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Worthington, Ohio

Discover Columbus is a site about Columbus Ohio. Originally named "Columbus Best Blog," it was never the best blog in Columbus Ohio. It was a blog about the best in Columbus and Central Ohio! Best restaurants, best real estate company, best schools, best neighborhoods..... written by Maureen McCabe a licensed real estate agent with Columbus Ohio's best real estate company, Real Living HER. Discover Columbus is just a site about Central Ohio.

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Worthington Ghost Story 2006

Feb. 11, 2008
Categorized in: Community

 

This was originally published on ActiveRain a Real Estate Network in August 2006. The events are from 2006.

Remember the allure of ghost stories when you were a kid?  Remember being a kid and there was a house in town that everyone told stories about?  Stories that it was a haunted house. Or the people who lived there were "different" or spooky or scary?  Remember ..you'd creep up to the front door on a dare? Knock on the front door? Ring the bell? Play 'ding dong, ditch"? The  really 'wild kids' threw rocks at the windows or pulled other pranks?    

I'd  never heard the kids in Worthington considered a house on the south end of town as "haunted."  I don't have children.  I wonder how many parents knew of their children's curiosity about the house at the edge of the cemetery.  When I heard the story in the news I thought "that house isn't old enough to be haunted."  It's in a post World War Two neighborhood. I think all the homes are cape cods, I showed a house up the street a couple of months ago.  There are some great old houses in Worthington...none are haunted as far as I know.  There are haunted "places" in Central Ohio... including Thurber House in Columbus.


A carload of high school girls went to the Worthington "haunted house" one night this week and one of the five girls was shot, twice.    

Haunted house, cheerleader, back to school time, it all makes an interesting story.   The headlines are all over the board and from all over the world: 

"Prank gone awry stuns Worthington" - Columbus Dispatch

"Teen Shot While Ghost-Hunting Was Having Harmless Fun, Father Says" - Fox News

"Ghost-hunting US teen shot in the head" -Toronto Star

"Shot in head in hunt for 'ghosts' " -Electric New Paper Singapore

"Loitering teen shot" - South Africa

"Teen shot in head at 'haunted' house" - Seattle Intelligencer

"Teen shot in head when looking for ghosts" - Sydney Morning Herald

"Dad laments daughter shot ghost hunting" - Leading The Charge, Australia

"Cheerleader Shows Signs Of Progress In Days After Shooting" - NBC4i.com,

"Haunted house dare gets cheerleader shot" - CNN International

"Uncle Of Shooting Victim Asks For Prayers" - Wheeling Intelligencer, WV

The story before "The Story." - "Family long considered outsiders by neighbors" 

I have been working on an entry about "blight" for my Columbus Best Blog.  Caron Mosey a REALTOR® in Michigan wrote a great blog article about Blight.  Blight can be frustrating for neighbors.   

One of my favorite movies growing up was "To Kill a Mockingbird" from the novel by the same name written by Harper Lee.  It is the story of three children in a small town in Alabama during the Depression.  Part of  the story is about their curiosity about their reclusive neighbor,  Boo Radley.  The children,  Jem, Dill, and Scout go out one night to try to peak into Boo Radley's back window.  As Jem is sneaking up on the house a gun shot rings out from inside the house.  No one is shot in 'Two Kill a Mockingbird.'  

I'm not blaming the victim...in the current Worthington tragedy.  Kids trespass on "spooky houses."  Or houses like the Davis home.   I know I did as a kid. I believe most kids did.  Did you?    

As the Columbus Dispatch story shows the Davis family, including Allen Davis has been at odds with their neighbors and the city for years. "Family long considered outsiders by neighbors" says: A neighbor, who refused to give her name because she feared retribution for speaking out, called the shooting a tragedy for everyone. "I feel terrible for the high school student. I feel bad for Allen and his mother."  

Aftermath: 

Davis was sentenced to prison.  The newspapers had stories about the sentence was too long...the Worthington girl who was shot had another surgery...

In 2007 the Worthington Library did a series of Worthington Ghost Stories... based on long ago ghosts...including:

Dr. Thomas Morrow of the Worthington Medical College...a Worthington Ghost Story

Mary Chase who is buried in St. John's graveyard... A Worthington Ghost

The series of videos made me think of the Worthington girls who went ghost hunting in 2006...

I'd love to hear from you if you have a comment on the topic of ghosts and Worthington's history.  All comments are moderated so you will not see your comment immediately. Thanks.

Copyright 2008 Discover Columbus and Maureen McCabe

Chase Road, Columbus Ohio 43214

Feb. 10, 2008


View Larger Map

I posted a ghost story about Mary Chase who is buried in the graveyard at the St. John's Episcopal in Worthington recently.

Mary, wife of Philander Chase an Episcopal priest moved to Worthington in 1817 and died in 1818. The first settlers moved to Worthington in 1803.

