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Haunted New Jersey: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Garden State

Haunted New Jersey: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Garden State
By Patricia A. Martinelli, Charles A. Stansfield Jr.

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Product Description

A fun look at unexplained phenomena in New Jersey, featuring information on ghost tours in the state. Includes stories about The Jersey Devil, UFOs in New Jersey, The Confederate Ghosts of Finn's Point, The Woman in White, Water-Dwelling Monsters, Pirates and their Treasures and dozens of other tales of ghosts, hauntings, curses, and monsters.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #128275 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 120 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
As Martinelli and Stansfield reveal, New Jersey is home to dozens of unexplained phenomena, from the legendary Jersey Devil to the lesser-known White Stag of Shamong. The authors (Martinelli is a freelance writer; Stansfield is a geography professor at Rowan University in New Jersey) take a serious look at the state’s occult history, traversing it from northwest mountains to the southern beaches as they document reported sightings of ghosts, witches and other creatures. Befitting their credentials and generally sober tone, the authors don’t actually reveal whether or not they believe in certain legends. Rather, they rely on eyewitness accounts to verify their tellings. For example, "several people have seen" a dead baron strolling the grounds of a Ringwood reservoir, and "local residents have reported seeing the ghost" of a Revolutionary War casualty in Elizabeth. Not as playful as last year’s Weird N.J.: Your Travel Guide to New Jersey’s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets but certainly more authoritative, this compendium of legends should appeal to residents of the Garden State interested in local lore as well as American historians.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author
Patricia A. Martinelli is a freelance writer with a lifelong interest in American history and folklore. Charles A. Stansfield Jr. is a professor of geography at Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey. He is author of Vacationing on the Jersey Shore (0811729702).


Customer Reviews

Uninformative1
I love reading books about New Jersey, especially the ghosts of New Jersey. This book not only failed to mention some of the most famous ghosts (and minimized even the Jersey Devil!!) but it included some information that was outright wrong. It also included stories that aren't even about ghosts, some aren't even about New Jersey!! The most irritating aspect of this book, however, is that it is essentially a summary of other books - it even mentions which book it gets each story from. This author needs to write her own book and stop stealing stories from other authors.

fun4
This was a fun book to read on a plane. Lots of short informative stories. I use to live in NJ. but didn't know half of the history that are mingled into each tale.

WONDERFUL BOOK OF NEW JERSEY GHOSTS AND LEGENDS5
Continuing Stackpole Books' outstanding series on regional hauntings comes "Haunted New Jersey", 120 pages of hauntings, monsters, and other strange goings on in the Garden State. With some 70 plus tales they are only a page or two in length and designed to show off as many of the legends of New Jersey as possible and again, it succeeds! The book is arranged by geographical region and filled with fantastic lore.

For instance there is the former Governor's mansion on Perth Amboy where Governor William Franklin resided. Franklin was the son of one of America's greatest Statesmen and founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin. But when the Revolution started, William refused to join and maintained his loyalty to England despite repeated pleas from his father. William would be exiled to England where he would die lonely and in shame. His ghost is said to yet occupy the mansion, ever regretting his fateful decision.

Then there is the story of Antoine LeBlanc who killed three people in 1833. Was later captured and hung. His body was given to a local surgeon for dissection. LeBlanc's skin was removed and tanned and used to make various objects. One purse still exists at the New Jersey Historical Society. This was also seen in an episode of the Travel Channels "Weird Travels". LeBlanc's ghost is said to haunt the area of Morristown, looking for these objects.

While many people think of Salem or even Connecticut when you talk about witchcraft in early America, New Jersey also had its suspected witches including Elizabeth Garlick who was put on trial but later set free and moved with her husband and child to the small town of Rio Grande. No burial plot has ever been found for her but around Halloween its said a strange mist swirls around the grave of her daughter. There is also an account of the less well-known witchcraft trials that took place in New Jersey in 1730.

The ghosts of former Vice President and suspected traitorAaron Burr and his father, also named Aaron are said to haunt the cemetery and regions around Princeton University.

Of course you can't talk about the weird in New Jersey without talking about its most famous monster, The Jersey Devil. This creature has been haunting the Pine Barrens area for almost 150 years and has been the subject of numerous segments on TV shows dealing with strange phenomena as well as a feature motion picture.

The book also provides information on ghost tours in New Jersey and websites you can visit that specialize in the research of the strange in Jersey. Yet another great addition to Stackpole's series of books on hauntings!

Reviewed by Tim Janson