ground dead. There were many reports of where his body was buried, but it wasn’t until 1996 that a remaining relative, Terry Clanton, along with grave expert, James A. Browning, found where it was officially located. Under a large tree near the creek in Greenlee County, Arizona, is a shallow grave they believe to be his. Even though Terry has tried to get Ike’s remains buried in the Boothill Graveyard near Tombstone, the town’s officials feel that his remains shouldn’t be bothered.

Riddle Me This Zakman and Boy Wonder

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I can always count on Aaron Goodwin (Ghost Adventures dude) to post some wacky pictures on Twitter. It is just like me to share them with you.

Crazy, I'll show you crazy!!!
I wonder if my bros need my help yet?
Starbucks is giving away free coffee, this is my 10th cup!!!
(Lots of caffine before a lockdown, probably not a good idea.)

Big Steppin

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I thought that it would start the week with the zany antics of Zak and Aaron of Ghost Adventures. They have been doing these Big Steppin videos at various places they have visited. I do miss those silly ol' frat boys.







Hurley Says Goodbye to "Lost"

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Here is an article by Jorge Garcia who played the lovable Hurley the past six years on ABC's Lost.  He wrote a wonderful article for Variety about his experience on the show. Take a moment and read what he had to say. Hurley, along with John Locke, was one of my favorites.

John Henry Thompson: Arizona's Most Colorful Sheriff

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For 8 long terms, John Henry Thompson served as sheriff for Gila County in the years 1890-1912. He was born on December 19, 1861 in Bell County, Texas and in the early 1880’s arrived in the Payson area. He settled and farmed 160 acres which were located under the rim rock of the Mogollon Mountains. People gave him the moniker of “Rimrock Henry”, and that name that stuck with him his entire life.

On January 12, 1887, John married Carrie L. Nash and then moved to the town of Payson and was selected Postmaster. The sheriff of Globe at the time was Glenn Reynolds who was shot to death after escorting the Apache Kid and other rebel Apaches to the Yuma Territorial Prison. Afterwards, Jerry Ryan was appointed to fill the position of sheriff. His term was short lived when he died six months later. He drowned trying to save a family friend. John decided that he wanted the position and needed his neighbor and close friend, John W. Wentworth, to endorse him. Wentworth was a man of importance, a miner and Justice of the Peace in Globe. He wasn’t sure if Wentworth would agree, after all Thompson’s cattle did meander onto Wentworth’s land and destroying his mining equipment. After using his step-father, O. N. Cresswell as a mediator between the two of them, Wentworth finally made the recommendation. On June of 1890, after swearing to the oath of office for sheriff of Globe, Thompson moved his family there. He continued to get elected as sheriff until 1896 when he decided not to run for another term.

Thompson, like many others, was hit with gold fever and decided to travel up to Alaska to see if he could get lucky and strike it rich. In 1890 he returned to Globe but no one knew if he ever found any gold. He started a partnership with Dick Barley in the feed, fuel, and livery stable business. In 1900, he got the bug to run as sheriff again, and added his name to the ballet. He easily won the position at the same time his businesses were thriving. Thompson was able to buy property in town and rent out some of the buildings. He also built his family a brand new home. He took another break from running for sheriff when some of his old mining claims had problems and took up much of his time.

Thompson couldn’t stay away from running for the office of the sheriff of Globe. In 1908, he ran for a sixth time and won. He ended up as Globe’s sheriff for a total of eight terms which ended in January 8, 1912 at the urging of the county supervisor. Thompson and some buddies were having some drinks in the Globe saloon just a few days before Christmas in 1911. All of a sudden a shot rang out and the bartender was dead. Upon investigation of the body, the bullet was a match to Thompson’s gun. He and his friend, Harry Temple were accused of the crime of murder. They were watched over by Frank Haynes, who took over for sheriff after Thompson resigned. They were found not guilty but Thompson’s career as sheriff was over at the age of 51. He had racked up the most arrests and convictions than any other sheriff in Arizona history.

Thompson spent the next 20 years working for the Arizona highway department, selling real estate, mining, and cattle ranching. Carrie died in 1926 and in July of 1932, he married a widow named Allie Smith. Thompson and Wentworth butted heads over many issues throughout the years until his death on August 2, 1934 in Globe, Arizona.

