Catching up and looking forward

It’s Spooky Season ghostie peeps! It has been a hot second since I last wrote a post for Christy’s Chronicles. Let me give you a recap on the last few months. Then a bit of encouragement to grab some tickets and come out to Fort Delaware this October for the Paranormal Adventure Tours!

Private Investigation at My Haunted Manor, USA

In mid-August, the team had a private investigation at the Samuel Miller Mansion as part of My Haunted Manor USA. I can’t share too much about the investigation because it will be featured in an upcoming episode on the My Haunted Project YouTube Channel. So be sure to subscribe! We had a small group when we visited which meant plenty of quiet time to really sit and immerse ourselves in the experience at MHM. Having a chance to explore the whole mansion with a small group, is such a different vibe than when we have visited for the public events. We absolutely love that place and really respect that the whole My Haunted Project is elevating the field of paranormal investigation at a truly international level by including 24/7 access via live streams and evidence from the public who visit.

Control room, camera view at Samuel Miller Mansion

I had the privilege to go back up to the Manor just a few weeks ago when the Ghost Pardee group had their private investigation. They were such a blast to meet. This particular trip was extra fun for me, because it afforded me the opportunity to learn more about a “command center” and really get behind the scenes of investigating. Watching the cameras, writing down the timestamps and being an extra set of eyes was a lot of fun.

If you want to know more about the Samuel Miller Mansion, check out the post from one of our last visits.

Pennhurst Asylum

In late August, I went to Pennhurst Asylum with other paranormal teams from the region. It was a blast being able to head back to Pennhurst to see how other teams investigate. I love learning about new methods or new ways to use old methods. I had the opportunity to investigate with the Bader Brothers AND their Mom and sister. Turns out that the whole family is gifted with a sixth sense and a supreme level of curiosity and passion. Seeing them investigate together was amazing; truly an honor.

Pennhurst is such a rough place to visit because from the moment you turn in and head down the drive you can feel the heaviness. Traumatic things happened at that asylum for many, many years and the energy left behind is incredibly sad. The groups I met that night were all incredibly respectful and kind-hearted. I can only hope that we were able to bring light and comfort to any spirits still lingering in that place.

Only Ghosts in the Building sat me down for an interview to talk a little bit about Pennhurst, as Emily from that podcast had been on that trip. The interview became a two-part podcast series on her show.

Please check out the Only Ghosts in the Building podcast. You can find them on Spotify and Patreon to name just a couple of platforms. And check out the DSGI podcast page to see a playlist with interviews featuring many of our investigators.

Warren’s Paracon

Group photo from the Warren's Paracon

This past weekend I attended my first Paracon. A group of friends and I went up to Gettysburg to attend The Warren’s Seekers of the Supernatural Paracon. Shout out to Emily, Kelsey and Morgan!

Sporting my DSGI hat, several of the paranormal teams from across the country learned about the Diamond State Ghost Investigators as they tried to come up with other words that fit that acronym. I think some of them might have just been learning about Delaware for the first time, too. Just kidding. I hope I represented the team well, next time I’ll make sure to have business cards or stickers. Every team or vendor that I spoke with was super kind and curious. They each genuinely wanted to learn more about DSGI, just as I wanted to learn more about them.

The Ghost Brothers were charming and funny. They also apparently like to roast their fans. Consider me roasted. But I did get a nickname out of it that should probably give me pause, but instead, Imma laugh about it. So the autographed picture says “To Christy “Big Crip.”” Look, I can’t help that I have a firm handshake Dalen Spratt, Juwan Mass, and Marcus Harvey. It’s gotta be the boxing. I promise I’m not gangsta!

One of the great things about attending something like a Paracon is that you get to network and connect with so many new people interested in the paranormal field. Of course, we also ran into the guys, the Bader brothers Trey and Jeff and Daryl from MHM, and several of our friends from Interstate Paranormal Research. We had a great time, albeit a very long day. Gettysburg, I can’t wait to come back!

Fort Delaware Paranormal Adventure Tours

Last week we had a pow-wow with Delaware State Parks to get ready for this coming weekend at Fort Delaware State Park on Pea Patch Island! The Paranormal Adventure Tours are back, this will be year 16! These tours are really something special, because we enjoy blending history with the thrill of ghost investigating.

