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Friday, March 25, 2011

The Congelier Mansion

Once the home of Charles Wright Congelier, his wife Lyda and a servant named Essie was located in the northern area of Manchester in Pittsburgh, PA. During the winter months of 1871 Lyda discovered the terrible secret that her husband was having an affair with Essie. According to the homes history, In a fit of rage she stabbed her husband to death, and cut off Essie's head.

For the next 20 years the home sat vacant, until 1892 when it was used to accommodate railroad workers who moved out only a few short months claiming to have heard the noises of a woman sobbing, or sometimes screaming throughout the night.
Around the year of 1900 the home was purchased by a Doctor by the name of Adolph C. Brunrichter who was described by neighbors as a man who kept to himself and was rarely ever seen. Until the night of August 12, 1901 when in the middle of the night neighbors heard a blood curdling scream come from the house. Neighbors Richard Winer & Nancy Osbourn claimed to have seen red lights flashing through the house and the ground beneath them shook, until they saw all the windows in the home shatter. When officials entered the house to investigate, they found a decomposed female body strapped to the bed and five headless young women in basement graves. "Dr. Brunrichter had been experimenting with severed heads," wrote Winer and Osborn. "Apparently he had been able to keep some alive for short periods after decapitation." Dr. Brunrichter, meanwhile, had disappeared, and the house once again stood vacant.

With the home's bad reputation, it stood vacant again for several years before taking on a second remodeling. This time it was to be used as housing for emigrant Equitable Gas Company workers.The workers had many odd occurrences they experienced throughout their stay but brushed it off as the American workers pulling pranks because they were taking the same jobs at a lower wage. One night however two of the workers were found dead in the basement of the home, one was hanging from a rafter, the other had a piece of wood driven through his chest. Both men had been seen alive and well just moments prior to their gruesome deaths.

Thomas Edison
In 1920, the famous scientist and inventor, Thomas Edison, came to study the house. Edison spoke of a machine that he was building to allow communication with the dead. Edison died before the mechanism was perfected. Winer and Osborn wrote that Thomas Edison's visit to the house at 1129 Ridge Avenue apparently influenced his strong belief in the afterlife.

In September of 1927, a drunk was arrested who claimed to be Dr. Adolph Brunrichter. He told police gruesome stories of sex orgies, demonic possession, torture and murder that had occurred in the house. The authorities could not determine if the man they had in custody was indeed Dr. Brunrichter. The man was released after a month and was never seen again.

Everyone in the area was convinced the home was evil or was itself possessed was destroyed on the night of November 15, 1927 when one of the gas storage tanks exploded which force was felt around the county. As workers of the Writers' Program of the Works Projects Administration actually described the scene in their words. "As houses collapsed and chimneys toppled, brick, broken glass, twisted pieces of steel and other debris rained on the heads of the dazed and shaken residents who had rushed into the streets from their wrecked homes, believing that an earthquake had visited the city."

The force was so strong it reportedly blew out windows throughout downtown, Mt. Washington, and as far away as East Liberty. Dozens of manufacturing plants and hundreds of homes were damaged or destroyed within a 20-mile radius.The Most Haunted House in America, which once stood at the present day site of the Route 65/I279 interchange, was obliterated in the explosion. According to Winer and Osborn, it was the only structure destroyed in the blast for which no trace was ever found.

The same day as the explosion a relative of the original owner Marie Congelier died. According to newspapers she was hit by shattered glass from the explosion and bled to death before making it to a hospital.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Butch Defeo Jr is Social Networking


Yes, it is true, the man who murdered his family in
1978 that generated the media storm that became "The Amityville Horror" now has both a facebook, and twitter account.

With 97 followers Butch tweets things like:
  1. Let The Blade Drip... #TeamFollowBack Come Get it While I Smoke Some #Pot #TeamWAKEandBAKE I'm Comin For The #Ganja
    @CC_HEART**** Giv it a good scrub n rub!!! Im such a #MADMAN @Amelia_Ath**** I'm The Original #MADMAN @Beck**** @Tasha_Ke**** i'VE BEEn the #MADMAN since the #50's @GlobalRhy**** this is T Dots Skitzo #MADMAN Side... Same Guy 2 Different Personalities

    #TeamWAKEandBAKE #JamacianPearl n than torturous Memories of that night in #Amitylville #LongIsland #NY a long... long time ago... #MADMAN Sometimes I team up wit @MaskedMurd**** to go on a killin spree... From Crystal Lake to Amittyville and ayythin in between


    I have (*) out the remainder of tweeters to protect their privacy. I did not add him as a friend to view his facebook account. His references to "getting stoned" and "going on a killing spree" makes me believe he still do this day does not feel or understand remorse. The fact that he references Amityville and refers to himself as "the original madman"  in a tweet tells me he is still riding the "wave of fame" that he jumped on in the 70s. He takes great pride in the slaughter of his family, it shows me he is a very dark individual who lost the ability to be human prior to the cold November night in 1974. This is just my opinion so If you want I have provided the links to follow him.

