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Too good to be true, mayhem on the highway turns into a ghost story from Old Charleston and the legend of Lavina Fisher

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Top: Charleston’s Old Jail, where Lavina Fisher and her husband John were held and executed.

Though she’s been dead for almost 200 years, Charleston is in love Lavina Fisher. Or rather the legend of Lavina Fisher.

According to legend, Lavinia had a way with men, particularly her husband John. John and Lavinia ran the Six Mile House, located as stated, six miles north of Charleston. Travelers heading in and out of Charleston would stop over for refreshments or a room for the evening. Lavinia loved to bring the men into her parlor for tea and conversation. The particularly tasty ones – as Lavinia had a taste for gold – were the rich ones, who got an extra dose for their tea. A lethal one.

As the poison would take hold, Lavinia and John would help the suddenly weary traveler to a bed in the back. Once he was out, John would spring a lever, a trapdoor was sprung and the bed, occupant and all would fall into a pit below the house. If the poison and the fall didn’t kill him, John would finish him off, relieve the corpse of all valuables, put the bed back and dispose of the body.

One evening a fellow by the name of John Peoples stopped over. Lavinia took him to her parlor and offered him tea. Peoples didn’t particularly care for tea, but was a kind soul, so when Lavinia had her back turned, he poured the contents of the cup into a nearby plant. Over the course of the conversation, Lavinia started giving Peoples the willies. The presence and quirky behavior of John didn’t particularly help. Wanting to get away from the couple, John Peoples feigned tiredness, made his excuses and found his way to his bedroom.

Glad to be out of the company of the Fishers, John found he wasn’t tired enough for bed, so set himself up in a chair by the door. As he sat there, the bed collapsed, falling into the pit. Startled, he leapt from the chair and threw open the door of his bedroom to summon help. Standing there was a very confused looking John Fisher, with Lavinia behind him, startled to see Peoples so active. Freaked, John Peoples slammed the door closed and bolted out the window, where he ran all the way to Charleston and reported what had happened to the police. Who of course investigated, noticed several reports of missing travelers along that stretch of road, and located the bodies of numerous victims.

And I might add, making Lavinia Fisher the first female serial killer in United States history.

See? A great story – one that gentile Charleston can trot out to tourists, particularly when escorting them around the gloomy and fascinating Unitarian Cemetery, where her ghost has been reported.

But too good to be true. What really happened is this …

Charleston police had a number of reports about robberies out along the highway by Six Mile House. Charleston lived and breathed commerce, and the highways were of vital importance. So they took highway robbery seriously. The noose.

First the police went to Five Mile House, obviously located one mile from John and Lavinia’s inn. They burned that, then came to Six Mile House and evicted the Fishers. In their place, they left a fellow by the name of Dave Ross. The next day a gang shows up at the inn, who drag Ross outside where he sees Lavina. Oh how sweet she must have looked, and Ross looked to her for help. Lavinia instead choked Ross, then rammed his face through a window.

A couple hours later, the gang accosted the aforementioned John Peoples on the road and relieved him of about $40. Peoples went to the police and reported the crime, which along with the testimony of Ross was enough to get Lavinia and John Fisher hauled before the authorities. Charged with highway robbery, they were sentenced to be hung and sent to Charleston’s Old Jail.

Since they were married, they were kept in the upper floors in a room together, from which they nearly escaped. John in fact, made it outside of the jail, but Lavinia couldn’t get out, so the loyal John allowed himself to be recaptured.

In South Carolina at the time, married women automatically escaped the death penalty, and Lavinia had hoped to escape the gallows by that. The judge squashed that plan however, telling her that they’d hang her husband first, which would make her a widow and eligible to hang.

John mounted the gallows peacefully enough, but his loyalty to Lavinia broke when he suddenly proclaimed his innocence, then just as suddenly asked for forgiveness for his crimes and that was it for John.

It’s said that Lavinia wore a wedding dress to her hanging, hoping her beauty and the pitifulness of her state would cause some man in the crowd to swoon, and marry her at the last moment. Evidently, when she realized that wasn’t going to happen, her mood soured. They had to drag her up on the gallows, kicking and screaming. According on one historian at the time:

“She stamped in rage and swore with all the vehemence of her amazing vocabulary, calling down damnation … The crowd stood shocked into silence, while she cut short one curse with another and ended with a volley of shrieks.”

“If you have a message you want to send to hell, give it to me I’ll carry it, Lavinia said,” and a legend was born.

And no, it’s not Lavinia Fisher who is seen roaming the tombstones at Charleston’s Unitarian Church. Her and her husband were buried in potter’s field near the Old Jail. Which by the way, is another place where Lavinia’s spirit is thought to haunt. Lavinia’s ghost, and several other odd experiences have been reported in her cell at the Old Jail, including sightings of her apparition from outside, through the window.

A lot of strange things are seen on the streets of Charleston. With the Spanish moss hanging from the oaks, and the humidity of the summer thickening the air, it’s the story that counts most, to while away the praline sweet minutes.