Fort Delaware rooftop

This year’s tours kick off on Friday, October 4, featuring a special guest appearance by Daryl Marston from A&E’s Ghost Hunters and My Haunted Manor USA. Daryl is renowned for his captivating insights into the paranormal world, and attendees will have the chance to learn from one of the best in the field.

On Saturday, October 5, we’re thrilled to welcome our contest winner, Wayne, and his guest. DSGI can’t wait to meet you both and share this unique experience!

Fort Delaware has a rich history as a Civil War prison camp, where tens of thousands of Confederate soldiers were held, and thousands perished. With tales of ghostly encounters and eerie phenomena—like mysterious footsteps and shadowy figures—this historic site offers a perfect backdrop for exploration.

Get your tickets

Our Saturday tours are sold out, but there are still tickets available for some of the upcoming Friday nights! Grab your tickets now and prepare for an evening filled with adventure, education, and perhaps a few ghostly surprises. We can’t wait to see you there!

P.S. Search on the page for the word “paranormal” at the ticket link above. Then type in a Friday date in October to see which tour has tickets left!

And don’t forget to bring your flashlights!

Stay spooky, friends! – C

Another Fort Delaware overnight in the books

Diamond State Ghost Investigators are the lead paranormal group responsible for the Paranormal Adventure Tours at Fort Delaware, on Pea Patch Island, each October. We volunteer to lead paranormal tours, and as a reward, we are given an opportunity to stay overnight on the island each year. (Tickets go on sale July 1, 2024!) This year, we stayed overnight on June 1. The weather was absolutely perfect; there were far fewer mosquitoes, and, of course, we experienced much laughter through the night.

We know that Fort Delaware is the most haunted location in Delaware. This is likely because it is old and has such historical significance. In 1847, Congress set aside a whopping one million dollars to construct the biggest fort in the country for guarding Philadelphia and the harbor. It was actually put into use in 1861 during the Civil War and was used to hold Confederate prisoners until 1865. The fort was also garrisoned during the Spanish-American War, World War I, and World War II before being shut down in 1944. You can find more history about Fort Delaware here.

We spend a lot of time on the island and inside the Fort. As a team, there has never been a time when something paranormal hasn’t happened to at least one, usually many, of us during each visit. However, this year, the activity was relatively low, at least for me.

I so very much wanted to see the tan man or a shadow figure, some apparition, but I didn’t. Others on the team did. I wanted to hear the phantom canon sounds or booming footsteps going up the metal stairs. Even a door opening and closing would have made this spooky gal happy. I didn’t hear or see any of those things over the weekend. Even though I know there is usually that type of activity, Perhaps my energy was off, I don’t know.

Inside the Casemates

Some of our paranormal experiences

While Adam, Fred, Michelle, Sherri and I were in the Casemates we heard and saw several bats. The bats were screeching and swooping down. I’ve never seen so many bats on the island. It made me so happy! Seeing more bats means seeing less mosquitoes. Fred, Sherri and Michelle saw shadow figures walking past the windows in the Casemates as we stood in the grassy area that we call the wedge. I kept looking, and while there were moments when it did appear that something blocked the ambient light through the windows, I couldn’t be sure it wasn’t just a bat or my eyes playing tricks on me because I was staring into the dark for so long. If those were shadow figures trying to get my attention, I apologize ghosties, because I didn’t sense anything at the time.

What I did experience, however, was hearing voices in what I’m calling the newer rooms of the Fort. I heard full discussions, though I couldn’t say exactly what was said. Now, there are no new rooms, and this Fort is very old, but I had not taken the circle through the Officer’s Quarters in full before. I hadn’t been through the library and around back to the staircase. So, when I was in the red room with the circle table, I sat down with my weary legs on the velvet sofa and listened. I kept hearing voices; we all did. Adam, Fred, Sherri and I were in the room then. It sounded like people on the other side of the staircase were having full conversations. However, no one else was in that building, let alone in those other rooms. So, it was cool to experience that type of paranormal activity. Adam had a recorder running in one of the back rooms at that time, so I hope he was able to catch some EVP evidence.

