Jeffrey's Favorite 13 Ghost Stories. Kathryn Tucker Windham
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Also by Kathryn Tucker Windham
Treasured Alabama Recipes (1967)
13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey (1969)
Jeffrey Introduces 13 More Southern Ghosts (1971)
Treasured Tennessee Recipes (1972)
Treasured Georgia Recipes (1973)
13 Georgia Ghosts and Jeffrey (1973)
13 Mississippi Ghosts and Jeffrey (1974)
Exploring Alabama (1974)
Alabama: One Big Front Porch (1975)
13 Tennessee Ghosts and Jeffrey (1977)
The Ghost in the Sloss Furnaces (1978)
Southern Cooking to Remember (1978)
Count Those Buzzards! Stamp Those Grey Mules! (1979)
Jeffrey’s Latest 13: More Alabama Ghosts (1982)
A Serigamy of Stories (1983)
Odd–Egg Editor (1990)
The Autobiography of a Bell (1991)
A Sampling of Selma Stories (1991)
My Name is Julia (1991)
Twice Blessed (1996)
Encounters (1998)
The Bridal Wreath Bush (1999)
Common Threads (2000)
It’s Christmas! (2002)
Ernest’s Gift (2004)
Spit, Scarey Ann, and Sweat Bees: One Thing Leads to Another (2009)
Jeffrey’s
Favorite 13 Ghost Stories
Kathryn Tucker Windham
NewSouth Books
Montgomery | Louisville
NewSouth Books
P.O. Box 1588
Montgomery, AL 36102
Copyright 2004 by Kathryn Tucker Windham. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by NewSouth Books, a division of NewSouth, Inc., Montgomery, Alabama.
ISBN-13: 9781588381705
eBook ISBN: 9781603061117
Lccn: 2004021194
Visit www.newsouthbooks.com.
In Memory
of
My Friend Herman Moore
1927–2003
Bookseller and Library Evangelist
and
Jeffrey’s Best Friend
Contents
4. The Curse of Barnsley Gardens
5. The Ghost Collie at Scataway
11. The Witch Who Tormented the Bell Family
It has been nearly forty years since Jeffrey came clumping into my life. Then, back in 1966, I did not know who or what was walking with heavy steps down the hall, opening and slamming doors, moving a variety of objects, rocking in a rocking chair, and frightening our old cat, Hornblower. Hornblower, now deceased, was the only living thing ever frightened by Jeffrey.
One of my children gave the intruder his name. The name was chosen for no particular reason, but we were pleased years later to learn that one of England’s most famous ghosts was named Jeffrey. The English Jeffrey haunted the rectory in Epworth where John and Charles Wesley, the founders of Methodism, lived.
Our family has a real affection for Jeffrey. We’re comfortable, even grateful, having him around. We blame everything that goes wrong on Jeffrey, thus relieving ourselves of any responsibility for such mishaps as spilled food, forgotten appointments, lost car keys, smudged handwriting, and such.
Soon after Jeffrey attached himself to our family, I went over to Montgomery to talk to Margaret Gillis Figh, longtime folklore teacher at Huntingdon College, about his presence in our home.
Our conversation naturally conjured up other tales of Alabama ghosts. Before our visit ended, we, possibly with a bit of prodding by Jeffrey, were talking seriously about selecting thirteen of our state’s best ghost tales and writing a book about them. We proposed to call our book “13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey.”
We dared not