This Wild West lawman, prospector, and businessman have been described by many as Arizona’s most intriguing sheriff.


Is Dustin Pari Still a GHI Team Member?

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I was emailed this post on masslive.com. In the article, the question was brought up did Dustin Pari leave GHI for personal reason, or was he simply replaced, or is he taking a season off.  They used Twitter as one of their sources to show that Dustin was not with the GHI team when they were investigating.  Whatever the reason for Dustin's absence, personal or not, the show will still go on. GHI will still have Robb, Barry and Paul and take us to some amazing places to investigate the haunts. Here is the article on Dustin.

The Nortorious "Pete Spence"

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As we were wandering around the cemetery in Globe last month, we came across a grave with a headstone marking the name, E. L. Ferguson. According to Debe, Ferguson wasn’t actually buried there but in an unmarked grave near Fin Clanton. She decided to get out her dowsing rods and check out this theory. The dowsing rods showed no body resting in the grave marked with Ferguson’s name but did show that a body was lying in the ground in the unmarked gravesite. I knew there was much more to Ferguson’s story and planned on checking it out when I got home. After all we share the same last name so how bad could he have been? How bad indeed!


I started my search as I always do with Google search. I put in the name E. L. Ferguson and got many other folks with that last name but not the man I was interested in writing about. Then I took another look at his headstone photo I took and noticed the name “Pete Spence”. I Googled that name and jackpot, Mr. Ferguson was found. It looks like he definitely left his mark in Arizona history.

He was born Elliot Larkin Ferguson in 1851 according to his headstone. When Ferguson later went under the alias “Pete Spence” during his notorious robbing and murderous days, it remains a mystery where he was precisely born. Some records show that he was born in Texas in 1852 or in Louisiana in 1850. There is nothing known of his childhood, his parents, or of any siblings. The first known record that Ferguson existed was when he enlisted in the Texas Rangers and served under Captain Wallace in June 29, 1874. He acquired the rank of second lieutenant, with unknown information on his whereabouts after leaving the Rangers.

It was in 1878 when Ferguson began his run from the law after committing a robbery in Texas. His journey took him to the Arizona Territory where he decided to hang his hat in Tombstone and change his name to Peter M. Spencer. Bisbee and Tombstone seemed to be the place where many fugitives, gun slingers, and murderers would settle down and hide from the law.

Spence lived in a small house in Tombstone, across the street from the Earps. This house still stands in Tombstone today. In October of 1880, Spence was charged with stealing Mexican mules, but was never convicted of the crime. He became friends with the Clanton family and business partner with Frank Stilwell. Together the pair ran the Franklin Mine, other mining ventures and a saloon in Bisbee. Those who lived in Bisbee and Tombstone and were buddies with the Clanton’s, usually were on the wrong side of the law and this included Spence.


The twosome, Spence and Stilwell, robbed the “Sandy Bob Line” Bisbee stage and were quickly apprehended afterwards. They were recognized by their voices and Stilwell by his unique boot prints by a Bisbee cobbler who just worked on them. Wyatt Earp was part of the sheriff’s posse that arrested the pair but had to let them go later for lack of evidence. They were arrested a second time by Virgil Earp for meddling with the mail delivery. This arrest angered the McLaury boys and 13 days later the gunfight at the O.K. Corral occurred. Stilwell was in jail on that day but Spence was released several days earlier because of the little evidence leveled against him.

It is suspected that Spence, along with Stilwell were responsible for the death of Morgan Earp. The actuations were brought on by Spence’s displeased wife, Marietta Duarte. The charges against Spence were dropped because spouses were not allowed to testify against each other. The Earps got wind of what the coroner’s report showed and decided to take matters in their own hands. There are stories told that Spence had a lookout named “Indian Charlie” during Morgan Earp’s murder and was killed two days after Morgan’s death by the Earp Vendetta Ride posse. Others were killed by this posse as well. Spence was able to escape the posse by turning himself in to the authorities for protection. The Earps found out later that Spence was an accessory in the murder, but it was Stilwall that fired the fatal shot at Morgan. The story goes on to say that Curly Bill Brocius fired his gun at the same time through a door which almost hit Wyatt Earp. Curly was later shot and killed by the posse for his part in Morgan’s assassination.