Charleston's Unitarian Church Cemetery, where Lavina's ghost is said to walk.
Charleston’s Unitarian Church Cemetery, where Lavina’s ghost is said to walk.

 

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January 10, 2011 By gothiccurios 29 Comments

Filed Under: Behind Urban Legends, Charleston, Haunted Houses and Buildings, Haunted Towns and Cities, The best in haunted travel tips, True Ghost Stories Tagged With: haunted house photos, real urban legends, travel photographer, True Ghost Stories, urban legend stories, urban legends ghosts

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Comments

  1. Breanna Jones

    April 8, 2012 at 4:34 am

    I went to Charleston when I was in eighth grade and we went on one of the ghost tours and I loved it. I saw Lavina at the courthouse. My friend Amy also saw her. We walked past and my and her looked up and she was staring at us. She looked very angry. I wish I could go back.

    Reply
    • Breanna Jones

      April 8, 2012 at 4:37 am

      We also heard about the harbor ghost, the jail ghost, the cemetary ghost, and much more.

      Reply
    • Jamatul Islam Porag

      October 17, 2015 at 5:00 pm

      Though You have strong belief in ghost but I would not like to accept it that really you had witnessed the ghost of Lavinia Fisher!

      It might be an illusion or the imaginative figur of the legend.

      Reply
    • Tori Ford

      January 27, 2016 at 8:32 pm

      That’s amazing. I would love to go.

      Reply
    • Angelo Barrett

      April 15, 2016 at 2:04 pm

      Hello, my name is Angelo Barrett, and I’m working on a history project all about Lavinia Fisher. Is there a way I can email you, and ask you questions about Lavinia Fisher.

      Reply
  2. Christiane Silvas

    April 28, 2012 at 6:16 am

    I just got home from my first ghost tour. My husband and I went to the 10pm Charleton Jail tour. The gentleman who was giving us the tour stated for us to take lots of pictures.. Well I took many witht he flash and I didn’t find anything interesting.. Then when we were in the room on the 2nd floor where John and Lavina were held captive for a year before their execution.. Well I took two pictures without the flash and I didn’t see anything but a black screen… Well when I got home I was looking at pictures and uploaded them to my FB… I saw the black picture and noticed two VERY CLEAR faces.. One seemed to be standing in front of the other… Both have different faces!! Its such a good picture its almost to good to be true!! Feel free to go onto my page and see it.. I have the original picture on the memory card.. This is not photo shopped.. Could this be John and Lavina Fisher???

    Facebook.com/christiane.deleon The picture is on my (Daily life of the silvas family) you can’t miss it

    Reply
  3. Amy Lloyd- Locklear

    September 6, 2012 at 1:47 am

    My family has lived in Charleston for over 70 years. While nothing paranormal has happened to myself we have been taught that we always state we are to be left alone and I hope anyone who has walked on hollowed grounds or haunted places that you shake your hands and release any spirits that may attach to you.

    Reply
  4. abby

    December 9, 2012 at 2:49 am

    hanged, not hung

    Reply
    • Olivia

      June 5, 2017 at 4:50 pm

      By the way she said Devil NOT hell

      Reply
  5. Gloria Brooks

    February 13, 2013 at 1:15 am

    Just read this a amzing story can’t wait to come to charlerston to see if the legend is true I hope so I really want to see lavinia and her husband I plan to video everything to see if I can capture their images.

    Reply
    • John Adams

      August 1, 2013 at 1:27 pm

      I live in Charleston and have seen the Ghost Bride. Not Lavinia but a bride with long dark hair that disappeared in front of me and my friend. On South Market near the Customs House.

      Reply
  6. neida

    April 9, 2013 at 3:20 pm

    There was an episode on “Ghost Hunters” about Lavina Fisher but its said thAt when tours are held at the Jail on the floor Lavina was in women happen to be scratched and sometimes have the feeling they are being chocked. in fact one of the girls in the crew of the “ghost hunters” was being scratched several times.

    Reply
  7. Hannah

    November 13, 2013 at 6:18 pm

    This story could hold a lot more credibility if the author knew how to spell Lavinia correctly…

    Reply
    • gothiccurios

      November 13, 2013 at 6:46 pm

      Thanks for the heads up. Am I looking all credible now?

      Reply
  8. Josh

    April 23, 2014 at 2:44 pm

    Unfortunately, there was no scaffold in Charleston where Lavinia was hung, so there was nothing for her to jump off of during her execution. The old city jail used an upright jerker during that period, which used a counterweight to “jerk” the body upwards into the air to a standard hanging position. The counter weight is still believed to be buried below the parking lot but funds have not been raised to look for it in the vicinity of the old gallows. She also did not walk to the gallows in her wedding dress. Criminals were sent to the gallows in white prison gowns, which may have resembled a white dress. She would never have been afforded the wedding dress option by the jailers.

    Additionally, Lavinia and John were buried at a potter’s field for criminals near the city jail, not at the Unitarian church as has previously been promoted by tour guides. Church records have been searched and researched to verify this. (I’ve personally seen a Fisher plot at the Unitarian Church, but this is not where John and Lavinia Fisher are buried.)

