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Myrtles Plantation, The Historic Louisiana House Said To Be Haunted

Ever since David Bradford built the Myrtles Plantation in St. Francisville, Louisiana in 1796, rumors have swirled about its alleged haunting by vengeful ghosts.

To this day, there’s something eerie about plantations. Relics of America’s earlier age, one marked by the horrors of slavery, they evoke images of tragedy and human suffering. It’s not surprising that some plantations are believed to be haunted by the people that toiled in their fields or happened to perish on their grounds. One such place is the Myrtles Plantation in St. Francisville, Louisiana.

A silent witness to over 200 years of history in the deepest part of the Deep South, the Myrtles Plantation house is considered one of the most haunted places in America.

Myrtles Plantation

Shanna Riley/FlickrLegends say that Louisiana’s Myrtles Plantation has long been haunted, from its Indian burial ground to the 1871 murder of William Winter to the infamous ghost known as Chloe.

What inspired this reputation? And is there any truth to the claims of ghost sightings at Myrtles? Go inside the eerie story of this supposedly haunted house.

The Beginnings Of The Myrtles Plantation Before The Alleged Hauntings Began

The Myrtles Plantation started out as a piece of land purchased by David Bradford, a general of the American Revolutionary War. Here, he built a house in 1796 and named the place “Laurel Grove.”

The Myrtles Plantation In Louisiana

National Register of Historic Places/Wikimedia CommonsThe Myrtles Plantation house in St. Francisville, Louisiana today.

Fleeing justice for his role in the so-called Whiskey Rebellion of 1791-94, Bradford built the house in what was then a Spanish colony.

He lived there alone for several years until he was officially pardoned by U.S. President John Adams in 1799. He then brought his family to live on his new plantation.

After Bradford’s death, the grove passed to his daughter and her husband, Clarke Woodruff. But their life there wasn’t a happy one. Of their three children, only one survived to adulthood.

It was during the time that the Woodruffs lived on the Myrtles Plantation that we get the first glimpse of alleged paranormal activity.

The Legend Of Chloe, Ghost Of The Myrtles

As the popular story goes, Clarke Woodruff was known as an honest man. Yet, he had one fatal flaw: an insatiable appetite for sex. It wasn’t long before he focused his attention on one of the slave girls on the plantation: Chloe.

The young girl knew that refusing Woodruff’s advances would not be wise: she’d immediately be punished by working long hours under the blistering sun, or worse. So, not having much choice in the matter, she began a sexual relationship with Woodruff that lasted for a few years.

Inside The Myrtles

Anne G/FlickrThe Fannie Williams room inside the Myrtles Plantation house.

Worrying that Woodruff’s wife would find out and punish her, Chloe began eavesdropping on the family’s conversations all around the Myrtles Plantation house. One day, Woodruff caught her listening and ordered her ear cut off as a punishment. From then on, Chloe was forced to wear a turban to cover her disfigured ear.

Understandably, Chloe wanted revenge. One night, when the family was about to sit down to dinner and Woodruff was away, Chloe allegedly slipped a bit of poison into their food. Within days, Woodruff’s wife and two of his children were dead.

The other slaves, afraid that Woodruff would find out what Chloe had done when he returned, took the matter into their own hands.

They grabbed Chloe and hung her from a nearby tree. When she finally died, they cut her body down and threw it into the river.

According to legend, Chloe’s spirit lived on, haunting the Myrtles Plantation. However, this story would not become widespread until many decades later.

Myrtles Plantation House

Shanna Riley/FlickrThe house at Myrtles Plantation, a popular site for ghost hunters to this day.

The Trail Of Death At The Myrtles Plantation Continues

In 1834, Woodruff sold the Myrtles Plantation to one Ruffin Gray Stirling. Stirling not only remodeled the house but also renamed the plantation after the crepe myrtle trees that grew on the property.

Sometime after, the plantation passed to William Winter, a man who married one of the daughters of Stirling.

