Wednesday, October 21, 2015

...Of all things SPOOKY with Debbie Christiana (@DebChristiana)

For today's post, my friend Debbie has gone deep into her well of creepy inspiration - and she's all about the inspiration - for a story that'll keep your lights turned on at night...





A few times a month, Luna the Lab and I and travel to Saratoga Springs, NY to see my husband, who was transferred there in March. He comes homes to NW Connecticut on the weekends and I go up when I can. 


The first thing I do when I get to a new place is to delve into the haunted history of the town/city. I hit the jackpot. Reportedly, there are 467 haunted venues in Albany/Saratoga area. The many battles of the Revolutionary War fought here, including The Battle of Saratoga are responsible for many of the sightings. But hidden deep in the history of the war, I found a story I thought perfect for Halloween.


Angeline Tubbs – The Witch of Saratoga.


The story goes that Angeline was born in 1761 in Britain. At 17 she followed her fiancĂ©e to the colonies to fight in the war. After the British were defeated at the Battle of Saratoga, he dumped her. 
Alone and abandoned, she settled in a hut at the base of Mt. Vista, a small mountain about one mile north of Saratoga, a brood of cats her only companions.

She soon earned a reputation as a witch and made a living telling fortunes, the majority of which came true. 

At one point, and the information is murky, she was sentenced to hang. There is no evidence she was charged with witchcraft, and some say she was falsely charged with stealing – to disguise the real reason, which was she scared the townspeople and they wanted her gone. 

The hanging failed. She walked away, a mark on her neck forever. 

They didn’t try again.

Some townsfolk claimed they would see Angeline on Mt. Vista, on the edge of the cliff, standing with her arms outstretched in the middle of a terrible storm, talking to spirits.

A Mr. William Stone wrote about it in his dairy in 1826 – not clear who Mr. Stone was, but he seems to be important…

“Had she been mistress of the whirlwind, she could not have been more delighted with storms. She had been seen, her form erect and with extended arms, standing upon the verge of fearful precipices, in the midst of the most awful tempests, conversing, as it were, with unseen spirits, her long, matted hair streaming in the wind, while the thunder was riving the rocks beneath her feet, and the red lightning encircling her as with a winding-sheet of flame.”

Angeline boasted she would die when the last of her 21 cats died. She grew older and older, outliving those who shunned and ostracized her and when her last cat died, so did she, in 1865 at the age 104.
There are those who swear she still inhabits Angeline’s Hill on Mt. Vista. A young writer, Ben Carradine on a writer’s retreat in 1932 saw her apparition briefly, for the first time. Driving back from Ohio in 1955, he pulled over to look at the sunset, when a thunderstorm rolled in. Taking cover near Mt. Vista, he found shelter under an overhanging rock and saw her again. Here’s his account:

 “A lone figure was standing on the stone ledge at the top, silhouetted against the sky.  She stood erect, arms stretched out to the raging sky.  Her long hair and wet cloak streamed out behind her. And he heard her piercing scream above him.  Another lightning bolt illuminated the woman.  She screamed again and again as the lightning flashed, the thunder cracked, the rain fell, and the wind howled.  Finally the clouds moved away, the screaming stopped, and the woman vanished.”

As my quest to see a ghost continues, on one of my trips here I see myself finding the infamous Mt. Vista and dragging my husband along for a visit. Maybe Angeline will be there to welcome us.

Happy Halloween!



CURIOUSLY DARK TALES



Supernatural beings and the evils of humanity come alive in these six, short grim tales with a twist. 

Some adult content. 

No gore.

Only 99 cents on Amazon    







Debbie Christiana is a fan of things that go bump in the night, the mysterious and macabre and unusual love stories. This led her to write paranormal romance, dark romantic fiction and dark short stories. 

When not writing, Debbie can be found planning next Halloween’s Haunted House, reading something spooky, practicing yoga, sipping wine or hiking the Appalachian Trail with her husband and yellow Lab.

Debbie is a member of RWA (Secretary of her local chapter) and the International Thriller Writers. She lives in her Connecticut empty nest with her husband, where her three children visit regularly.

Check out her books, anthologies and blog at www.debbiechristiana.com
Twitter: @DebChristiana
Facebook: Debbie Christiana, Author



8 comments:

  1. Thanks so much, Liv, for hosting me! Happy Halloween!!

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    1. Well thank you for sharing such a cool legend! I hope your Halloween is amazing!

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    1. Glad you liked it, Selena. I thought it was pretty cool!!

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  3. Great that you are featuring the creepy about now, Liv, so Halloween! Debbie, I LOVED this tale. I have a story to tell about this image of a woman on a cliff embracing the wind and storms, but that will have to wait for another day. I just bought your book and know I will love it.

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    1. Aw, thanks so much, Cora! I hope you do enjoy it.

      As I spend more time in Saratoga, I'm going to really try and find the Mt. Vista and see if I can dig up more info.

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  4. All of those haunted areas in the Albany/Saratoga region and I never saw a single ghost. Yes, that makes me happy. I hope you get to see one.

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    1. Nana, I think of you every time I drive up there. I see the exit for Sienna College :) Well, I believer you weren't looking for ghosts when you lived there, LOL - I hope I see one too. Thanks for stopping by.

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