In June of 1893, while serving as a deputy sheriff in Georgetown, New Mexico, Spence was punished and convicted to a 5-year term in the Yuma Arizona Territorial Penitentiary for pistol-whipping Rodney O’Hara, resulting in his death. The photo is the only known authentic picture of him and was his prison mug shot from the Yuma Penitentiary in 1893. The photo shows a very unfriendly and unnerving man that chills me right down to my core. His eyes appear to be cold and empty, almost like he is missing his soul. For some unknown reason, he was granted a full pardon the territorial governor, after serving less than 18 months.

Spence later moved to Globe and together with his long time friend, Phineas “Fin” Clanton, brother to Ike Clanton, they owned a goat ranch located south of town in the Galiuro Mountains. He also was in charge of burro trains which brought supplies into the Globe area. His good friend Fin died in 1906 and Spence remained friends with his wife. On April 2, 1910, Spence married the widow of Fin Clanton, but this time using his real name E. L. Ferguson. He died in 1914 and is buried in the Globe, Arizona cemetery and said to be next to Fin Clanton. His grave is unmarked till this date, but another marked grave with his name on a headstone is also in this cemetery. So the question remains, where is E. L. Ferguson’s final resting place? We may never know.

Mohave County Downwinders

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I saw this on the news last night.  The Downwinders are people living in or near Kingman, AZ, and were there at the time when nuclear testing was done in the Nevada desert.  Their homes are downwind from all the radiation that scattered and blew their way.  Since then many have suffered from horrible diseases and cancer.  This story was reported by 3TV's awarding winning investigative reporter, Mike Watkiss.  He definately knows how to get to the heart of the story. 

The Story of Ben Linus

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ABC’s Lost has many noteworthy characters that are on this factious island. I wrote a post "The Story Of John Locke"  because he is one of my favorite Losties. On this last season of Lost, we find the survivors and others caught in two separate storylines after the bomb went off. In one, everyone is still on the island, in the same year, but not all together. John Locke is dead but his likeness is either evil or not and can become the smoke monster that kills all who defies him. The second storyline is about the plane landing and what happens to everyone after that. Which story is real, one or two, or perhaps both. We won’t know until the two hour season finale.

One of the show’s fictional characters is Benjamin “Ben” Linus, portrayed by Emmy winner, Michael Emerson. Ben was only supposed to be on the show for three episodes but the producers saw something in him and his portrayer, Emerson. When we first see Ben, he tells the survivors that his name was Henry Gale and was also on the plane. Locke and the other survivors grew suspicious of Ben and later his true identity was revealed. Ben was the leader of the Others, a group of island inhabitants that tortured and terrorized the Oceanic Flight 815 survivors. His ability to manipulate and lie, enabled him to mess with Locke’s mine, and gets himself released from their captivity in the hatch.

Ben Linus was born in the woods outside of Portland, Oregon. His mother Emily died giving birth to him and his Dad, Roger, blamed Ben for his loss. When he was a young boy, his father took a job for the Dharma Initiative, and they moved to the Island. Roger started drinking heavily and verbally abused Ben. Ben grows to hate Dharma and runs away bumping into the never aging Richard. Richard was an island native and part of the group known as the “Hostiles”. Ben wanted to be a part of this group. Richard told him to be patient and he will get his wish. In the fifth season where the island is moving through time, Sayid comes across young Ben and shoots him, leaving him for dead and hoping to end Ben’s reign of terror. Jack refused to help the dying Ben so Kate and Sawyer bring him to Richard who deems him as one of the Others from that point on.

We begin to know more about Ben’s past in his flashbacks. In 1988, Charles Widmore, the leader of the Others, sent Ben to kill Rousseau, “the French Lady”. He sees that she had a baby and kidnaps her and raises her as his own. Four years later, in another flashback, we see Ben killing his father and all of the members of the Dharma Initiative with poisonous gas. After that, he banishes Widmore from the Island and takes over as leader of the Others. He tells them that he is in constant communication with Jacob, the real leader, but it comes out later that he never met Jacob.

It was only two days before the crash of Oceanic flight 815 that Ben learned he has a spinal tumor. While watching the crash, he sent a couple of his group to investigate to see if there were any doctors aboard and had survived. He learns of Jack Shepard, a spinal surgeon, and concocts a plan to get Jack to do his surgery. After finding out that the men he sent didn’t get any answers, Ben came up with the idea to be Henry Gale, a man that died on the island earlier, to get closer to the survivors. After escaping, he was able to capture Jack, Sawyer and Kate to put his plans in motion. After some convincing, Jack agreed to do the surgery. But before Jack was done, he refused to finish unless Sawyer and Kate were let go and Ben agreed.

