Bringing Back Sligo

Breathing new life into an Italianate home in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Bringing Back Sligo
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  • Category: Slaves and Servants

    • The “Haunting” of Sligo

      Posted at 9:57 am by Lauren Tepaske, on August 4, 2021

      Since we’re still in limbo waiting for orders to move to Singapore I thought I would write about something else that is in limbo and answer a question I get asked from time-to-time: Is Sligo haunted and have we had any “experiences?” The easy answer is “yes and no.” As far as I know, Marcus hasn’t had any experiences but keep in mind he’s an engineer and Dutch which makes him doubly pragmatic and logical. Both of our daughters claim to have experienced what they thought was the cat walking in their room only to turn and see nothing. The youngest also claims that things move in her room and there’s a ghost boy named “Gary or Larry or Peter” (now I really don’t believe her). She’s also the one most likely to crawl into bed with us in the middle of the night but whether it’s an 8-year-old imagination or something really going on, I don’t know. What I can say is that her room is the same room a previous resident slept in and had many experiences though I have never told her that (I’m all about being open and honest with the kids but the last thing I need is a child in my bed every night).

      What I can tell you are my own experiences, some of which are more compelling than others. So, let’s get started. One of the first events that happened was the skeleton key to our front door went missing for a month or so. I found it eventually stuck in a mint julep cup on the mantle and while I or the children or even Marcus could have done it and forgot I’m not convinced it wasn’t the spirits. Also, please note, we don’t use our front door so missing the key for a while was not critical. In this same room where the key was eventually found is also the same room where electronics go off (always in the middle of the night which really gets the heart rate going). Now, the logical part of me thinks that this is bound to happen because the majority of the electronics are stored and charged in that room. The less logical side of me thinks “ghosts!”

      For the most part, I rarely experience anything but for a period of time in the fall I was constantly seeing shadows or movement from the corner of my eye. One particularly startling moment was seeing a full body shadow just outside of the youngest’s bedroom. I have also had the same experience as the girls thinking the cat was in the room but finding nothing. Also, sitting on the couch in the living room I have a viewpoint of the small hallway outside of the half-bath. From the couch I would constantly see movement and even at times the feeling that someone was walking from the kitchen into the hallway. I feel as if my youngest daughter’s room and the area just outside of the half-bath have more energy than other spaces in the house.

      One of the most compelling things to happen though involved the dog. As I was calling her to go out one night I was standing near the hallway to the half-bath. From the corner of my eye I saw a shadow fly across the space and at that exact moment, the dog came trotting through and looked directly at the spot where I had seen the shadow. For me, that exact moment solidified all I had thought I had been seeing and experiencing. There was also a strange moment when the cat was hissing towards the top of the stairs and behaving as if the dog had materialized and was about to pounce even though the dog was not there. She could have been on high-alert because she and the dog did not get along but it was weird nonetheless.

      A few friends with more of a sixth sense have walked through the house and determined that the energy is calm. When we had C & C Paranormal come through (which you can read about here, here, and here) they spent time in the basement releasing the energy and now, when people stay down there, they claim to have had the best sleep of their lives. Whether that is all associated or not, I don’t know? There is a lot of “I don’t knows” when it comes to the question of whether the house is haunted or not. I do think there is an energy here but I do not think it is haunted in the way we typically think of such. We don’t have “broke-neck ladies” or vengeful spirits doing harm but given the age of the property and it’s experiences (i.e. as a small-pox hospital, a slave owned property, and the Civil War) it’s foolish to think there is nothing lingering.

      Posted in Basement, Grounds, Haunted, History, Hospital, Life, Main House, Slaves and Servants, Wars | 3 Comments
    • Robert Walker Ferneyhough

      Posted at 2:47 pm by Lauren Tepaske, on May 22, 2020

      I’m not going to lie.  I can be a bit impulsive at times.  Usually this happens when out shopping and I purchase something and return it the next day because in reality, I never needed it to begin with.  But sometimes, just sometimes, my impulsivity transfers into my research and assumptions of Sligo and I’m left feeling a little silly.

      I follow a page on Facebook called “Spotsylvania Memory” which is constantly being updated with pictures and stories of the people who once lived in Spotsylvania and the surrounding areas.  It is also a blog which you can follow here:  http://spotsylvaniamemory.blogspot.com/.  Anyway, one of the more recent Facebook posts included a picture I have come across many times before because it is labeled as “the Ferneyhough place.”

