TALENT — With electromagnetic field readers
blinking and infrared cameras surveilling every upstairs room, there was
only one thing left to do — kill the lights and call the spirits.
Members
of the ghost-hunting Oregon Paranormal Society of Medford came out in
full force Thursday night to investigate why the 120-year-old home of
Talent founder Aaron P. Talent is haunting its current occupants.
The family, who does not want to be identified,
says it has tried driving off the shadowy souls lingering in their
rooms by burning sage and having a local reverend bless the house with
holy water, but nothing has helped.
"When my
5-year-old daughter woke up and saw the little girl sitting next to her
bed twirling her hair, I said, 'Enough is enough,'" says the mother, who
has been renting the home in the 100 block of South Front Street since
February.
The mother of two says she hasn't
personally encountered the spirits, but strange occurrences — most
recently, their pet snake disappearing from its locked cage in an
upstairs room — and her children's sightings have her convinced that the
home is haunted.
"I can deal with it, but if
they don't leave my children alone we will move," says the mom. "It's a
beautiful home and you'd love to live here if you didn't have to be
tortured by these spirits every day."
The woman says she's had similar sensations at some of her past residences, but nothing close to this.
"I'm scared," says her 10-year-old son. "I like seeing this stuff in the movies, but not here."
At
least three spirits reside in the house, the mother believes: an older
man, a young girl and at least one other child. After months of her
smoke alarm mysteriously going off at the same time every morning, her
caged birds wildly chirping during the middle of the night for no reason
and the family cat hypnotically staring into the same corner, she
decided to call the Oregon Paranormal Society team.
Scott
Triem, 42, of Medford founded OPS in 2009, and the group has gone on to
investigate dozens of sites
around Southern Oregon, he says.
Triem's
team didn't have a significant personal encounter with any spirits at
the Talent home that night, but hours of audio and video recordings
still have to be reviewed before the investigation is complete.
Voices
and objects that humans can't detect naturally often are realized while
reviewing video and audio recordings from investigations, he says.
OPS
member Pam Lindgren, 49, referred to as a "sensitive" by her colleagues
for her ability to detect the presence of spirits without the help of
recording equipment, says the house is haunted without a doubt.
"I
definitely feel a presence ... you're being watched," Lindgren told the
family Thursday. "I don't feel maliciousness, but I wouldn't sleep in
this room."
Even if the night's footage and
audio recordings don't reveal a glimpse of any spirits, the team agrees
that the house is haunted.
"It's heavy in there," Triem says.
Tina
Sanchez, 41, of Medford, the team's research leader, says a young girl
decades ago drowned in Wagner Creek near the home. It could be her
spirit lurking in the rooms, but it's hard to tell, she says.
According
to historical records, Aaron P. Talent built the home in 1886, about 10
years after settling in Southern Oregon. Originally a carpenter, Talent
had opened a successful grocery store between Ashland and Phoenix in
1881. Two years later he established a post office inside the store,
which made possible the incorporation of Talent in 1910.
Talent
and his wife, Martha, raised nine children in the Front Street home,
records show. Six of those children made the trip from Tennessee to the
Rogue Valley with their parents, and three were born here.
It's possible, OPS team members say, that any of the Talent family or subsequent occupants could be haunting the place.
Talent
sold the home to Mary Packard sometime before 1896, the year she sold
the property to George A. Briner, records show. By 1902, Talent and his
wife had moved to Medford and the Front Street home had been sold again,
this time to Van A. Dunlap, who went on to become the city of Talent's
first mayor.
Dunlap's daughter Bertha,
following the death of her parents, sold the home in 1922 to Susan and
Thomas Clayton, who owned it until 1945. Ownership was then transferred
to F.O. Clayton, records show.
Reviewing all
of the recordings from the investigation could take weeks, says Sanchez.
She expects OPS will conduct a follow-up investigation once the review
is complete.
Sanchez says she doesn't know whether any of the former owners died in the home, but she assumes someone has.
However,
"we're not qualified to rid a home (of a ghost) ... our only intention
is to investigate and find out if our clients' home is haunted ... and
hopefully find out why they (spirits) are using the home," Sanchez says.
"It's possible to make peace with them."
As for the family, the mother says, "we'll just have to wait and see what happens, but we can't do this very much longer."
I now live at this house with my family and you can sometimes hear small things here and there but we have never been "haunted". So she must be a friendly girl. Or at least she likes us? Also I think she likes music b/c in the upstairs bedroom when we turned off the radio it came back on once.
ReplyDeleteI think its neat.
Hi Tracy, it's so interesting to hear your current update in regards to spirit activity in the home. My name is Jennifer and I work as a psychic medium. I have never been on that property, however I have done a number of psychic assessments on homes in the Talent area near you. Although I have experienced many earthbound energies,almost all have been more of a playful, curious, harmless nature. Thanks for the update! I have many active cases in Talent right now, and hearing accounts from others in the area helps to find some resolution for both, earthbounds and residents. Thank you for sharing! Happy Holidays!
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