Haunted Marysville, Montana
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About this ebook
Vince Moravek
After twenty years working in acute medical care, Vince Moravek escaped humid climes and steady employment for the wonders of Montana as a freelance writer, artist and cartoonist (latter most known for the five-year run of Zink in Helena's Queen City News). Since 2016 an accidental resident of Marysville, he ran the Snowline History Museum, established the Marysville Dispatch as a modest resurrection of the newspapers of old and is involved in local historic preservation efforts.
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Haunted Marysville, Montana - Vince Moravek
seek.
INTRODUCTION
I stumbled into Marysville by accident.
I had lingered in tiny East Glacier after a project, and when forced to return to the Helena area, I feared the prospect of the chaotic big city as much as I resented leaving the adventures and daily marvels that come with residing on the edge of Glacier National Park. Rental prices were way out of my range. But the Fates didn’t let me down. After striking out with all other options, a single email changed my life forever: an offer to rent an empty house in this high-mountain ghost town that had been vacant and on the market for several years. The Bunkhouse
was indeed an old dorm for miners, needed tons of work and was cosmetically trashed. Normally, they wouldn’t consider renting it, but hey, if I didn’t mind…
That allowed some of the most amazing experiences of my life.
I felt I had moved into a living museum exhibit of the Old West mining past. Although 90 percent of the infrastructure is gone, abandoned ruins still outnumber modern homes. Each day brought a new dawning awareness of the near-indescribable scope of the pioneer metropolis crammed in this tiny bowl and throughout the surrounding hills. The Marysville District’s leading role in many ways exceeds the other better-known Montana tourist ghost towns yet is overlooked because it survives as a living town.
This new stranger encountered friendly waves from day one. I was admittedly unprepared for the winter but never suspected I looked pitiful enough to find cords of cut firewood magically appear in the yard. Same with boxes of extra cold-weather gear and groceries on my porch. Now that I know everybody, I see that was a community taking care of its own; several neighbors were responsible, and not one sought recognition or payment. This single bachelor received anonymous Christmas presents and Easter baskets for the first time in decades. When my main car blew its engine and I was stuck with a big 1979 Lincoln backup, a neighbor was so appalled at my winter travel struggles that he bought me a surprise AWD Subaru! Yes, a payback deal, but that’s just partially reflective of this stunning community. Friends wonder if I’m being groomed for some mysterious purpose and will one night wake up to a yard full of townsfolk in black robes and burning torches. But no. Reality rules. Along with unprecedented graciousness, I have managed to annoy, repulse and anger my usual share. Hopefully I can keep that percentage low in this unique place.
Ruins above Main Street with Betsy. Author photo.
Cabin ruin interior. Author photo.
I discovered a new adopted hometown filled with amazing people surrounded by interesting areas to explore. Wildlife abounds. Moose have wandered in at times, along with free-range cattle and escaped pet donkeys. Our mayor, Hank, is a fang-grinning malamute. With all the routine cool weirdness, who could suspect the biggest surprises lay in wait?
Abandoned in place. Author photo.
I’d heard the usual passing rumors, but ghosts or supernatural events were the last things on my mind when I had a mind-blowing paranormal double-feature late one night in my second rental house. Shocking as that was, it was only the start of a real-life series of spooky events that played out over the next weeks like a favorite Twilight Zone episode. Forevermore, I know something’s going on
beyond our reckoning. That also started the questions.
So I invite you up into the high Rockies of south-central Montana, to Marysville and the Marysville Mining District, for the first glimpse into its vast untold reports of ghosts and other supernatural events (GSE), all with a spectacular background legacy of sometimes unbelievable, usually unappreciated historical figures and other impressive personalities. This is no grocery list of old stories. You’ll join an active quest as you help fit the many puzzle pieces of rumor into a wondrous—and chilling—panorama of secrets and surprises.
But knowing what I know now…um, allow me to let you go first.
CHAPTER 1
THE HAUNTING OF JULIAN HOUSE
Did you know this was one of the more haunted houses in town?
—Ginny Thomas, 2016
THINGS THAT GO SMASH IN THE NIGHT
Had I just witnessed a miracle?
In the fall of 2016, I overcame what any sane person would see as an insurmountable challenge: finding another affordable rental house in Marysville. Especially one with the unbelievable timing of becoming available the same week the old house sold and I’d been handed my walking papers. Better yet, the new digs were right up the street! I’d been saved from the certain doom of attempting to find and afford a new rental and then remain sane in busy Helena after years in small towns like East Glacier Park and Marysville.
Divine intervention or careful what you wish for?
Did you know this is one of the more haunted houses in town?
This cheerful revelation came from a trusted neighbor as I hauled stuff up the street. Ginny Thomas is absolutely credible and only reported what she’d heard. Loud bangs and other noises in the middle of the night. So much so that [the current owner living in Missouri] had to have a Native American shaman perform a sage ceremony to banish them. There’s also supposed to be some creepy mirror in which people saw strange things.
The moon over Julian House. Author sketch.
Hmm, that wasn’t in the brochure.
Actually, there wasn’t any brochure. The only reason I had the house was due to the fantastic Marysville townsfolk. No pitchforks or torches showed up my first year, and after two years, the newcomer must have passed some kind of acceptance threshold. Those who saw my predicament got together, vetting me to their mutual friend the landlord. I moved in sight unseen (except, of course, for the outside), caring for nothing more than getting it.