Photo taken atop the Fort

Energy depletion

One thing I can say with one hundred percent certainty is that many of our devices went through several iterations of batteries. Something was most definitely draining the energy of the batteries. And, I felt drained. Don’t get me wrong, I’m an early bird who likes to be in bed by 8:30 so I can curl up with a cozy mystery and fall asleep. I’m an early riser! So it’s challenging for me to stay awake, but usually there is so much activity that I just have to be alert and ready. I don’t know if it’s adrenaline, but I didn’t have it Saturday night into Sunday morning. I was DRAINED. So drained. Running on fumes. I was the first to fall asleep, head down on a picnic table and then eventually on a bench. All in all, I got about 3 hours of sleep, one and off, according to my FitBit. Most of the team didn’t sleep at all.

When I got home, I cleaned off the Fort dust and promptly took a nap. Every muscle in my body ached and felt tight. I usually experience congestion and exhaustion after a night at the Fort, but this felt different. I physically could not do anything for hours. I tried. I couldn’t even play computer games with my daughter as I had promised; I couldn’t keep my eyes open or my head up. So, while I’m not typically a napper, I had to sleep and recharge. I don’t know if something had drained my energy, too, or if it was a myriad of other reasons why my body completely rebelled, but it was intense.

Sunrise Fort Delaware

My ghostie peeps

More than anything, I realized that even with the paranormal hangover/flu feeling, there is nothing like spending a night with my ghostie peeps. Being a part of Diamond State Ghost Investigators is truly one of the best things. We laughed, we cried, we were feisty, we were chatterboxes, we were serious at times, we were all of the things and it was all completely accepted and okay. Even in the morning, when we were ready to get off the island and get home, we sat together as a team under a tree full of spiders, talking and laughing. It was quite an abdominal workout to get all that laughter in 😉

In addition to DSGI members, Michelle from the State Park, Daryl Marston and his wife Melanie were also at the Fort. They are such great people and really added to the overall investigations and camaraderie throughout the weekend. Andy Lendway, a fabulous friend, teammate and artist, had surprised Trey and Daryl with an amazing painting of the two of them with Jeff Bader for their My Haunted Manor endeavor. I’ve talked about Haunted Manor and the Samuel Miller Mansion in a previous post. They are such great people, and what they are doing with Haunted Manor is incredible. If you’re interested in immersing yourself in a paranormal investigation at a safe, haunted location steeped in history, definitely book a night at the mansion.

It is refreshing to be a part of a team that also encourages me to be exactly who I am. So I’d like to thank my teammates and friends, my ghosties peeps, for having my back and for accepting me no matter if I’m being super silly and upbeat or if I’m acting like a hangry lunatic. You are my people.

15th anniversary of Paranormal Adventure Tours at Fort Delaware

Our team has completed another season of Paranormal Adventure Tours at Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island with Delaware State Park staff. This amounts to over 60 hours of time on the island or the Delafort ferry heading to the island. We’re so grateful to have completed another season, and especially so given that this was our 15th year! You can find 15th-anniversary DSGI merch in our online store.

If you’d like more of the history on the Fort, I do include some in a past post where I talk about my experience with the ghost cat Bill. I definitely talk about Bill the cat during most of the tours I lead, it was after all my very first paranormal experience at the Fort.

For two of our tours, we had the pleasure of including Daryl Martson. He is a co-lead investigator of A&E’s Ghost Hunter TV show and an author. Daryl has been a part of over 400 investigations all over the country but his home base is Middletown, Delaware. Daryl’s most recent book The Horrors of the House of Wills: A True Story of a Paranormal Investigator’s Most Terrifying Case, tells the tale of an experience he had at the House of Wills in Ohio, but it leads by acknowledging that his first paranormal encounter was at Fort Delaware when he was much younger.

Nearly 3,000 people died at Fort Delaware

Contrary to past publications or urban legends, there were not any dungeons at Fort Delaware. They did not starve prisoners, they received two meals a day. Granted the prisoners were fed bread and water, which is certainly not a five-course meal.