    I invite you to check out the book 6 Miles To Charleston, a book written by Bruce Orr that digs into the true documented (and less sensationalized) history of John and Lavinia Fisher:
    http://www.amazon.com/Six-Miles-Charleston-SC-Lavinia/dp/1609491173

    Reply
  9. CLARENCE WOODARD

    May 9, 2015 at 5:35 pm

    ANY ONE EVER HEARD OF 113 FOLLY ROAD A WHITE STONE HOME NO ONE LIVES THERE LONG. IT IS DANGEROUS PLACE THE GHOST THERE WILL HURT YOU.

    Reply
  10. Tami

    August 17, 2015 at 4:37 am

    My boyfriend and I visited the old jail on august 15th. I took a lot of pics of the outside and inside of the jail. When we got home we started reviewing the pics and noticed two of the outside pics there are faces in the windows. The one room or window was where Lavinia was kept and it does look like a woman’s face. The second is the room after hers and it definitely looks like a man. Now you can not get to either of these windows on the inside for they are both blocked off. Pretty awesome to see something. The tour guides were awesome also. If anyone wants to see the pics send me an email I will be more than happy to share them. Jasmine6975@gmail.com

    Reply
    • Jack

      October 11, 2017 at 7:06 pm

      I’d like to visit this jail, i’m obssessed by lavinia and john fisher’s story. it’s so painful

      Reply
  11. Juanita bpnes

    December 27, 2015 at 7:41 pm

    Jack, squat, nothing did I see when I was there. I was kinda hoping to see or experience something.

    Reply
  12. Lavinia R

    January 8, 2016 at 4:52 pm

    As a fellow Lavinia, it pains me to see her name misspelled so many times (it’s not “Lavina”!). Please edit this.

    Reply
  13. Cody hanson

    April 9, 2016 at 11:47 pm

    I believe her spirit is real and that shr haunts the grounds at the old Charleston city jail which I would love to visit and investigate myself if I had a way im a big believer in the supernatural and would love to expience this myself

    Reply
  14. Icy Sedgwick

    February 2, 2017 at 2:44 pm

    What a fascinating story! The legend has shades of Sweeney Todd about it…

    Reply
  15. Laura Leonard

    July 30, 2017 at 3:09 am

    My husband and I visited the jail last year. My husband decided to take a picture of me on the upper floor. When he would look into the camera, he would see what appeared to be hundreds, and I mean hundreds of what I would describe as fireflies. They weren’t obviously, but they were tiny twinkling lights. They were all around me. When he would look up from the camera they were not there. A woman standing beside him noticed it as well and was amazed.

    I walked to the side of him so that part of my body was still in view of the camera, one of my arms, part of my torso and leg. I looked into the camera and I could see these flickering little tiny lights. When I looked up from the camera, nothing.

    When we actually took pictures, we had a few orbs on them but nothing substantial.

    I took pictures of my husband. The little lights were nowhere to be found. It only happened to me.

    Later on that evening it dawned on us that almost all of the thousands of people who spent time in that prison were men. I wondered if those lights around me, as a woman had had anything to do with that. It made me sick.

    Imagine being a woman accidentally being locked in there for a few hours – even for a few minutes. I will never go back there. Ever.

    Reply
  16. Jack Samuel Bivula

    October 11, 2017 at 7:10 pm

    It’s so sad, i wish i were there to see lavinia.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Jailhouse Rock « The Accidental Cootchie Mama says:
    August 20, 2012 at 5:11 am

    […] with the Old Jail. Its rusting paddy wagon. Its caverns of vaulted brick. Its heavy iron bars, spooky corridors and iffy lighting. I love the damaged patina of the stucco that flecks off like peeling skin and […]

    Reply
  2. In old Charleston, the historic and haunted are around every corner says:
    June 13, 2013 at 3:53 pm

    […] where many were held just prior to hanging. It’s hard to miss hearing about the ghost of Lavinia Fischer, the first female mass murder in the United States. She’s been seen in the Unitarian […]

    Reply
  3. Tips for Exploring Charleston In One Day says:
    June 14, 2017 at 10:19 pm

    […] the country’s first female serial killer who made her home near Charleston.  Her name was Lavinia Fisher and legend has it that she would serve (oleander?) tea to wealthy male guests at her inn.  Long […]

    Reply
  4. Tips for Exploring Charleston In One Day says:
    March 27, 2019 at 4:46 pm

    […] country’s first female serial killer who made her home near Charleston.  Her name was Lavinia Fisher and legend has it that she would serve (oleander?) tea to wealthy male guests at her inn. […]

    Reply
  5. Charleston’s Most Inhospitable Hosts: The Story of John and Lavinia Fisher – Crime Traveller says:
    September 14, 2020 at 12:41 pm

    […] Terrifying to very end, Lavinia arrived at the gallows in her wedding dress, clinging to the hope that as a married woman, she could not be hanged. Neither ploy worked; the judge presiding over the executions simply stated John would hang first. Though the law forbid the execution of married women, the law had no rules against hanging widows. […]

    Reply

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