Over the generations, the building today occupied by Villa Maria has become home to a fair share of ghost stories.
Lynda
da Silveira, a former Villa Maria student who now works there, for
years organized the school’s historical tour, which is given by students
and includes the ever-popular ghost stories.
Da Silveira recounts a perennial favourite: “It’s a story of unrequited love.”
It
involves the school’s main building which had once been the
Monklands Hotel. In that building is a rope that hangs from the second
storey down to the first, connected to a bell.
“Two
lovers came to the country inn — they were having an amorous affair,” da
Silveira says. The woman, fearing her husband and society at large
would discover her indiscretions, ended the romance and left the hotel.
“That
night he hanged himself with the rope. It is said that at the time of
his hanging which was 11 p.m., oftentimes, you can see the rope moving.
And the chime of the bell will sound like the agonized cry of a dying
man,” says da Silveira. “We all refer to it as the hanging rope.”
What
of other ghosts? “Lots of teachers and staff throughout the years will
tell you that weird stuff happens
on that floor all the time,” Da Silveira says. “So you’ll be sitting there, and suddenly a gust of cold wind will come from nowhere. The lights will turn off. It sounds like someone is walking across the room, even though you’re the only one left.” Some have even reported hearing laughter.
on that floor all the time,” Da Silveira says. “So you’ll be sitting there, and suddenly a gust of cold wind will come from nowhere. The lights will turn off. It sounds like someone is walking across the room, even though you’re the only one left.” Some have even reported hearing laughter.
Another
tale pertains to a student named Lillian Stubbs. It is said she
contracted cholera. She longed to go home to Texas for the summer break,
but because she was contagious, she had to stay at the school with the
nuns. She died there in 1880.
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