Prisoners of War at Fort Delaware
Prisoners Of War In Fort Delaware, May, 1864
Source Name: Miller, Francis T., The Photographic History of the Civil War Volume 7

Many of the prisoners who lived at Fort Delaware were from other places in the country. They came from multiple battlegrounds as far as Ohio, but also from Vicksburg and Gettysburg, by steamboat. So knowing this information, knowing the facts as we’ve researched them, is all very important when we conduct our paranormal investigations. It helps to know how old people were, where they came from, and what they possibly endured during their time at war.

We know there were a handful of violent deaths on the island, but the majority of people who died there died from sickness. I’ve read letters written by Sergeant Bishop Crumrine while he was stationed at the Fort thanks to Fort staff, Edward Binasiewicz, who shared the letters with me. Bishop wrote a lot about the rebels who were brought to the camp and how quickly they would die. Sometimes they would die within a day or two and were immediately taken to Delaware City and buried. In one letter he wrote to his brother that the rebel bodies were “planted” and that by spring there would be a forest. Yikes. We know that many Union officers who died were sent across the river to be buried at Finn’s Point National Cemetery.

There has also been research done regarding prisoner escapes. When you consider that there were more prisoners than soldiers, and the prisoners stayed outside of Fort walls, it’s no surprise that this could have been the case. “At one point, there were only 300 Union soldiers to guard nearly 12,000 prisoners.”

Throughout, the season each of us on the team had numerous experiences in various areas of the Fort. I had the opportunity to lead tours in areas portrayed as the officers’ kitchen, the laundry, Battery Torbert, the ordinance, the mess hall, and the officers’ quarters. I really enjoy hearing the history from the Fort staff and I use that when I’m investigating. Being able to tell people the names of those who were stationed on the island, I think really amplifies the investigation. It is more real when you can say Captain Clark, are you here with us at the ordinance?

Is there anyone here with us?

Torching and spirit box sessions were the most successful modes of investigating for me this year. Setting up maglites, which we call torches while investigating spirits who would not know what a flashlight is, and then using these lights to communicate is always pretty spooky. The idea is that the ghost can turn the flashlight on and off to answer yes or no questions. A spirit box is a device used in paranormal research to communicate with spirits or ghosts by detecting EVPs (electronic voice phenomena). It is a small handheld device that scans through radio frequencies, creating white noise, and spirits can use these waves to communicate with us.

When you ask a question like “Is there anyone here with us,” and a flashlight sitting five feet away turns on by itself while you’re sitting in the dark, it’s just a really cool feeling. However, when you ask the question and the flashlight turns on while you’re also hearing a distinct “hello” come through the spirit box, that is a whole other level of awesome. If this goes back and forth long enough it really feels like something is communicating with you. Especially when combined with the fact that there are other times when nothing turns on or makes noise at all.

When it comes to Fort Delaware, we hear a lot of the same things. It’s clear to me that there is residual energy left behind. You have an old military fort that was home to a lot of young officers and prisoners for a long period of time. There was a war happening outside of those walls on the mainland. Within the Fort there was a lot of tension, sickness, and a constant state of questioning what’s going on and what are we doing here. The Fort never saw a battle, so when I think of these young men I have to wonder if they almost felt guilty that they weren’t out in the frontline. Is that why there is so much repetition, so much of the same sounds and movements because their structured routine is how they got through the day? As an aside, I’m grateful to everyone who has served and continues to serve in our military. No matter your station or your role, please know you matter.

The public reactions

When you’re part of a team and you’re investigating a place, you’re very familiar with, like Fort Delaware, sometimes the best part of the night is seeing the reactions of the public. We know Fort Delaware is haunted, there is no doubt about that. Even during nights when it feels dead, pun totally intended, we know there are spirits on that island.

When people come out to investigate, we can only hope they will experience something paranormal, or at least something that makes them question. We’re not hiding in the dark and jumping out of places. We’re not putting things in areas to force interactions or to make it seem extra spooky. Our team is actually more likely to debunk the rattle of a window or the sound of water drops than we are to feed into it. So, when someone is using dowsing rods or a KII meter and they see the lights turn up or the rods cross, it’s awesome to see their reaction. I love those “Oh shit, did you just see that!?” moments when it’s like, yes, exactly, this is what we’ve been telling you!