Locke ends up rescuing Jack but not without a hostile encounter with Ben. Ben tells Locke that they have his father and if he killed him, he can become part of the Others. Locke ends up getting Sawyer to do his dirty deed and then takes the corpse to Ben. Ben decides to take Locke to meet Jacob but shoots him and leaves him for dead after discovering the Locke can hear Jacob.

Ben ends up back with Jack and the other survivors who are now in contact with a freighter somewhere off the coast of the island. Ben warns them that these people are evil and will kill everyone. For his efforts, he is beaten and taken hostage while Jack makes contact with the freighter.

In the fourth season, the survivors are now divided into two groups, those that believe the freighter people to be good and those that believe they wish them harm. Ben knows that Charles Widmore sent the freighter and wants him. As the people from the freighter land on the island, the mercenaries end up killing Ben’s daughter, Alex, and others. Ben summons the smoke monster who quickly attacks the men, killing them all. Afterwards, Ben, Locke, and Hurley visit Jacob’s cabin where Locke goes inside by himself. Locke returns and tells them that they must move the island. They go to the Orchid where Ben tells Locke to leave and become the new leader of the Others while he enters a secret room. In the room is a large immobile wheel in the wall which Ben turns and it teleports the Island to a new location and through time. Ben himself is sent to the Sahara Desert in Tunisia, ten months ahead of the time he left the Island.

Ben seeks out and finds Sayid, one of the Oceanic Six that got off the Island, at his wife’s funeral. He convinces Sayid that Widmore was the one that had his wife killed and enlisted him as his personal assassin. While Sayid fulfilled Ben’s lists of targets, Ben finds Widmore and threatens to kills his daughter, Penny, as punishment for the death of Alex, his daughter. Meanwhile, Locke leaves the Island to convince the Oceanic Six to return. Ben finds Locke and kills him making it look like a suicide. Ben then later convinces Jack that Locke’s body needed to be on the same flight with other six. Ben and the Oceanic Six board a flight to return to the Island. Jack, Kate, Hurley and Sayid end up on the Island in 1977 with those that were on the Island when it was moving through time. Ben and Sun remains in the present with Locke’s dead body, the stranger walking around in Locke’s body, and the survivors of this flight.

A failed attempt to take a boat to the main Island, Ben is faced with Locke, who is quite alive. He tells Locke that he tried to get to the main Island to be judged by the Monster, breaking rules and returning to the Island. He and Locke go to the main Island looking for the Monster at his house. Locke tells him that he knows where the Monter’s lair was located, in tunnels beneath the Temple. Ben and Locke enter the temple when Ben falls through the floor and is faced with the Monster. He sees flashes of all the decisions he made, most of which involved Alex. After not being harmed by the Monster, he sees Alex who tells him not to kill Locke and to obey whatever he asks of him.

Along with Locke and Sun, Ben returns to the Others’ camp where Locke promises all of them that he will take them to see Jacob. As they are walking back to the temple, Locke tells Ben that he will kill Jacob. Because of what Alex said, Ben reluctantly agrees. When they reach the statue, Ben and Locke enter where they are met by Jacob. Jacob realizes that Locke is not Locke but his enemy and he is there to kill him. After a heated argument, Ben stabs Jacob twice, killing him. A very upset Ben is told to bring Richard inside, but before he does, Ben is confronted with Locke’s corpse. The group that brought Locke’s body was confronted with the smoke monster after shooting at “Locke”. Ben, Sun, and Frank (the plane’s pilot), buried Locke and Ben eulogist him saying that, “John was a believer, a man of faith, and a better man that Ben himself could ever be”.

In this season’s story one; Ben is on the island with Sun, Frank, Miles and other survivors. They are at the camp of the Oceanic 815 survivors, cleaning up the mess to make the place livable. In the alternate timeline where the plane didn’t crash, Ben is a European History teacher, having survived the destruction of the Island in 1977. We see him meet up with Locke who is a substitute teacher, and Alex, who is a student of his and not his daughter. It will be interesting to see how all this plays out.

