It was the late 1990's, I think 1996. My
husband, Gary, and I were living in a small town
in Pennsylvania - Sharon, PA, right on the
border of Ohio and Pennsylvania. It was an old
steel mill town, with a lot of joblessness,
homelessness, and many older first- and second-
generation European people who had come to
America hoping for prosperity, but instead lost
all their future when the steel mill left and
took all their pensions.
There were many old-timers in Sharon who had plenty of time to tell
stories of the history of Sharon and otherwise.
Gary and I had been married only a couple of
years. We didn't know many people in Sharon,
had moved there for my job in the large hospital
there only. We had no family close by and only
a few acquaintances. But we loved the town, with
its old stories and people who had so much time
to share their thoughts. We bought a brick
house very inexpensively, as it was at least 70
or 80 years old and had not been taken care of
(the address was 272 Cedar Avenue). It was a
wreck. Messy, stinky, with layers of paint and
scum and wallpaper all over the walls, trash and
debris all over the basement. In fact, we even
found an old upright piano hiding in a small
corner in the basement; and, although badly out
of tune, it still played!
Gary and I had a lot
of time on our hands, no children, enough money,
and so decided to completely renovate the
house. We tore everything down to the lathboard
and/or brick, replaced all the plumbing,
electric, all the old plaster walls taken down
and replaced with drywall, we refinished the
hard wood floors throughout the house. But
there was one bedroom (of the three total
bedrooms upstairs) that we left undone, as we
just got tired of renovating for a while.
This
room, in the next two years that we lived in the
house, began to be affectionately (and sometimes
eerily) referred to as "Kate's room."
But before we came to call this bedroom Kate's
room, a number of strange things happened.The
first incident had to do with the old upright
piano that usually sat quietly in the basement.
One afternoon I got out of work from the
hospital early. It was a beautiful spring day,
so warm, smelled good outside, the sun was
shining throughout the house on Cedar Avenue. I
was in the newly renovated kitchen doing dishes
and looking forward to the weekend ahead. The
window in front of me was open and I was
enjoying the sounds of neighborhood kids
playing. It was about 3:30 in the afternoon. I
was the only person in the house at that time,
save for our six cats, who usually all slept
upstairs together until night came. Suddenly, I
began to hear a quiet song playing on a piano.
I couldn't recognize the specific song, it
sounded as if a child was trying to pick out
some simple melodies and chords. It was slow
and pretty. I remember thinking how sweet it
was that a neighbor child probably was just
learning how to play. I put my ear to the open
window, listening for the direction of the
sweet, youthful melody. But I discovered the
music was not coming from outside. I felt a
little anxious as I walked slowly over to the
basement door (which was right off the
kitchen). I stood at the top of the basement
steps and listened to what I didn't really yet
believe: that the sweet little tune was coming
from my basement. Yet there was not supposed to
be anyone home except me.
Strangely, the music
kept playing for quite a while. I was way too
scared to go downstairs and prove or disprove
this oddity. So I rationalized and told
myself, "You're probably imagining that it's a
real song; it's probably one of the cats walking
around on the piano keys." So I walked back into
the kitchen and called for all the cats. They
usually would all come to me if called. All six
cats came sleepily down from the upstairs of the
house - none of them had been in the basement at
all! The now eerie little tune kept playing from
the old, forgotten piano in the basement. I ran
out to the front porch and waited for Gary (my
husband at the time) to come home. He did come
home about ten minutes later. I felt very
unsettled. Gary reassured me, he told me I
probably imagined everything, and went inside.
There was no more music playing when he went
with me to the basement steps so we walked
down and looked at the piano, and nothing looked
out of place. We couldn't explain it, and I
never heard that piano play again. But the
story goes on.
A few months later, Gary was busy cleaning out
some old heat ducts in the house when he looked
up and said, "I think the heat duct is full of a
bunch of stuff; I can't quite reach it." We got
a broom and dug around for a time. In the next
ten minutes, Gary proceeded to pull three
different baby shoes out of our heat duct. None
of the shoes were matching, but all were about
the same size, perhaps to fit a three-to six-month-old baby. There was a red tennis shoe, a
slipper looking bootie, and a very old-fashioned
looking white patent leather shoe. All three of
the shoes had obviously been worn at one time or
another; we just couldn't figure out why they
were stuck in our heat duct and why there were
no matches. Again, an odd random incident that
we could not explain. And we actually had
already forgotten about the piano playing and
the baby shoes when the third incident happened.
It was late fall or early winter, perhaps 1997.
Gary and I were asleep, it was about 3:30 or
4:00 in the morning. I woke up in a daze of
sorts, maybe still half asleep, I felt like I
was dreaming but was definitely not. I lay in
the bed for about three or four minutes quietly,
with Gary asleep next to me. For the entire
three or four minutes, I heard from the wall
next to me (which was the wall that separated
our bedroom from the bedroom that was not redone
yet) the quiet voice of a woman singing some kind
of lullaby, and sometimes it sounded as though
she was trying to comfort a baby or a child. I
could not make out any exact words or a song,
but the mumbling sort of sounds were so very
clearly coming from the wall beside me. At
times I thought I heard her say, "It's okay,
it'll be okay, come on," but I cannot be sure.
