| This house in Oyster
Bay played an important role in the Revolutionary War both
for and against the British. Could it be that shadows of it's
past still linger?
This original home of the Townsends quartered British troops
during the war as was the law in the American colonies. One
day a British Major, John Andre was overheard discussing a
bribe to convince Benedict Arnold to surrender his troops.
Townsend's daughter notified Washington and the plot was foiled.
John Andre was known to frequent the house often before this
and it is claimed that he may still pay occasional visits.
According to an article on the former Haunted Long Island
website, there was a sighting of Andre outside a bedroom window.
There may also be another ghost. Another British officer often
staying at the house also quartered a lover there. It is said
that her bedroom where she stayed is always cold. It does
not mention which of the upstairs rooms she held but there
was one room in particular I found rather chilling. The museum
curators set up period mannequins there to illustrate scenes
of daily life. See photo on the right taken in the middle
bedroom upstairs.
There may also be a pleasanter spirit residing at Raynham
Hall. Many visitors and museum employees tell tales of the
smell of apple and cinnamon in the kitchen. Some say if you
smell it, the lady in the kitchen welcomes you. Strangely
when we arrived to do out investigation of Raynham we smelled
it too but I found some potpourri in the kitchen that smelled
just like apple pie. At first I thought maybe there was no
apple and cinnamon apparition but when speaking to one of
the tourguides, she said she encountered the smell far from
the kitchen near the servants stairway. When she called her
supervisor he told her not to worry as she had been welcomed.
It seems to be accepted as a real haunted house by many sources.
We were unable to find anything conclusive on our tour. Someone
caught an orb but it looked like it could have been dust from
a curtain blowing in the breeze.
Another strange thing was this trap door looking panel in
the floor on the second floor. The break on the wood you see
in the photo on the right continues around in a square hole
big enough for a person. There appears to be an outlet inset
into the floor but this is obviously an addition. I am unsure
if this "trap door" is original or not.
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