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Haunted Jail & Museum For Sale In Pennsylvania

Wreckless

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For sale: Historic NE Pennsylvania jail haunted by the ghosts of hanged coal miners
Updated: AUGUST 16, 2018 — 11:26 AM EDT

JIM THORPE, Pa. — The asking price — $749,000 — includes gallows, nooses, handcuffs, the everlasting handprint of a hanged coal miner, and possibly some ghosts who have good reason to be ticked off.

“Oh, we have ghosts here,” Betty Lou McBride said last week. “Tons of ghosts.”

McBride, 84, and husband Tom, 87, purchased the former Carbon County Jail in Jim Thorpe in 1995 when it still housed prisoners, and took over once the county moved the last of them to a new facility in Nesquehoning. The McBrides have spent the last two decades running the imposing, 147-year-old stone building as The Old Museum Jail.

“We’ve been saying we were going to sell it for a long time, but it’s hard to let go,” she said.

The two-story, 27-cell jail is tucked into a rocky hill atop Broadway in the quaint mining town formerly known as Mauch Chunk on the Lehigh River. Pennsylvania has plenty of old stone buildings where nothing much happened, but the jail is on the National Register of Historic Places because of its unique and ominous place in the history of labor unions in America.

In the late 1800s, immigrants were pouring into Northeastern Pennsylvania and heading down into the mines to extract anthracite coal. Faced with low pay, meager living conditions and discrimination, Irish miners turned to fraternal organizations such as the Ancient Order of Hibernians for solidarity and, eventually, to fledgling trade unions to organize.

“What they were, basically, were miners who were just trying to get the mine owners to treat them fairly,” said Karliene Zack, of the Mauch Chunk Museum down the street.

Blood was spilled on both sides, along with brawls and vandalism, and when mine owners were killed, coal barons sent in their own private police force — the Pinkerton National Detective Agency — to infiltrate the Irish miners, dubbed the “Molly Maguires” after an Irish woman who led revolts against English landlords. On June 21, 1877, a day known as “Black Thursday,” four Irish miners were hanged inside the Carbon County Jail for murder, while six others were hanged in Pottsville.

A 1970 film The Molly Maguires, starring Sean Connery and Richard Harris, was one of 10 movies that shot footage in the Carbon County Jail.

Three more Irish coal miners were hanged in the jail after “Black Thursday.” The fairness of the Molly Maguires’ trials has long been questioned by historians. In 1979, the alleged leader of the Mollies, Jack “Blackjack” Kehoe, was posthumously pardoned by Gov. Milton J. Shapp.

“The judge was a friend of the coal companies,” McBride said.

On the right side of cell 17, a Molly Maguire handprint stains the wall about six feet up and allegedly can’t be scrubbed off, painted over, or plastered.

“This handprint will remain as proof of my innocence,” the prisoner allegedly exclaimed before he was led to the gallows.

Cell 17, McBride said, almost always remains locked, the handprint visible through the bars.

“Nobody gets in the cell with the handprint by themselves. Nobody spends the night here,” she said. “I’m not about to spend the night here, not because I’m afraid, but because I don’t want to sleep on a concrete floor.”

One former inmate, Walter “Mountain Main” Rodriguez, was in cell 17 by himself, McBride said, after his arrest in connection with the murder of a teenage girl. She said Rodriguez, a member of the Warlocks Motorcycle Club, begged to be moved to a different cell out of fear.

The museum sees approximately 24,000 visitors a year, and while McBride holds ghost tours, she’s never gone full-tilt into the lucrative Halloween market, like Eastern State Penitentiary’s “Terror Behind the Walls.”

She said she respects the ghosts too much.

“I don’t understand them and I never wanted to ridicule them with an artificial haunted house,” she said.

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The handprint, allegedly left by one of the Molly Maguires before he was executed, still stains cell 17.


http://www.philly.com/philly/news/m...sh-miners-pinkertons-jim-thorpe-20180816.html
 
Steep price. But this is a trendy town to visit right now. I wonder if someone will buy it and cash in on the haunt factor, the notoriety, and the lucrative paranormal overnight "investigations". People pay a premium for this kind of experience (and never find anything of legitimate value to the wider community). It's a shame when a place of legit history is overtaken by the paranormal aspects but it's a way for people to reconnect personally to the past.
 
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