The Myrtles Plantation House

Michael McCarthy/FlickrStories began circulating that the Myrtles Plantation house was haunted not long after it was built at the tail end of the 18th century.

Then, in 1871, an unnamed man shot Winter in the chest as he was exiting the house. He allegedly ran back into the house and stumbled up the stairs before dying in the arms of his wife Sarah.

After this, Myrtles continued to pass through different hands. It wasn’t until much later that something unnatural allegedly began occurring at Myrtles Plantation.

Paranormal Activity In Recent Decades

It would take until the 1970s when Myrtles Plantation was purchased by the Meyers family, that its reputation as a haunted house would come about. The family opened the plantation as a bed and breakfast and it didn’t take long for strange things to take place.

Myrtles Plantation House Interior

Corey Balazowich/FlickrThe supposedly haunted mirror inside the Myrtles Plantation house.

For starters, guests at Myrtles Plantation reported hearing strange noises. Others saw ghostly apparitions, often of a young girl wearing a turban.

Many suggested that this might be the spirit of Chloe, which by this point had become a full-blown local legend. Then, in 1992, the owner of Myrtles Plantation supposedly caught her on film.

That year, she took a photo of the property to help get an insurance policy for the house. The photo was quickly forgotten until three years later when a researcher asked to use it for a postcard. After blowing it up, he allegedly noticed the figure of what appeared to be a young girl.

According to the owner, there was no one in that spot that day.

Ghost Of Chloe

Fortean Slip/ YoutubeAlleged photo of the ghost of Chloe at Myrtles Plantation with the figure circled.

Other Rumored Ghost Sightings At Myrtles Plantation

The vengeful ghost of an abused girl sounds scary enough. Yet, if other sightings are to be believed, she’s not the only paranormal resident of the Myrtles.

Some people claim to have seen young girls in old-style clothing in the windows. Others say that they’ve caught glimpses of Woodruff’s children appearing in the mirror near the room where they died.

Worse yet, according to another local legend, Myrtles Plantation was actually built on top of an old Indian burial ground: a common idea in tales of paranormal activity.

The Myrtles House

Andrew Nicolle/FlickrSome say the Myrtles house was built on top of an ancient Tunica Indian burial ground.

Indeed, some people report seeing the spirit of a Native American woman in a gazebo on the property. Presumably, she is one of the people buried here long ago.

Meanwhile, others have reported seeing William Winter, the only man we know for certain was killed at Myrtles Plantation.

According to this story, Winter’s ghost relives his last moments by loudly staggering through the house’s entrance and running up the stairs to the 17th step where he allegedly met his end.

Some people even claim to have caught the ghosts on film. Although some of these photos are undeniably spooky, they look somewhat grainy and raise suspicions over their authenticity.

Is The Myrtles Plantation House Really Haunted?

Indeed, the ghost stories and tales surrounding Myrtles Plantation have some factual problems. For starters, Chloe almost certainly didn’t exist.

The Woodruffs never recorded owning a slave by that name. And though Woodruff’s wife and children did die, they weren’t poisoned.

Exterior Of The Myrtles Plantation House

Andrew Nicolle/FlickrThe Myrtles has been featured on several ghost-hunting shows in recent decades.

Like many people in colonial Louisiana, they succumbed to yellow fever. In fact, many of the more gruesome events that are supposed to have happened in the house, like the ten murders allegedly committed there, also seem to be made up.

Of course, anywhere with as much history as the Myrtles Plantation is bound to pick up a few legends over the years.

Is that enough to say that strange things don’t happen at Myrtles Plantation? There’s only one way to find out. If you’re up to it and ever find yourself in Louisiana, you could always spend the night.

After this look at the Myrtles Plantation, step inside Los Angeles’ supposedly-haunted Cecil Hotel. Then, read up on the Perron family and the Enfield haunting — the inspiration for The Conjuring.

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Tandra Barner

Update: 2024-06-21