    Follow Butch Defeo On Twitter

    Add Butch Defeo as a Friend On Facebook


The Borley Rectory (England's Amityville Horror Story)

The Borley Rectory (1892)
The Borley Rectory is said to have been the most haunted house in England. The home a Victorian era mansion constructed in 1863 was located in Borley, Essex, England and originally owned by Reverend Dawson Ellis Bull, the rectory was eventually converted into a house for a large family of 14 children. It replaced a rectory already on site then built by Reverend Herringham which was demolished and the Borley Directory took its place. There is evidence suggesting there was a home  built on it prior to Reverend Herringham's Rectory and the land has a lot of history.
The Rear View Of Borley Rectory
According to a monk legend a Monastery carried out a relationship with a nun from a nearby convent. After their affair was discovered the monk was executed and the nun was bricked up alive in the convent walls.  The first actual accounts of hauntings began in 1863 when locals claimed to have heard strange noises and footsteps in the home. In July 1900 four daughters of the current Rector claimed to have seen the ghost of a nun from a few yards away but as they approached her, she disappeared.
What Remains Of Borley Rectory
Through the next four decades, several locals had tales of hearing noises, seeing apparitions, and even claimed to see a phantom coach driven by two headless horsemen. Ellis Bull Died in 1892 leaving his son who has just married a young divorcee named Ivy to tend to the Borley Rectory. No Strange incidents recorded, No Apparitions, no headless horsemen driving a phantom coach, and then in June 1928, Harry Bull died and the home became vacant once more.
The Tunnel Under Borley Rectory

In 1929 the home was purchased by Reverend Guy Eric Smith and his wife. After just a few short days in there new home, Mrs. Smith was cleaning out the kitchen cupboard when she found the remains of a human skull. Almost immediately after her discovery very odd occurrences plagued the family. Strange voices, Music, servant bells would go off in the middle of the night (even though the strings had been cut several years prior.) After Mrs. Smith claimed to have seen the phantom horse drawn carriage in the middle of the night, she and her family contacted the local press, specifically the daily mirror. Once the press got this information it created a whirlwind effect and the stories became more detailed and distorted. (As the press often does, even to this day.)
The Forlorn interior of The Borley Rectory
The Daily Mirror soon got in touch with The Society for Psychical Research and sent Harry Price a Paranormal researcher on June 12, 1929 to further study the home. Within days the paranormal activity heightened and things turned physical. Stones, tools, a vase and other objects were thrown at the family and at Price. Messages were found taped or written on the back of wire mirrors from spirits. After Mr. Price finished his investigation and left, the physical side of the haunted ceased. Mrs. Smith believed and reported to The Daily Mirror that Mr. Price being a talented conjurer probably was the cause for the heightened phenomena.
One Of The "Messages" From The Spirits
The Smith's left in 1929 and had a difficult time finding a Reverend to replace for Borely Rectory. They did eventually get Reverend Lionel Foyster (a relative of the then deceased Reverend Bull) with his wife and adopted daughter, they finished moving in October 16, 1930. Reverend Foyster wrote an account of the various phenomena that took place Between October 1930 - October 1935. This included Bell ringing, shattering windows, stones and bottle throwing, wall writing, and their daughter being locked into a room that had no key. Mrs. Foyster claimed to have been thrown from her bed in the middle of the night by an unseen force. The Reverend also wrote that his daughter had been "attacked by something horrible" but did not go into any detail.
Interior Of Borley Rectory as it Would Have looked when the Prices lived there
Whatever the account, it caused the Reverend to twice attempt to perform an exorcism of the home. The first attempt the Reverend was hit in the shoulder by a fist sized stone (The Daily Mirror was constantly harassing the occupants of the home and were still covering this story as if it were all major news) In May 1937 whatever the case may be, the family decided they had enough. The house sat vacant and The Daily Mirror as well as paranormal groups wanted a piece of the publicity the home seemed to be providing.
Side View
This lead into another investigation later to be known as "The Price Investigation" and a seance was conducted by college students interviewed by The Times A British newspaper, as well as spiritual enthusiast in March 1938. They supposedly made contact with two spirits; The first claimed to be a young nun murdered on the property in 1667 and identified herself as Marie Lairre. (In A previous seance held at the home, same story and details were told but the nun identified herself then to be Evangeline Westcott. It was later found that a young nun by the name of Marie Lairre who belonged to a nearby rectory who "left the church in 1667" and moved to another area in England to be married. However, no record of the young nun exist after 1667. Did the church put on record that she left the by choice to cover up her death? Or does no such record exist because she took her husbands name after they were wed? Either way, the young nuns story ends in 1667 as this is the last record kept of her.
Rev. Henry Lawson Ellis Bull
The Second Spirit to make contact identified himself as Sunex Amures he claimed that he would set fire to the Rectory, so they would be able to find the bones of a body on the property. One month later, a new owner Captain W.H. Gregson came to the Rectory, while unpacking a small oil lamp overturned and the rectory was severely damaged. While the insurance company investigated they DID find female human remains in the cellar of the home. The bones were given to a nearby church for burial, whether or not the bones belonged to the young nun, the head stone reads the name "Marie Lairre" where the bones were buried. The remains of the home were destroyed in 1939. According to Wikipedia the homes haunting history can be compared to that of "The Amityville Horror" story.
The Ruins Of Borley Rectory

Monday, March 14, 2011

Watch The Amityville Horror (2005 - Remake)

The 2005 remake of the original classic tale of terror starring Ryan Reynolds and Melissa George as George & Kathy Lutz.

The Amityville Horror is a 2005 horror film directed by Andrew Douglas. It is a remake of the 1979 film of the same name which itself was based on the 1977 novel of the same name by Jay Anson, which documents the alleged experiences of the Lutz family after they moved into a house in Long Island which had been the scene of a mass murder committed by Ronald DeFeo, Jr. who shot six members of his family there in November 1974.

Watch The Amityville Horror (2005) Free Now (brought to you by watch-moviesfreenow.blogspot.com)

Watch The Amityville Horror (1979) Free

Watch The 1979 Movie Based on Jay Anson's novel that started it all free.

Based on a true story that was claimed by writer Jay Anson, The Amityville Horror is about a large house on the coast of Long Island where newly weds George and Kathy Lutz and their three children move into the house that they hope will be their dream house but it ends up in terror.

Watch The Amityville Horror (1979) Free Now