Ghost? The General and His Mystifying Mist

58
rate or flag this page

By A. Jill


 

Crown Hill is a huge 40 acre or so cemetery in Indianapolis, IN. It's the final resting place of such notables as John Dillinger, Benjamin Harrison, and James Whitcomb Riley. Crown Hill is a beautiful place with lovely old trees, beautiful lawns, and fantastic monuments and statuary. People go there to have a quiet walk or to ride their bikes. I have seen wildlife there such as a herd of deer and a coyote.

I was introduced to it by Beth, with whom I work. She is in love with the place and has been going there for over 30 years. It's her place of peaceful retreat. She's a wonderful tour guide, full of interesting information about so many of the gravesites and their occupants. She is even considering having her wedding there in the beauty and spiritual atmosphere of her favorite place.

I have gone back a few times myself, camera in hand to capture photos of the incredible statuary. My first visit and photos produced a very puzzling and intriguing surprise. At home and looking at the images I caught, I found one with an interesting mist at the gravesite of General A. D. Streight. I showed the picture to some friends who had more technical knowledge about photography than I do to see what they thought.

They had no pat answer other than to suggest that I go back again for more pictures and see what happened. So, I went back to visit the General, and a second shooting revealed another mist in attendance at his site. The first, as shown by the photo here, has a more blanket like and obvious mist by the site. The second photo shows a smaller and circular mist near the top of the tombstone and off a bit to the left.

The two pictures were taken on different days, one sunny and one overcast. They were also taken on two different cameras. Other pictures were taken on both days of different sites with no mists appearing in them. A third trip and new pictures showed no mist at all. I will be going back and taking more photos.

I have included the pictures below so that you may judge for yourself. Comments and opinions are welcome and encouraged.

I have also given a brief history of the General and his wife, who I find a very interesting woman, especially her actions after the death of her husband.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

General Abel. D. Streight was a book and map publisher. He joined the Union army in 1861 as a colonel in the Fifty-first Indiana Infantry. He was captured and was a prisoner of war for 10 months at Libby Prison in Richmond. He and 107 other soldier escaped from the barracks by digging a tunnel under the prison grounds.

His wife, Lovina, accompanied him on his campaign nursing the wounded. She was capture three times and traded twice for war prisoners.

His campaigns were disappointing because the budget didn't allow for him to have horses so he and his troops went to war on mules. His battles were unsuccessful.

He retired a brigadier general and became a senator for Indiana.

His wife had him buried on the front lawn of their home and then arranged a yearly reunion of the Fifty-first regiment and soldiers would camp on her lawn. When she died, she was buried at Crown Hill Cemetery with full military honors. Abel Streight was exhumed from the front lawn of the family home and buried beside her.

Relatives contested her will stating she was not of sound mind and body when she signed it. "Evidence" of her lack of mental stability was her practice of picnicking at her husband's gravesite, wearing bright clothes, and dancing with the neighborhood children. She had also embraced spiritualism and would have lengthy conversations with Abel at his gravesite. A jury agreed that she was not of sound mind, and her will stipulating that her property and possessions be used for the purpose of establishing a home for elderly women, was declared invalid.

To be honest, the mysterious mists by the General's grave have made me feel that it wasn't the general. I can't say why, it just felt that it might be from another source. Upon reading this information about his wife, Lovina, I feel it more likely that if the mist is to be attributed to anything or anyone in a spiritual sense, it would be her. She sounds to me like the type of personality to be hanging around in such a way.

The General's Grave and Mist
The General's Grave and Mist
The General the 2nd time around with circular mist
The General the 2nd time around with circular mist

  —   Rate it:  up  down  [flag this hub]

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub Small RSS Icon

jim1307  says:
3 months ago

Excellent Jill, full of intrigue and mystery. What more can anyone ask! :))))

A. Jill profile image

A. Jill  says:
3 months ago

Thank you, Jim. I find the story of the General and Lovina totally fascinating.

Neil Sperling profile image

Neil Sperling  says:
3 months ago

Jill- Interesting hub and most exciting that the camera can catch what the naked eye can not. This type of thing is no surprise to me - life is filled with wonders and many wonders are more wonderful than scary....... your intuition re: feels to you more to be his wife - tells me that you have developed the sixth sence to a degree..... work on it and you may refine it!

Love Light and Laughter

Neil

A. Jill profile image

A. Jill  says:
3 months ago

Thank you, Neil, for you interest and remarks. I agree with you that there are many things to wonder at in this reality. I don't find the phenomenon at the General's grave at all scary. If I lived in Lovina's time, I would probably be declared a mental case, too, for my beliefs and for going about talking to those that I feel come around me to be of assistance, including my own late husband. It's nice running into someone like minded about such things.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working