The Truth About
Ocean-Born Mary's Ghost
by Fiona Broome and the Hollow Hill staff ©2005
(Continuing the Ocean-Born Mary legend, which appears
on this page)
Here is
the actual story, according to Henniker records:
Ocean-Born Mary really was born in 1720 aboard a ship, the Wolf.
Also, her life was spared by the pirate
Don Pedro, just as the story claims.
Mary's father, Captain James Wilson, died
soon after they landed in Boston, and his widow, Elizabeth, took Mary to Londonderry, NH,
where she claimed the land Capt. Wilson had been granted.
Elizabeth married a second time, to James Clark (great-great grandfather of
Horace Greeley, the man who said, "Go West, young man."). She died about 1732.
1732 was also the year that the Wallace family, originally from Scotland,
arrived in Londonderry, NH after living in Burnt Mills, Northern Ireland.
(Burnt Mills is not on modern maps, but this is the town mentioned in historical accounts.)
Thomas Wallace married Mary Wilson on December 18th, 1742. She was actually
six feet tall, with red hair. And, true to the legend, she wore a gown made
from the silk given to her parents by Don Pedro.
The Wallaces did, indeed, have four sons and a daughter: Elizabeth, Thomas,
Robert, William, and James. However, Thomas Wallace, Sr., and his wife Mary
lived a long and happy life together, until his death on October 30, 1791.
He is buried in Hill Graveyard, in Londonderry, NH.
Their daughter Elizabeth married Major (later Deacon) Thomas Patterson of
the NH Militia; he was the son of Peter Patterson. They had at least one child, Robert.
Thomas Wallace, Jr., was a distinguished Revolutionary War hero.
Sons Robert, William, and James married sisters, respectively, Jeanette,
Hannah, and Anna, all daughters of Robert and Mary Moore of Londonderry.
"Ocean-Born" Mary Wilson Wallace moved to Henniker on July 6, 1798 at age 78,
and spent the rest of her life with her son, William, about a quarter-mile from
another son, Robert.
Robert is the one who built the mansion that, today, is supposedly haunted by
Ocean-Born Mary. William's journals and the census records suggest that Mary
never lived in that house.
Mary died in 1814 and was buried in William Wallace's family plot, as
described in the legend, in Centre Cemetery.
The romantic tale of Don Pedro cannot be documented after the encounter
outside Boston Harbor. He certainly did not have a land grant to 6,000 acres
of Henniker; Robert Wallace, who built the mansion, was considered a wealthy
landowner with a deed to 300 acres surrounding the home.
The silk wedding gown was very real, and worn by several of Mary's descendants
at their own weddings. Pieces of the gown remain, in the D.A.R. Museum in Washington,
D.C. and in the public library of Henniker, NH. It is a lovely faded teal green silk,
in a brocade style, with small teal flowers and white stripes through it.
The home that Mary actually lived in was reported to be haunted and--after it
was empty for awhile--the town purchased it in 1844 as a poorhouse, and it was known
as the "Wallace Poor Farm." In later years, it was destroyed by vandals.
The "Ocean-Born Mary" house, as her son Robert's mansion is known today, was owned
by several families before it was bought in 1917 by Louis Maurice Auguste Roy, author
of The Candle Book.
Mr. Roy and his mother purchased the house and restored it, after hearing rumors of a ghost.
Soon after completing work on "the Ocean-Born Mary house," the Roys opened their
doors to the public. They charged admission, and Mr. Roy told colorful tales about
Mary Wilson Wallace and the ghost which his mother claimed to have seen many times.
The phantom rocking chair was never Mary's, and it rocked because Mr. Roy had
placed it over a loose floorboard that he could shift from the other side of the room,
to make the chair sway.
Further, Mr. Roy would describe the lost fortune of Don Pedro, still buried
somewhere in the garden where the pirate had died. Then Mr. Roy rented shovels
to the tourists, for 50-cents each, so they could dig for treasure in the back yard.
The descendants of Mary Wilson Wallace were not amused, but the public's love of
adventure, romance, and a good ghost story, made Ocean-Born Mary one of America's
best-known ghosts.
Mr. Roy died in 1965, and subsequent owners of the home, while intrigued by
the legend, have done everything possible to discourage curiosity-seekers from
trespassing and otherwise bothering the home and its residents. They have even
moved the road in front of the house, blocking tourists from invading their privacy.
The house last appeared in Yankee magazine in September 1996, where
it was in the "House for Sale" section, listed at $875,000.
If the house is haunted--and it may be--it is probably not Ocean-Born
Mary who walks there.
The first half of the story--in which the pirate spares the life of the crew and
passengers, when the baby is named for his mother--is romantic enough to spark legends.
The rest of the story appears to be made up by Mr. Roy. (The black-and-white photo on
the first page of this article, was taken by Mr. Roy to publicize the house.)
Henniker is a lovely town and it is home to New England College and Pat's Peak skiing area.
Henniker's Centre Cemetery is a classic New England graveyard, and perfect for
picture-taking, if you like stark and eerie images. Mary Wilson Wallace is buried there.
A Henniker grave marker
However, the Ocean-Born Mary ghost story is clearly drawn from the Green Lady
(because she haunts a house, not a family) and the story of appearing on a horse-drawn
coach is straight out of Irish legends. Mary Wilson Wallace is probably not
haunting her son's home.
Those who are in New Hampshire and seek a "real" ghost, would do better
to look for
the famous "Blue Lady," who haunts Vale End Cemetery in Wilton (now closed at night),
poltergeist "Avery," who haunts Psaris Bistro in Manchester, and,
Elizabeth Ford, who haunts The Country Tavern in Nashua.
And, yes, those are genuine ghosts.
---
Special thanks to Colleen D. of Henniker's public library,
for her time and assistance in locating materials about Ocean-Born Mary.
Also thanks to Mike Wallace, one of Mary's relatives,
who provided useful information for our research.
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