This story is going to be a little
different than my others. Usually I tell a little history of the area
and then tell my story of my experiences. This time I will tell you my
experiences first, because I did not fully know the history of this
place before I experienced my encounter with the spirit/spirits of the
Asylum.
As a very young child in grade school I
joined Cubs (the younger version of Scouts) as a Cub Scout we would
often go camping or have sleepovers at public buildings. This particular
time we stayed at the old Amherstburg Asylum. At the time we were told
it was an old orphanage… Which is also true. (The building has been many
things over the years. It has been part of the Fort Malden buildings
for many, many years. It was properly known as the Fort Malden Lunatic
Asylum.)
So we stayed there the night and all
slept on the floor of the main level. The building resembles a very
large colonial house of the pioneer times. It is a two and a half story
brick house with old wood floors, many wooden windows and a steep old
grand staircase. The house is broken up into many rooms. As an old house
it seemed harmless. So there were 20 of us Cub Scouts with a few
leaders staying over the night. As a young boy I did not have many
nightmares. (I guess I was a happy kid.) But this particular night I
did.
The night was not a good sleeping night.
The house was filled with strange noises (creeks and clunks). I guess
this is typical of an old house but the sound of running footsteps
upstairs seemed to bother all of us (even the leaders). Several boys had
trouble sleeping and I can remember a few of them saying that boys were
out of bed and running around. The leaders would do a head count with a
flash light and all would be accounted for.
I can remember it wasn’t until really
early in the morning that I actually got to fall asleep. Between the
noises and the leaders getting up to check the reports of kids out of
bed, sleep finally came. But so did a disturbing nightmare. I dreamt
that the house was full of kids that were wondering around confused,
angry and crying. They would walk around as if trapped and stop to look
at us (the Cubs) sleeping. Many of them had bleeding eyes, vicious
bruises on the sides of their heads or black tongues. It was a really
creepy dream.
The next day I slept all day once I got
home. The visions of the kids in the Asylum stayed with me for a few
days and then I eventually forgot about it.
Many years passed and I was now in high
school. This is when I learned that the building was once an Asylum. I
wanted to check it out, but the building was closed to the public, and
only open to tours on special occasions. I did not dwell on it since
there were many other things to investigate in the area.
Well, more years passed and I eventually
got a job, wife and kids. Fifteen years passed and I found myself back
in Cub Scouts as a volunteer leader. My son was now a Cub and, like the
good ol’ days, we did a lot of sleepovers. I was excited to hear that we
were sleeping over at the Fort. I thought the kids would love sleeping
in the army barracks and the whole trip would be good.
Little did I know that we were not
sleeping in the barracks. We were, indeed, sleeping in the Asylum. This
was mildly disturbing… Actually, quite the mind grinder… (to keep the
vernacular clean). Instantly a warning flag popped up in the back of my
head, but the years had placed a thick layer of cobwebs between my
memories and my mind. (I had forgotten the impact of the whole
experience I had as a youth). The minute I walked into the building it
all came back to me. The place was set out of time. It seemed time had
not passed in here and it was identical to what it was when I was a kid.
Knowing more about the building this time, I was a bit freaked by the
still air and the feeling of a presence sensing that I had returned.
Being an adult, I quickly swept away those thoughts and focused on the
time at hand.
So, I had returned to the Asylum. Now I
was the leader and we had about 12 kids sleeping on the floor. Of course
the kids did not sleep. They heard the noises and were scared. (Someone
must have let it slip that they were in an Asylum…hum…I wonder who it
was…) Well, the running footsteps were back and other leaders started to
comment on them. We did a head count and all the kids were in their
sleeping bags. Some of the kids said they saw other kids out of bed and
running around in the halls. So as leaders, we took turns checking on
the kids through the night. I have to admit, I was really unnerved when I
found myself walking through the Asylum halls and rooms at night with a
little pocket flashlight. With every turn I took, I half believed I
would see a horrified ghost child. But I did not see anything. (Thank
God, because my wife would have left me if a returned home without the
kid.)
I did manage enough courage to go
upstairs to seek out the source of the footsteps. The second floor had
several small rooms with the dim moonlight flooding into each of them,
casting shadows across the floors. The rooms were mostly empty but all
had a few items in them, a single chair or table. They all had old
wooden floors that showed the markings where a table once was, or the
legs of a bed. The second floor was eerily still… Actually that’s when I
noticed that the running footsteps had stopped. I had a very cold chill
and the strong feeling that I was the focus of attention. So I backed
out slowly and returned to downstairs. The other leaders asked me what I
saw. I told them the truth… Nothing. But none of them were willing to
go upstairs on their turns to patrol the area.