Also during this entire three or four minutes,
as my heart was beginning to beat more and more
quickly, our Siamese cat, Percy, was pacing the
hallway upstairs, and meowing aggressively,
almost crying, and keeping her eyes on the wall
from where I heard this peaceful voice.
Although I was frightened, because I could not
explain the voice (no one else was in the house
that early morning other than sleeping Gary),
the voice at the same time oddly comforted me.
The more I listened to it, the more comforted I
felt. After those few minutes, Gary frightened
me even more by speaking out suddenly, "Do you
hear that voice?" I jumped when he spoke. I
thought he was asleep. And Gary was not one to
admit that he heard something unexplainable. I
knew then that I was not imagining things. As
the singing went on, Gary got up and went
downstairs to look around. When he came back
up, the singing was still going on, Percy the
cat was still pacing the hallway, and Gary told
me that all he heard from downstairs was the
quiet singing coming from the empty bedroom
upstairs. The singing stopped after about a
full ten to fifteen minutes. Gary and I just
sat in the bed listening. It stopped almost as
if fading out, Percy stopped pacing and meowing,
and I never heard any strange noises in 272
Cedar Avenue for the rest of the time we lived
there.
But one of our friends did hear
something strange about three or four months
later.
Before I tell that story, I must note that I one
day I told Gary we should probably name
our "ghost" and be friendly with her, so we
could all live peacefully. He laughed at me.
But later on I got a strong feeling that the
voice I heard was a young woman named Kate. I
have no proof to back my feeling, but
nevertheless I began coming home some days to
call out, "Hi, Kate, how was your day?" I never
got an answer, but it seemed to help me feel
less afraid. We even started referring to the
bedroom that was right next to ours, the one
that we renovated late, as "Kate's room."
Gary and I decided not to tell our story to very
many people, as most people would not believe us
or believe us to be fruity.
One night some
months later, we had a friend Tammy stay
overnight. Tammy did not know about Kate's
room. Tammy had been out late at our house and
we didn't want her to go home alone, so we made
a bed for her in the bedroom that was not
finished yet. The next morning, I woke up very
early (as usual for me) and went to the kitchen
to start some breakfast. I was not talking or
singing at all, trying to be quiet so as not to
wake Tammy or Gary. After 20 minutes or so,
Tammy came rushing down the stairs wrapped in a
towel and covered with soap, looking very scared
and slightly angry. She ran into the kitchen
and said, "Stop trying to freak me out!!!! Why
are you sneaking into the bathroom like that?"
I told her that I had been downstairs cooking
the whole time and had not really made much
noise at all. Tammy proceeded to tell me that
she had woken up early to take a shower. She
was washing up in the shower and said that she
heard a woman's voice, sounding as if the woman
were singing a quiet lullaby to someone, and
Tammy heard this right outside the shower
curtain. Tammy said that she quickly opened the
shower curtain to see nothing and the singing
also stopped. She said that this went on about
three or four more times, with her trying to
wash up, hearing the quiet singing clearly,
madly opening the shower curtain to see
nothing. After about the fourth scare, she said
she decided to run downstairs because she
thought that I was trying to make her feel
scared. I vowed that I was not trying to scare
her, but you must understand how Tammy's story
made Gary and I feel very unsettled once again,
as our friend who had no knowledge of Kate had
obviously experienced almost exactly what we
experienced months earlier.
There is only one more unsettling incident to
tell related to 272 Cedar Avenue and Kate's room.
It had been at least one year since all of the
odd piano, shoe, and Kate singing incidents. It
was about 1998, winter. We had hired an older
man to come in the house and install our new
kitchen cupboards. I forget his name, but I
remember clearly that he was an old timer from
Sharon, told me that he had lived there all his
life. He was very talkative and had many
interesting memories to share about Sharon, PA.
As I was standing talking to him, watching him
on his back attempting to screw in the bottom of
a cupboard, he asked me, "Hey, did you guys ever
hear about what happened in this house right
after it was built?" I told him I knew nothing
about the history of our house, other than that
it was built in the 1920's or 1930's. I also
chose not to tell him any of the Kate stories.
Curious, I asked him what he knew about our
house. He said, "Oh, boy, there was a big
murder here in the 1930's, I remember. I was a
little kid, but I remember everyone talking
about it, a big scandal for this small town."
The cupboard, still laying on his back at work,
proceeded to tell me that the story was of a
young couple who bought 272 Cedar Avenue when it
was first built. They had no children. But the
young woman had a sister who lived in Chicago.
The sister in Chicago was unmarried but became
pregnant. It was later rumored that this young
pregnant woman (the sister in Chicago) was
beaten terribly by the father of her baby.
Still pregnant and wanting safety for herself
and her baby, she moved to Sharon, PA, and came
to live with her sister and brother-in-law at
272 Cedar Avenue. The father of the child, so
angered by her leaving him, came and found her
in Sharon, and in a fit of rage stabbed her to
death in her bedroom upstairs. The cupboard man
could not tell me any of the names or which
bedroom it was, but I was very curious. I went
to the library and did a bit of research. I
would like to say that I found out there was a
young woman named Kate to nicely complete this
story. Alas, though, I found no information to
validate his story. But I have a feeling, from
the strange experiences I had with "Kate"
and "her room," that his story was not a lie.
We moved from 272 Cedar Avenue in 1999. I think
of Kate often. I have never had another
paranormal experience, but sometimes wish that I
might be comforted by her quiet singing again
someday.
|