      From the first time I saw it (after an initial impulse to assume it was a picture of the original Sligo) I felt confident it was not “our” Ferneyhough place, past or present.  For one, the outbuilding placement didn’t match and, two (and I’m no period clothing expert) but it occurred to me that the clothing was more consistent with what people would have worn in the late 19th and early 20th centuries which would coincide with when present day Sligo was built (plus, and more importantly, this house looks nothing like Sligo).

      Ferneyhough place in Spotsy - Robert Walker

      Retrieved on 21 May 2020  from http://spotsylvaniamemory.blogspot.com/2014/11/thomas-pearson-payne.html 

      Naturally, then, I wondered which Ferneyhough did this particular house belong to?  When I saw the Facebook post I took a chance and asked whether it was known which Ferneyhough owned the place.  Spotsylvania Memory answered my question indicating that as far as he knew the house had belonged to Robert Walker Ferneyhough.  I was elated to have confirmation that this wasn’t Sligo (in case there was any lingering doubt) but also to know how there was a connection.  Elation = impulsivity.

      Excitedly, I proclaimed to the world what a great find it was, reassuring my belief that it was not Sligo pictured.  I started looking more into Robert Walker because, ironically enough, I had recently been gifted something that had belonged to him (more on that in a bit).  However, the more I researched, the more I decided that it couldn’t possibly have been Robert Walker’s property because he lived most of his life in Essex.  So, I proclaimed to the world for a second time that this was not Robert Walker’s house and I took back everything I said.

      Guess what?  It is Robert Walker’s house.  I take back what I said, again…for realsy this time.

      Quick refresher course on Sligo and the Ferneyhough family.  First we had John Robert Ferneyhough Sr. and Margaret Walker who had three children:  John Robert Jr., Frances, and Margaret.  John Ferneyhough Jr. married Frances Gilbert and together they had five children:  John, Mary Ann, Thomas Gilbert, Edward, and Robert Walker.  When Frances died John Ferneyhough Jr. married Eliza Thrift and together they had George Thrift and Sallie Magruder.  If all of these same-named but different people don’t make you want to tear your hair out then maybe you’re more cut-out for this than I am.  Also, for the purpose of this post, we’re only really interested in Robert Walker but I thought I might give a little more context by including all of the family tree.

      Robert Walker was born in 1816 in Fredericksburg, presumably at Sligo.  He married Frances Polexna Cauthorn in 1842 in Essex, Virginia where they lived until 1854 when they purchased the property in Spotsylvania County from William Hall (retrieved 22 May 2020, http://fbgresearchindxes.umw.edu/SpotsyEmbIdxSch.asp?andor=AND&Grantor=&Grantee=&property=&book=OO&page=373&process=newsearch&B1=Search).  In 1860, there is a slave census for Robert Walker in Chancellor, Virginia which includes three females and one male infant.  We know from Spotsylvania Memory that the house pictured above was once situated on Catharpin Road in Spotsylvania County and it stands to reason this is the same house purchased by Robert Walker and for which the slave census was taken.

      Robert Walker and Frances had five children:  John Robert (that makes a third John Robert Ferneyhough in case anyone lost track), Mary (who married Henry Garnett Chesley), Milton, Henry, and Charles.  In 1885 Frances passes away and in 1896, the Spotsylvania property on Catharpin Road is sold to Mary Chesley and her brother, John Robert (retrieved 22 May 2020, http://fbgresearchindxes.umw.edu/SpotsyEmbIdxSch.asp?andor=AND&Grantor=&Grantee=&property=&book=AH&page=142&process=newsearch&B1=Search).  By 1906 the property is sold out of the Ferneyhough family.  Robert Walker eventually passes away in Stafford in 1907 at the home of his son, Milton.

      This is all to say that I should delve deeper in my research before making any statements.  I mean, in the end, nobody is hurt by it except for me and my pride.  Sadly, I don’t think this is the first time I’ve made proclamations only to be proven wrong (by myself) so you would think I would have learned a lesson by now.  I haven’t.

      Anyway, I also wanted to share with you a pair of 213 year old books that once belonged to Robert Walker and Eliza Ferneyhough which we received from one of the Ferneyhough descendants.  If my calculations are correct Robert Walker would have been this person’s great uncle (could totally be wrong, correct me if so!) and Eliza their great-great grandmother.

      Robert Walker’s book is particularly special because in it he doodled and it’s all quite cunning.  Eventually, the books ended up in the care of John Bowie Ferneyhough (as indicated by the sticker on the inside) who would have been the gifter’s grand uncle (is that a thing…he was the same generation as the gifter’s grandfather…or does that make him the great uncle and therefore Robert Walker a great-great uncle…oh, lort…).  From there they managed to stay in the family and now they are back where they started, at Sligo.  I have an old curio that I have been storing all of my Sligo related artifacts and it’s my hope that the books will always stay at Sligo.

