| Ghostly
images, spirited debate 'Haunted': Ghost
hunters set out to prove the existence of a ghost at Patapsco
Female Institute.
By
Rona S. Hirsch Special To The Sun
Originally published October 31, 2001
Jacqueline
Galke has heard the story before. A young student who died of
pneumonia at Patapsco Female Institute before her parents could
reach her wanders the grounds of the former 19th century school.
Nervous
teens hang out there in hopes of a sighting. Ghost hunters stop
by snapping random photographs.
"We
realize people think that it's a haunted site," said Galke,
executive director of the Patapsco Female Institute Historic Park
in Ellicott City."Do we care? No. It's been considered a
haunted site at least for the last 25 years."
If
the pursuit of ghosts seems a frivolous curiosity to Galke, others
take it more seriously ghost hunters who believe in what they
see and ghost debunkers who worry about pseudoscience.
Timothy
Kerins and Ken Rathburn (That's us),
two computer network controllers have taken about 100 photographs
over five visits to the institute in June and July and say they've
come up with possible evidence of ghostly presence floating around
the grassy fields of the stabilized ruins. Shot with Kerins' digital
camera, the images reveal what the pair call "orbs,"
or circular, floating illuminated objects and globs of white streaks
that they see as resembling a woman in white Victorian dress.
"We
saw lights coming up," said Kerins, 36, a Timonium resident.
"I didn't know if it was from lens flare [reflection of source
light in a straight line] or a light back in the trees. Then we
saw they were showing up next to objects or in photos we took
of each other. In some pictures, they were appearing where there
was no light."
Although
the images are of different sizes, he said, they are translucent
and have texture. On their next visit, the pair said they were
stunned by the image of a white luminary taken by Rathburn while
he extended the camera in front of him. "You're not going
to believe this picture," Rathburn said. If Rathburn and
Kerins are entranced, professional ghostbuster Joe Nickell believes
speculation about ghostly orbs andluminaries is a product of wishful
thinking.
"It
has all the earmarks of superstition, ignorance and pseudo science,"
said Nickell, senior research fellow at the Committee for the
Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP)
based in Amherst, N.Y., and science writer for its publication,
Skeptical Inquirer magazine.
"Science
has never authenticated a single ghost," he said. "Most
of which is claimed as supernatural and paranormal is negative
evidence. They say, 'We don't know what this is. It's unexplained
phenomena.' To claim you don't know what something is and then
claim it's paranormal or supernatural is lapse in logic.
"It's
arguing from ignorance. If you heard a funny noise in a house,
you
can't
claim that's a ghost because you don't know what it was. And if
you don't know, you don't know. Period. I've been in more haunted
homes than Casper. These phenomena don't happen when I'm around."
Nor,
said Nickell, can anyone determine which are authentic ghost photos
because there are no genuine ghost photo standards > with which
to compare them.
He
attributed ghost photos of transparent people to double exposure,
reflections or hoaxes, while photos of "nonpeople looking
ghosts" such as orbs, streaks, mists, strands or bursts of
light are "glitches" in the photography process. Those,
he said, are more commonly caused by a flash and anything that
gets in between the camera lens and scene, which can create a
glitch.
Orbs,
he said, are particles of dust or droplets of moisture close to
the lens, foggy breath on a cold night bouncing the off the flash,
a puff of cigarette smoke, a flying insect, strands of hanging
hair, one's fingertip, foliage, jewelry or a camera wrist strap.
Galke sides with Nickell.
"The
ghosts of the PFI are all fiction," she said. "I've
never seen a ghost and I'm really disappointed. I've been affiliated
> with PFI for about six years. I don't know anyone else here
who's seen a ghost."
Despite
her skepticism, Galke has arranged for 15 members of the Maryland
Ghost & Spirit Association, to spend the night Nov 16 at PFI
after Kerins and Rathburn consulted with the group's founder,
Beverly Litsinger. "I want to help them to dispel the myth
and fallacies," Galke said. "I think it's an important
thing to do so it's not such a mystery."
Litsinger,
whose association has 400 members, plans to bring along ghost
hunting equipment including a video camera, night scopes, thermal
scanners and electromagnetic detection.
"Ghosts
have a lot of electromagnetic energy," said Litsinger, 49,
a Randallstown consultant to nonprofit organizations. Ghost skeptic
Nickell said thermal scanners and electromagnetic detectors are
not designed to catch ghosts and should not be used to try.
Litsinger
claims that people have seen full body apparitions of the student,
whom she said, hated PFI and wanted her parents to get her out.
"Some ghosts are trapped because of unfulfilled lives,"
she said. She's an unhappy soul. Someone has to tell her she has
the ability to leave. She's probably not aware she's dead."
PFI
isn't Ellicott City's only haunted site, according to Litsinger.
"Howard County is covered with ghosts," she said.
She
points to the Mount Ida Mansion, down the hill from PFI, where
Litsinger says its last resident, Ida Tyson, can be heard rattling
the large set of key rings she had carried. Folks also claim,
she said, that they can hear doors slamming in the old firehouse
on Main Street or furniture being moved around upstairs in the
former Moose Lodge nearby.
In
fact, the Howard County Tourism Council leadstours of the historic
district based on the book The Hauntings of Ellicott Mills, written
by the council's executive director Melissa Arnold.
Other
reports, she said, are from former employees of the Howard County
Tourism have experience some paranormal happenings.
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