Needless to say it was a long night and I did fall asleep early in the morning and I did again have the nightmares of the wondering kids with bleeding eyes and black tongues.
Needless to say it was a long night and I did fall asleep early in the morning and I did again have the nightmares of the wondering kids with bleeding eyes and black tongues.
When I woke in the morning, the daylight
made the building feel peaceful. I quickly swept away the nightmare as a
lingering fear from the nightmare I had as a kid. I actually felt silly
that I had gotten all worked up. Well, the Cub Scouts were in rough
shape from the sleepless night and the kids were very groggy. Breakfast
was being served outside at a picnic table. The conversation around the
table was, of course, the creepy noises. I was barely paying attention
to the kids’ conversations when I overheard one of the Cubs complain
about dreaming about kids with bleeding eyes. (I think I nearly dropped
the pancake I was flipping.) More kids talked about having the same
dreams… Not all the kids but 5 or 6 (about half the group) …Even one of
the leaders said he too dreamed of zombie like kids… So this set my
freak level quite high and I was very glad once the day was over and
parents were picking up their kids.
Of course… I was one of the last leaders
to leave and on the way out I stopped and had a brief conversation with
the groundskeeper? (I actually did not know who he was or why he was
there, he just appeared and started talking to us about the Asylum.) He
asked if I stayed in there overnight. I said yes. He said, “I’d never
sleep in there.” Of course I asked why… He said, “Too many bad spirits… I
hear them running around sometimes when I am here late in the
afternoon. So I asked him, “Do you believe it is haunted?” He told me,
“Yes.”
He was about 80 years old. He said his
great aunt was committed to this Asylum as a child and that is what
brought his family to Amherstburg. He said when she came out of that
place she was never the same. His father (the aunt’s brother) said she
was like a zombie and often cried when she looked at the place (being
that they had moved only a few houses away across the street). He also
told me that this Asylum was one of the first to use shock therapy and
lobotomies in Canada. He said the doctor was a forerunner of science and
would perfect his practice on new patients. The doctor talked his
grandparents into moving to Amherstburg to help their daughter with the
promise of a cure through new science. The conversation continued as my
awe in his words deepened with every syllable. He continued… He said
that the whole asylum was shut down only after about 10 years of use
because the town was so upset over the treatment of the troubled kids
that they chased the doctor out of town. The asylum was later converted
into an orphanage and eventually surrendered to the town. Well, needless
to say, the information from this nameless old man left me speechless
and very troubled.
A couple of more years passed and I had
forgotten again of the disturbing memories of the Asylum. It was movie
night and I was watching Sucker Punch… The scene came up where they
punched a steel spike into the brain of people through their eye socket…
That’s when I realized that, that is what a lobotomy was. And finally
that is when it all came together for me… (ok I am slow). The kids with
the bloody eyes were victims of a lobotomy. The bruises on the heads
were the shock therapy… The black tongues… Well, I still don’t know. But
it all became a lot more real to me once it all added up.
So I did some research. The Asylum
operated in the mid 1800s for only a decade. There were about 240
patients there at one time. They were worked as a free labor force. The
patients ranged in age from 13 to 55, even mix of male and females. They
used hydro therapy (cold/hot water submersions) shock therapy,
lobotomies and drug therapy to treat all kinds of mental illnesses.
In my research I will have to say not
much factual data is actually out there but I was surprised to find
conditions that they considered treatable mental illnesses (especially
in women). Many women that were locked up as patients were people that
were perfectly sane (normal). Examples are women who had gotten pregnant
before marriage or overly active, irregular menstrual conditions, women
that were attracted to other women, people who had medical problems
like fainting or seizures. Talking disorders or twitches and ticks. Many
people who were imprisoned for dept or crimes were able to get an
insanity plea so that they could be treated and possibly released.
Apparently there is a list out there of all the inmates and their
dispositions (released or deceased) and there is very few that make the
released list.
I find this period of history the most
disturbing as the instruments and infirmaries were very sanitary and
wholesome appearing in intent… But the shady basements and reality was
quite different in a horror film sort of way.
By Bob M.
Source:Paranormal 360

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