Halloween Artists Newsletter - August 2009

The artists of HA31 are starting off the season with brooms
a blazing! Hence, the name of our art event beginning August
19. Search ebay for HA31 to find lots of original Halloween
folk art and get a jump start on this season's hottest
collectibles!

AUTUMN BREEZE
Listen to the crow caw
Feel the Autumn breeze
Let the season draw you in
Soon comes Winter's freeze
by Cindy Tevis
(HalloweenSprit01)


The Tale of Black Aggie
Black Aggie is a local legend in Baltimore and
Pikesville, Maryland. Black Aggie is the unofficial name given a
statue placed on the grave of General Felix Agnus in Druid Ridge
Cemetery in 1925. The statue is of a seated figure in a cowl or
shroud.
The statue is surrounded by many urban legends, principally that
someone spending the night in its lap would be haunted by the
ghost of those buried there; that the spirits of individuals
buried at Druid Ridge would annually convene at the statue; that
no grass would grow on the ground where the statue's shadow
would lay during the daytime; or that the statue would somehow
animate itself during the night, whether by physically moving or
by showing glowing red eyes.
The following tale of Black Aggie, will
definitely have you feeling goose bumps, even in the July heat!
Enjoy!
Black Aggie
as retold by S. E. Schlosser
When Felix Agnus put up the life-sized shrouded bronze statue of a grieving
angel, seated on a pedestal, in the Agnus family plot in the Druid Ridge
Cemetery, he had no idea what he had started. The statue was a rather eerie
figure by day, frozen in a moment of grief and terrible pain. At night, the
figure was almost unbelievably creepy; the shroud over its head obscuring the
face until you were up close to it. There was a living air about the grieving
angel, as if its arms could really reach out and grab you if you weren't
careful.
It didn't take long for rumors to sweep through the town and surrounding
countryside. They said that the statue - nicknamed Black Aggie - was haunted by
the spirit of a mistreated wife who lay beneath her feet. The statue's eyes
would glow red at the stroke of midnight, and any living person who returned the
statues gaze would instantly be struck blind. Any pregnant woman who passed
through her shadow would miscarry. If you sat on her lap at night, the statue
would come to life and crush you to death in her dark embrace. If you spoke
Black Aggie's name three times at midnight in front of a dark mirror, the evil
angel would appear and pull you down to hell. They also said that spirits of the
dead would rise from their graves on dark nights to gather around the statue at
night.
People
began visiting the cemetery just to see the statue, and it was then that the
local fraternity decided to make the statue of Grief part of their initiation
rites. "Black Aggie" sitting, where candidates for membership had to spend the
night crouched beneath the statue with their backs to the grave of General Agnus,
became popular.
One dark night, two fraternity members accompanied new hopeful to the cemetery
and watched while he took his place underneath the creepy statue. The clouds had
obscured the moon that night, and the whole area surrounding the dark statue was
filled with a sense of anger and malice. It felt as if a storm were brewing in
that part of the cemetery, and to their chagrin, the two fraternity members
noticed that gray shadows seemed to be clustering around the body of the
frightened fraternity candidate crouching in front of the statue.
What had been a funny initiation rite suddenly took on an air of danger. One of
the fraternity brothers stepped forward in alarm to call out to the initiate. As
he did, the statue above the boy stirred ominously. The two fraternity brothers
froze in shock as the shrouded head turned toward the new candidate. They saw
the gleam of glowing red eyes beneath the concealing hood as the statue's arms
reached out toward the cowering boy.
With shouts of alarm, the fraternity brothers leapt forward to rescue the new
initiate. But it was too late. The initiate gave one horrified yell, and then
his body disappeared into the embrace of the dark angel. The fraternity brothers
skidded to a halt as the statue thoughtfully rested its glowing eyes upon them.
With gasps of terror, the boys fled from the cemetery before the statue could
grab them too.
Hearing the screams, a night watchman hurried to the Agnus plot. To his chagrin,
he discovered the body of a young man lying at the foot of the statue. The young
man had apparently died of fright.
The disruption caused by the statue grew so acute that the Agnus family finally
donated it to the Smithsonian museum in Washington D.C.. The grieving angel sat
for many years in storage there, never again to plague the citizens visiting the
Druid Hill Park Cemetery.
Copyright S. E. Schlosser
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