The public reactions truly help to validate the stories and occurrences we talk about happening at Fort Delaware. For those of you who attended and it was literally just a lot of dust, darkness and looking at historical artifacts, that happens, too. These spirits aren’t using Signup Genius and lettings us know when or where to find them. You can spend hours investigating a space but end up with zero evidence. That’s part of being a paranormal investigator.

The 5-hour extended tour

First of all, it was the night of the full moon. The Fort was lit by the light, bathed in the flow of a gorgeous blood moon. Depending on your faith, you may or may not know how strong the pull of the moon can be during that time. Especially, since we were surrounded by water. During the extended tour we can explore additional places around the Fort which is always exciting.

Adam and I were paired together for the five-hour tour. He’s a great person to investigate with because he uses humor to put people at ease. We know there are people who call in requesting him as their tour guide. He has a lot of paranormal equipment he brings to the table, so I was excited to hear the rem pods and music box go off in spaces. Sadly, we didn’t hear the music box at all that night. We did have rem pod activity, especially in the officers’ quarters and in Battery Torbert. There were times when the lights and the high-pitched noise just would not shut up. This prompted me to reset and move it each time, because clearly it was faulty. Hahahaha. However, it still caught interactions even after being moved. We had constant torching activity and a couple members of our group hung on to the dowsing rods most of the night, because they were getting definitive interactions.

Black and white photo with a cannon facing battery torbert at Fort Delaware

It wasn’t our blue group, though, that experienced the paranormal wow-factor. Christina and Ken’s group experienced something that none of our team or the fort staff have ever witnessed on the island. I won’t give details that I don’t know, because I wasn’t there, but I will say that I have complete trust and faith in my team and I believe what they saw. It happened in Battery Torbert, and unless there was some kind of mass hysteria or illusion, they witnessed a rem pod levitate a foot off the picnic table at the end of the hall. When I think about the strength it must have taken for a spirit to hold the device, lift it and move it like that, I’m just amazed.

Once the public left, we all went to the location to see what we would find. We didn’t see anything levitating, but we did hear footsteps and something moving above the location. To me, it sounded like something heavy being dragged. Andy said it sounded like a deep humming. We all felt a different energy there. It makes me wonder, was something brought to the island that night? Our team knows the Fort, but we did not know this type of activity at the Fort. It’s hard to wrap my head around, but I do believe that people can bring energy and attachments to places. I’ve seen it in my own life. I think that might have been what happened during the extended.

For those who are still non-believers

Good. I mean it, seriously, don’t ever let anyone try to talk you into something you don’t believe. That’s not what this is all about for us. There is a reason why no one has been able to offer 100% unrefutable proof that ghosts exist. We all experience interactions with the spirit world in different ways. Some of us feel goosebumps, some of us hear a whisper or a tapping on the wall, some of us see shadow figures or mist in a room. Depending on the experience it is perfectly normal to explain it away as a fluke, and in many cases you can’t replicate what happened.

So, I get it, I get how hard it can be to open yourself up to believing in something you may never be able to prove. I can’t prove anything that happens after someone dies, aside from their physical body decomposing. But their physical body isn’t their spirit and many people believe that spirits go to heaven or hell or some other place, right? You can’t prove that either.

Sometimes people will ask us, “why is the ghost here, why haven’t they moved on?” To that I say, what makes you think they haven’t moved on? Do I think some spirits are sort of trapped in a space due to unfinished business? Sure. But I also think there are some spirits who travel freely. Maybe you smell oranges out of nowhere and then believe your great-grandmother is nearby checking in on you. Or you sense someone walking behind you when you’re in your favorite garden or on your favorite hiking trail and you know it’s a lost family or friend. It’s my belief that spirits aren’t locked in anywhere. I think spirits can check in with their loved ones.

Until we meet again

We’ll return to Fort Delaware again, and again and again. We’ll be there for our team overnight in the summer and we’ll return for the paranormal tours in October 2024. We hope to see all our readers out there, too. And we encourage you to consider visiting the Fort during the daytime. History feeds the paranormal. You’ll have a better understanding of what might be haunting the island if you know what it was like when it was a functional base.

Thank you again to everyone who came out this season. We couldn’t do this without you!