Ghost Stories and Legends of Prince Edward Island

Front Cover
Dundurn, 1988 - Fiction - 177 pages

Swathed in mist, surrounded by the secretive sea, wind wailing like the lost souls of sailors around its shores, Prince Edward Island is the ideal setting for the strange and incredible, even the supernatural. Islanders have handed down, from one generation to the next, legends and ghost stories: tales of phantom ships, Indian curses, buried pirate treasure, sea serpents, and ghostly apparitions.

In this book, Julie Watson has collected a wealth of "true tales"; many were told to her by those who experienced them, or knew someone who did. Others are culled from old newspapers and books; to add to their charm, the author has copied these exactly as written, including the sometimes quaint spelling and punctuation. And, strange as most of these stories are, who dares to doubt the veracity of the sailors who met a phantom schooner, the fishermen who fled a sea monster, or the countless Islanders who have dug for pirate gold, only to be terrified by something uncanny, into abandoning their search?

Perhaps you will visit West Point Lighthouse in the dark of the moon, or watch the drowned spectre of Holland Cove, trailing sea-water across the floor, or, like the doomed Peter McIntyre, venture into the cemetery at Scotch Fort at night, never to return.

On the other hand, you can curl up with this book on a dark night and find yourself transported into the haunting legends, delightful yarns, and spine-tingling ghost stories of the magical and mysterious Prince Edward Island.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Creation of the World
11
Origin of Flies
17
Burned at the Stake
27
The Phantom Ship of Northumberland Strait
35
The Great Seal Robbery
41
Buried Treasure
49
Copyright

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Page 11 - Bird, whose eyes were fire and whose glances were lightning, and the clapping of whose wings was thunder. On his descent to the ocean, and on his approaching it, the Earth instantly rose up and remained on the surface of the water.

About the author (1988)

Julie Watson is one of Prince Edward Island's best known authors. Her six previous books include Favourite Recipes From Old Prince Edward Island Kitchens and A Prince Edward Island Album published by Hounslow Press. Julie divides her time between writing and her promotions company, working from the rural Island house she shares with her husband Jack. Their son, John Watson, who took all the photographs in this book, is a professional photographer. His work has appeared in numerous magazines and several books.

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