Did I care that its original street-facing porch and 1890s structure was a perfect stand-in for Jed Clampett’s cabin? Not with the entire back half completely renovated like a Hyatt Regency suite. And its further odd amalgam of modern renovation versus pioneer original only added to the charm. A dark dogleg hall led off the kitchen—modern site for a washer/dryer but part of the original structure. Layers of old wallpaper were peeling off to reveal the 1894 Helena Herald pioneer insulation
newspaper pages still plastered tight against hand-hewn log walls. Even June Cleaver would find the patterns of the remaining patchwork linoleum floor quaint and outdated.
Entering what I called the Dark Hall was to step into the past, from the 1940s back through to the 1890s. A trio of ominous narrow doors shut off other ancient unused rooms: a low woodshed, a tiny old bathroom choked with dust-covered 1930s-era fixtures and a bedroom-sized chamber, also with original walls and scattered odd personal items abandoned decades ago. A 1924 edition of Grit. A leather belt aged hard and brittle. Old cooking utensils hung on nails, rusty tools and a pile of 1920s–’30s newspapers stacked neatly on a dusty table. A March 1936 edition carried an interesting piece on the hunt for outlaw gangster John Dillinger after his latest jailbreak.
The big adjoining living room was the main part of the original cabin, but taken together, it was like having a modern home with half a haunted house tacked on. Complete with the aforementioned creepy mirror.
Unremarkable at first glance.
Rectangular. Foot and a half tall. Shade over two feet long. Mounted in a simple faded green wooden frame, jammed high up on an old shelf in the Dark Hall. Reflections were muted behind decades of old soot, grease spots, dead flies, dust, spiderwebs and hanging cobwebs. Simple thing but yep, creepy all right. Especially with the stories.
The scoop from multiple sources—including the owner, himself a personal witness—was that multiple strange bright lights would appear, moving about within the mirror without any reflective source in the outside world. Same confirmations on the loud unexplained night sounds. But no worries—all quiet since the sage ceremony.
In fact, the previous residing couple had no disturbances whatsoever. Of course, there was that one time when the stereo burst on by itself in the middle of the night, but that might have been a timer malfunction—despite never using the feature. But certainly no loud noises or phantom mirror lights. Did they avoid the Dark Hall by night just like I found myself doing?
Should I dig deeper, or did I even want to know more at this point?
If I do, it’s only for historical interest and always with respect!
I giddily announced aloud that first week, not really believing I was addressing anything more than my own superstitions, although let’s cover all the bases, ha-ha—huh?
Two seconds after my declaration to the Dark Hall, a very distinct metallic TINK! sounded in the (personally dubbed) Roaring Twenties Room. Subtle but with the clarity of a ten-penny nail dropping. Hardly a bang or crash, yet something seemed to fall on cue. Room clutter held no revelations besides my own worked-up imagination.
And no moonlight horrors erupted other than my snores.
New digs for the unwary with Princess Jasmine on the porch. Author photo.
At least for the first three months.
January 30. The depths of a dark, frozen night when I woke out of a dead sleep. Felt and looked like 3:00 a.m. or damn close enough—no clock was checked. I was sleeping on the sofa in the new part of the house beside the kitchen with a clear view into the old section up front.
Nothing but black silence. What woke me up? Usually I slept like granite, waking at times, sure, but typically back out in moments. It was unprecedented to even get to the point of opening my eyes to look around. Somehow this time I did, noting the two guest dogs I was hosting for a neighbor were also awake. Neither showed any sign of alarm, yet both had their heads up, necks turned for mild looks into the kitchen.
Utter peace. Confusing. Until the Attack of the Poltergeist.
CRASH is but a mild definition of the metallic/porcelain/dining utensil/small appliance bashing clatter that then exploded out of the kitchen. Not a single smash but more an avalanche of domestic kitchen items. Exactly, go figure, as if that tall but shaky item-loaded metal shelf stand in the corner just toppled over. Either that or a skinny, top-heavy lamp I insisted on placing atop the microwave fell over again, this time taking toaster, coffeemaker, cups, saucers, breadbox, several dishes and a couple fully loaded metal toolboxes along with it. If it was a spooky movie special effect, Steven Spielberg would have approved wholeheartedly with wide grin and happy clapping.
What did I do in this stunning encounter of the paranormal?
In an equally remarkable demonstration of how a groggy brain operates—or perhaps fails to—my reaction was nothing more than a disgusted grunt and sneering grumble, absolutely certain it was my own carelessness to blame. I had a unique skill to set things up for later falls. Not one thought of the supernatural. The dogs cringed at the sudden noise but otherwise lay watching.
Aw, I’d check out the mess in the morning.
I barely began turning over when another burst of disturbance hit, this next one fierce enough to vibrate sofa cushions. Think of an extremely irate Dwayne Johnson suddenly appearing in your front room, taking a running kick to a major brace beam while releasing double armloads of rough-cut lumber to scatter, smashing against the nearest interior walls.
Criminy! Whatta ripple effect! Really outdid myself this time!
Snore.
I WOKE UP ANNOYED but glad I waited for morning to confront both the mess and my new lengths in bookshelf overload, poor kitchen furniture choice and/or whatever home decorating Rube Goldberg time bomb I’d managed to set up for myself.
Instead, I confronted the inexplicable.
You guessed it: absolutely nothing was out of place.
Insert here a whole morning of investigation/attempted debunk. Include several neighbors’ inspections and inevitable shrugs. This was right after a brief thaw as well: metal roof, noted clear all around and specifically