Thursday, July 18, 2019
Urban Legend of Mount de Sales Academy :: Urban Legends Ghost Stories
Mount de Sales Academy When one usually thinks of a hearing a ghost story, the setting is dark with flickering light (such as around a campfire or in a basement with bad lighting) and, of course, it is nighttime. Needless to say, when I heard this story during the middle of the day on a Friday, I was a little taken aback. When prompted for any urban legends or ghost stories a white, female friend of mine immediately responded with, ââ¬Å"Have you ever heard of de Sales Academy?â⬠With my negative response, the nineteen year old student jumped into her story: Mount De Sales Academy is one of those Catholic, all girlsââ¬â¢ schools that teaches their students to be good Catholics and all that. In the 1940s, however, there was one girl who didnââ¬â¢t listen to all the rules and became pregnant. For the time, this was a terrible situation and the girl didnââ¬â¢t know what to do. She lived at the school on the top floor and eventually committed suicide instead of facing the trouble she would have been in. Ever since then, there have been reports in the school of doors opening and closing with no possible explanation and silhouettes seen in the windows when there should be no one at the school. The storyteller had not witnessed the strange happenings at the school but claimed to know someone who had seen the disturbances. As a performance, the telling of this story was very matter a fact and my friend did not self-aggrandize; the performance was quick, to the point, but not particularly dramatic. The storyteller told the legend as fact and was not melodramatic about her role as storyteller. While researching the story I was only able to find one specific reference to Mount de Sales and any ghostly presence there. However, at this online repository of lore relating to the State of Maryland, Mount de Sales Academy is mentioned along with ââ¬Å"reports of doors open[ing] and clos[ing] while locked andâ⬠¦a bright blue silhouette walk[ing] by the windowsâ⬠(Juliano and Carlson). Further research found no other reference to de Sales in any stories and no reference to any suicide or murder at the school. The additional tale found relating to the Catonsville school does reflect the story told to me. Both mention doors opening and closing without cause along with a ghostly silhouette; but there is no reference in the Internet source of the suicide of a pregnant girl.
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