topdog
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2009
- Messages
- 1,028
I went to visit relative this week who live at Stoneville, NC for the first time. Then I went to Madison which is only across town and stop at this coffee house/Drygoods store. Turns out this become the highlight of my trip.
The owner saw me walked in with my camera and he told me I can take as many pictures as I like. After I took a few shots around the store, he told me I can go upstair to walk around and take pictures as well. He did told me the rooms upstair have not been touch for over 100 years and it really intrigue me. So I proceed to go upstair all by myself and left my family down at the store. As soon as I got upstair, there is a room at the end of the stair. I took a quick peek through the door window. The room is empty but somehow I don't feel right going in there.
So I turn right and it's a big lobby. I then took another right turn at the lobby and it's a big hallway that lead to a series of rooms. I was told later those were hotel rooms from late 1800s to 1930. I took some quick shots of the rooms and the hallway but I start feeling very unease even it's in the middle of the afternoon. I don't feel fear but I do feel my heart begins to speed up and somehow I know I should not stick around too long.
I left as soon as I finish my shots and went back downstair. Then the shop owner owner proceed to tell me the history of the building. He own the building for 18+ years. The Drygoods store side of the building was a hardware store which now he turns it into a clothing store. The coffee house side of the building was a hotel lobby. However, what's really bizarre was above the hardware store side of the building were the hotel rooms. But above the hotel lobby side of the building was a funeral parlor.
What make this funeral parlor famous was the room I opt not to go in at the end of the staircase was an embalming room. What really shock me was that room once embalmed all the family members from the gruesome Charlie Lawson murder at Christmas day in 1929. At first, I wasn't sure how valid was this murder. Then as I look more about this on the internet, it seems to be true.
Here are a couple of interesting read I found on the internet.
http://maria333.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=posts&action=display&thread=452
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Lawson
Here are the shots I took at this place.
In front of the store. Left side of the building is the coffee shop and right side of the building is the drygoods store which has became a clothing store. The doorway between the two store is an elevator.
These two doors are make shift fitting rooms for the clothing store.
He's the owner, Richard Miller, of these two buildings.
Some antique display through out both stores.
Shots of the hotel rooms that have not been touch over a hundred years.
Not sure what are those ropes for hanging from the ceiling.
The hallway.
Doorway for the elevator at upstair.
The elevator. That's how they transport the casket and body to upstair.
The embalming room. After the owner told us the story of the building, he took us all to go back upstair again and he told me I can go into the room if I want. I was brave enough to took a quick shot of the room.
Hope you find the story interesting. It was my first somewhat paranormal photo shoot. Quite interesting.
The owner saw me walked in with my camera and he told me I can take as many pictures as I like. After I took a few shots around the store, he told me I can go upstair to walk around and take pictures as well. He did told me the rooms upstair have not been touch for over 100 years and it really intrigue me. So I proceed to go upstair all by myself and left my family down at the store. As soon as I got upstair, there is a room at the end of the stair. I took a quick peek through the door window. The room is empty but somehow I don't feel right going in there.
So I turn right and it's a big lobby. I then took another right turn at the lobby and it's a big hallway that lead to a series of rooms. I was told later those were hotel rooms from late 1800s to 1930. I took some quick shots of the rooms and the hallway but I start feeling very unease even it's in the middle of the afternoon. I don't feel fear but I do feel my heart begins to speed up and somehow I know I should not stick around too long.
I left as soon as I finish my shots and went back downstair. Then the shop owner owner proceed to tell me the history of the building. He own the building for 18+ years. The Drygoods store side of the building was a hardware store which now he turns it into a clothing store. The coffee house side of the building was a hotel lobby. However, what's really bizarre was above the hardware store side of the building were the hotel rooms. But above the hotel lobby side of the building was a funeral parlor.
What make this funeral parlor famous was the room I opt not to go in at the end of the staircase was an embalming room. What really shock me was that room once embalmed all the family members from the gruesome Charlie Lawson murder at Christmas day in 1929. At first, I wasn't sure how valid was this murder. Then as I look more about this on the internet, it seems to be true.
Here are a couple of interesting read I found on the internet.
http://maria333.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=posts&action=display&thread=452
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Lawson
Here are the shots I took at this place.
In front of the store. Left side of the building is the coffee shop and right side of the building is the drygoods store which has became a clothing store. The doorway between the two store is an elevator.
These two doors are make shift fitting rooms for the clothing store.
He's the owner, Richard Miller, of these two buildings.
Some antique display through out both stores.
Shots of the hotel rooms that have not been touch over a hundred years.
Not sure what are those ropes for hanging from the ceiling.
The hallway.
Doorway for the elevator at upstair.
The elevator. That's how they transport the casket and body to upstair.
The embalming room. After the owner told us the story of the building, he took us all to go back upstair again and he told me I can go into the room if I want. I was brave enough to took a quick shot of the room.
Hope you find the story interesting. It was my first somewhat paranormal photo shoot. Quite interesting.

before he began Dropping like flies.