Miss Aaron?

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Another goofy picture from the tweets of Aaron Goodwin (Ghost Adventures).

Pearl "Bandit Queen" Hart

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When we took our daytrip to Miami and Globe, we stopped by a couple of cemeteries. Resting in the Pinal Cemetery, near Globe, is Pearl Hart Bywater. Debe showed us where her grave was located and told us a brief history on her escapades. Sharon (Autumnforest) told me that she would make a great post, so I took her advice. I did some research on Pearl but there a many conflicting stories of her life. Some of the details are uncertain and often inconsistent leaving many to speculate what the real story is on this Arizona outlaw’s life. She is acknowledged as the only known female stagecoach robber in Arizona’s history earning her the nicknames of “Bandit Queen” or “Lady Bandit”.

She was born Pearl Taylor in 1871 in Lindsay, Ontario, Canada. Her parents were religious and wealthy affording her the best education. Her father, James, was a civil engineer who moved his family to Toledo, Ohio in 1878. She was enrolled in boarding school at the age of 16. It was there where she met a young man named Frank Holt and eloped with him when she was only 17. He was known as a drunkard and gambler who became more abusive right after they were married. She went home to her mother but reconciled with him several times after that. Together they had two kids, a boy named “Little Joe”, and a girl named, “Emma”. The kids were only eleven months apart in age. There are some stories told that she sent her kids to her mother in Ohio, after she left Frank, and hopped a train to Trinidad, Colorado. The story goes on to say that she possible met another man, a piano player named Dan Bandman, and went with him.

In 1892, she arrived in Phoenix with claims that she worked as a cook or singer, possibly a demimondaine. She lived on Washington Street and developed affection for cigars, liquor and morphine. She ran into her ex, Frank, while living in Phoenix and he persuaded her to move to Tucson with him. They lived well for a brief period but once the money ran out, he became abusive again. Frank ended up enlisting in the military service during the Spanish-American War, leaving Pearl alone. She found it very difficult to survive and became very depressed. She tried to kill herself at least four times but was stopped by a friend. Some say that she wished Frank would be killed by the Spanish.

In the late 1890’s, while she was living in Mammoth, Arizona, which is located 47 miles north of Tucson, she worked as a cook in a boarding house. Other stories had her operating a tent brothel near the local mines and doing quite well until the mines closed. Shortly after that, she got word that her mother was gravely ill and she needed to come home. Desperate for money, she hooked up with a friend, Joe Boot, who said he had a mining claim but found no gold. Many say that Joe Boot wasn’t his real name but that he was using an alias. In May of 1899, the two of them decided to rob the Globe to Florence stagecoach near the settlement of Troy and Kane Springs Canyon. Pearl cut her hair, dressed in men’s clothing, and was armed with a .38 revolver. Boot held a gun on the victims while Pearl stole two firearms and money. They gave each passenger a $1.00 for food, took the driver’s gun and fled south towards Benson. They worked their way up the San Pedro River hoping to get far away from the crime. The stagecoach driver unhitched a horse, road to town and alerted the sheriff, W. E. “Bill” Truman. Then in June of 1899, the Pinal County sheriff caught up with the two bandits while they lay asleep. They were captured near the north side of Benson and charged with armed robbery. Boot went quietly but Pearl put up a fight.

He was taken to Florence jail while Pearl was put in a Tucson jail. Florence’s facility was not equipped for female prisoners. Many people were fascinated by the female bandit, with some showing sympathy for the petite, five foot tall woman. She became the voice for women’s freedom and liberation. While serving time, she felt affection for an inmate trusty named, Ed Hogan, who was a petty thief. Hogan was allowed to freely wander aimlessly and became obsessed with Pearl. Because her cell was made of lath and plaster, Hogan was able to cut a hole in the wall, aiding in her escape on October 12, 1898. She was recaptured two weeks later in New Mexico. When Pearl and Boot finally went to trial, she made a plea saying that she needed the money to see her ailing mother. The jury found them not guilty which angered the judge. He ordered another trial and the pair was convicted and punished. Boot was sentenced to thirty years and Hart for five years. They were sent to the Yuma Territorial Prison to serve out their time. Boot was made a prison trusty, driving a supply wagon for which he used to escape after two years of his sentence.