      Without further ado!  The books!

      20200418_122015

      Both books are titled:  The Spectator, Select British Classics, volume XI and XVI respectively.

      20200418_122217

      20200418_121833

      Robert Ferneyhough’s book.

      20200418_121919

      Could this be Robert’s drawing of the original Sligo?

      20200418_121910

      What looks to me like an American Revolutionary soldier.  Or maybe a magician?

      20200418_121949

      I love the horses!

      20200418_122045

      Eliza Ferneyhough’s book had no doodles with the exception of some numbers written in the back.

       

       

       

      Posted in Artifacts, Ferneyhough, History, Life, Slaves and Servants | 1 Comment
    • Slavery at Sligo

      Posted at 12:11 pm by Lauren Tepaske, on April 5, 2019

      I would be remiss to not mention the slaves that the Ferneyhoughs would have had during the 18th and 19th centuries. This isn’t to say that slaves were not present at Sligo prior to the Ferneyhoughs it’s just that the majority of our research has focused on the family who owned and operated Sligo for the longest period of time.

      In 1783 we know of Edmund Hollinger, the son of Barbara Hollinger a free woman, who is indentured to John Ferneyhough Sr. for training in coach making. I realize he is not a slave but I wanted to mention him all the same. By 1788 Edmund has turned 21. By 1806 it is verified under oath that Edmund is a free man and has appropriately served his apprenticeship.

      In 1799 we know that there is one runaway slave named Daniel. I plan to write what we know about his story in a separate blog post.

      In the early 1800s we have the names of Cornelius, Anderson, and Sally (listed as mulatto).

      In 1823 to 1824 the names of the slaves along with most of their ages are as follows: Mary (25); Joice (18); Betty (9); William (7); James (4); Aaron (2); Reuben.

      In 1833 the names of the slaves along with their ages (and in two instances their trade) are as follows: James (blacksmith) (45); Sally (cook) (35); Mary (16); Join (10); Juddy (12); Jim (7); Scipio (3); Bell (4); William (1).

      I am trying desperately to not confuse you by throwing out so many different dates but I also want to be sure that my information is corroborated by actual documentation. So, from the 1829 plat we know that there were at least four buildings on the property: The dwelling, a kitchen, a carriage shop, and a smith shop. With that being said, we know that by 1860 Sligo is 44 acres (according to John Ferneyhough Jr.s’ will). None of the plats mention slave quarters despite the fact that we know there are slaves.

      In the 1860 United States Census Slave Schedule in Spotsylvania County we know that John Ferneyhough Jr. owned 16 slaves ranging in age from 1 year old to 35. I do not know how any of these 16 slaves relate to the aforementioned slaves listed by name because no names are given, just their ages and sex.

      We also know the names of slaves thanks to varying documents such as John Ferneyhough Jr.’s will (1860) which leaves “one negro man named George,” a “negro boy named ‘Ned’,” and a “negro woman Corinna” to a daughter-in-law. Also, in the 1937 Works Progress Administration (WPA) of Virginia Historical Inventory we learn of an old slave referred to as “Uncle Isaac” who attempted to save some of the Ferneyhough’s belongings from the Union soldiers. The WPA also states that the Union soldiers burned “all but one of the out-buildings” and threw many of the Ferneyhough’s belongings in the well.

      After the Civil War I cannot say what happened to the slaves or where they went. However, on one of my many walks along the Rappahannock River Heritage Trail in downtown Fredericksburg I happened to stop and read an informational sign about the slaves of Fredericksburg during the Battle of Fredericksburg. It states that “many slaves saw opportunity in the resulting chaos (of the arrival of the Union army across the river at Falmouth)…(and) thousands of…African-Americans left their homes, seeking their own freedom through the Union lines.”

      If anyone has more information to share about the slaves at Sligo I would love to hear from you. Especially any descendants or further information of their stories since so little is known.

      Posted in Ferneyhough, History, Slaves and Servants | 2 Comments
    • Recent Posts

      • Preoccupied December 20, 2021
      • The “Haunting” of Sligo August 4, 2021
      • Rehabilitation Tax Credits April 27, 2021
      • Put Me in Blogger Jail April 6, 2021
      • Virginia Historic Registry and the National Landmark Registry August 6, 2020
      • My Good Boy, Axel July 14, 2020
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    Lauren Tepaske
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