Is Chase Rd. in Columbus just south of Worthington named for Philander and Mary Chase or their descendents? 

A real estate agent told me a story about why Chase, Lincoln and Stanton are named Chase, Lincoln and Stanton and it had to do with President Abraham Lincoln... that Lincoln and his cabinet stayed there on one of his visits to Columbus.  Chase and Stanton were names of men in Abraham Lincoln's cabinet? Why would President Lincoln visit Columbus and stay way out in Worthington (or almost Worthington) way back when...

St. Johns Episcopal Church is at 700 High Street Worthington Ohio, right on the Worthington Green.  It is about a mile and a third from the church to Chase Rd, the first street south of Worthington. 


A Worthington Ghost - Mary Chase

A Worthington Ghost Story - Dr. Thomas Morrow

Comments are welcome.  All comments are moderated so you will not see your comment immediately. Thanks.

Copyright 2008 Discover Columbus and Maureen McCabe

A Worthington Ghost

Feb. 8, 2008
Categorized in: Community
Tagged with: central ohio, ghost, worthington

Is Mary Chase haunting the St. John graveyard in Old Worthington?  


Two ghost stories for the price of one...   but be prepared to not be scared...

While not really scary, the story of Dr. Morrow and the Worthington Medical College was a lot more interesting... to me.  There are no grave robbers or angry mobs in the story of Mary Chase  but it is about a graveyard that still exists and is at the center of Worthington, Ohio.

This is the story of Mary Chase who is buried n the graveyard at St. John's Episcopal church at 700 High Street in Worthington.

I am going to link to the first Mary Chase video and embed the second.  The first is the background story... Mary Chase had not even traveled to Worthington at the end of that plodding video.... I have to admit I did not enjoy storyteller  Mary Jane Bellay's (an associate at the Worthington Public Library)  delivery of what is described as "Mary's tale of woe as she haunts the churchyard at St. John's Episcopal Church."  However the old pictures and the history of Worthington interest me. 

"Mary Chase was born in 1779 in Bethel, Vermont. At age sixteen, she married Philander Chase, who was seeking ordination as an Episcopal priest."

Mary Chase Video One Link







Mary Chase Video Two Link

Synopsis: if you can't watch the two videos.  Each is almost  7 minutes... but felt much longer to me...

Video one:  Philander Chase wanted to become a priest in the Episcopal Church, he married Mary when she was sixteen years old.   They moved around a lot.  According to the video if I understood it,  Mary Chase had babies, three boys, one baby died.  Mary Chase contracted Tuberculosis.  Rev. Chase and Mary moved more...  they were called to the wilderness which was Worthington Ohio in 1817.

Video two:  Mary traveled 10 months to get from Connecticut to Ohio... she arrived in Cleveland and her husband was not there to meet her... arriving a few hours later... (this was the scary part for me...) they went to Worthington which had been settled only 13 years earlier.  Mary Chase was involved in her husband's church... St. John Episcopal church.  James Kilbourne the founder of Worthington and Philander Chase did not always get along.  At first I understood it as Mary Chase  wrote the constitution for the Worthington Female Track Society... but then realized surely it was the Worthington Female Tract Society... Mary Chase gave birth to a baby girl who died with in her first year of life.  On May 4, 1818 Mary Chase died and she is buried in the St. John's church graveyard.... 

Mary Chase haunts the graveyard because of the tragedies in her life?


Today -  St. John Episcopal Church in Worthington

Map - 700 High Street Worthington

Thanks to the Worthington Library and Worthington Historical Society for the information about early Worthington.  I'd love to hear from you if you have a comment on the topic of Worthington, Mary Chase, the Worthington Library, the videos, the ghosts....  All comments are moderated so you will not see your comment immediately. Thanks.

Copyright 2008 Discover Columbus and Maureen McCabe

Worthington Ghost Story

Feb. 3, 2008
Categorized in: Community
Tagged with: central ohio, ghost, worthington

Worthington Ghost Tours: The Tale of Dr. Morrow  

From the Worthington Libraries starring Stefan Langer, the webmaster at Worthington Libraries as Dr. Thomas Morrow.

Grave robbers, angry mobs of citizens, a missing body from an insane asylum?  I don't believe I had ever heard of the the story of Dr. Thomas Morrow and the Worthington Medical College's demise.  The Worthington Library has a series of videos of Worthington ghost stories that they produced last fall.



Worthington in 2008


"Worthington was founded in 1803 and has grown into a well established community while maintaining its New England atmosphere. Worthington offers a wide variety of homes, both in style and price range. The proximity to the 1-270 outer-belt with Interstate 71 and Route 315 makes transportation to downtown Columbus easy, allows fifteen to twenty minutes driving time at rush hours."

and ghosts too!  Who knew?

I'd love to hear from you if you have a comment on the topic. All comments are moderated so you will not see your comment immediately. Thanks.

Copyright 2008 Discover Columbus and Maureen McCabe