On November 18, 1899, Pearl was assigned the number 1559, and started serving her five year sentence. She received lots of attention for which she truly enjoyed and used to improve her circumstances. Her cell was oversized, larger than most, and came with a small yard. She used the yard to entertain reporters and other guests. She was released from prison in December of 1902 when she was pardoned by Governor Alexander Brodie. It was two years before her sentence was done and amongst rumors that she was pregnant. It is unclear if this was true but the claims are that the pregnancy would have embarrassed the prison and that is why the pardon was given. There was no evidence of Pearl having a third child and could have been a ploy by her to get released from prison early. In any case, she was given a ticket to Kansas City, Missouri, and asked to leave the territory.

Her later life is also a mystery. One story is that she did a short lived play reenacting her crime and talking about the horror of being in the Yuma Territorial Prison, while living in Kansas City. In 1904, while running a cigar store, she was arrested for receiving stolen property. She was declared innocent of the charge. Another story is that she returned to jail, in Tucson, 25 years after her first time she was put in prison but for reasons unknown. And then there are claims that she lived a private life with her husband of 50 years, George Calvin “Cal” Bywater. They lived in Dripping Springs, Arizona, where she was known as Pearl Bywater. A woman pretending to be a census taker claimed that while at her home she noticed that her clothes were dirty and cigar butts were all over the place. She also suspected Pearl to be the infamous Pearl Hart, Bandit Queen. Her death is a mystery as well. Most claims are that she died sometime after 1928, not able to give an exact date. But other claims state that she died on December 30, 1955 from Cardio Vascular Disease in the Gila General Hospital located in Globe, Arizona. She is buried next to her husband in the Pinal Cemetery which is located near Globe.

Perhaps many of Pearl’s life stories may be just claims with no documents to back them up, but whatever the truth may be, Pearl Hart has earned a place in Arizona’s Wild West history.

Chip Coffey

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When you think of psychic mediums, one name comes to mind, Chip Coffey. His uncanny natural gifts have not gone unnoticed by several newspapers or magazines. They have noted his outstanding abilities in many articles. Not only can Chip’s story be found in a majority of printed items, but he has been a distinctive part of many television and radio broadcasts. Lately, we can find Chip using his abilities in such A&E Network programs as Psychic Kids: Children of the Paranormal, Paranormal State and Airline. On Psychic Kids he acts as a mentor towards children who have experienced psychic abilities, primarily seeing ghosts.

Chip Coffey was born on August 21, 1954 in Elmira, New York. He lists his occupation as “Medium” and is currently living in Atlanta, Georgia. This is a tweet Chip said about himself:

“I shop at Walmart, mow my own grass, do my own laundry and clean up dog poop every now and then. Yep, I'm a celeb. ROFLMAO.”

I didn’t find information about his younger years, but you can find Chip all over the web in his many sites. Read more about his personal life, about the shows he is involved with, and other aspects of his life at the following places:

His website: http://www.chipcoffey.com/

myspace: http://www.myspace.com/chipcoffey

twitter: http://twitter.com/CHIPCOFFEY

facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Chip-Coffey-Psychic-and-Medium/90338070683?v=wall

Here is a link to an interview he did with Ghost Theory in 2009: http://www.ghosttheory.com/2009/09/05/skeptical-qa-with-chip-coffey

Interview with GHI's Dustin Pari

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I wish I could say that I conducted the interview, but I didn't.  Steve Eramo posted it on SciFi and TV Talk's Blog.  It was nice to read a positive interview from someone on the GH and GHI teams.  Here is the link to Dustin's interview.

Ghost Adventures' Desert Transportation

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Aaron and Zak on their way to the next investigation. 
 Looks like Nick decided to take the vehicle.

I have at least five half done posts on Word and trying to find the time to finish at least one of them. You would think that being unemployed I would have more time to write posts, but that just hasn't been the case.  I have to thank Zak for posting this crazy picture on Twitter and providing me something to share with all of you.  He and Aaron are so goofy.

Next weekend (Feb. 20th), Mike and I are going back to Bisbee and staying at the Copper Queen Hotel along with his sisters and other friends.  I'm hoping that something paranormal happens while we are in the hotel or walking around Bisbee.  I'm also hoping that it will get Mike back in the mood to write. (hint, hint Mikey, lol) I will be posting our adventure after we get back.
~Julie~
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