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In 1861 and
1862 both Union and Confederate troops could be found camped in or near
Bowling Green. Like so many soldiers who served in the Civil War, they
were more likely to fall victim to diseases–typhoid, dysentery, measles
and malaria, to name a few–than to battle wounds. Wherever the men encamped,
it was necessary for their officers to commandeer churches and houses
for use as hospitals. But these hospitals were hardly the antiseptic environments
we envision today. They were grim charnel-houses, home to primitive medical
procedures and unspeakable filth, where young men ended their lives in
pain and fever, wishing that their time on earth had been longer. One
such hospital, it is said, was the home at 1410 College Street that now
serves as the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house.
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The fraternity
brothers there are said to share the house with the ghost of one of the
Civil War's departed soldiers, a tall, slender man in military cap and
overcoat who has identified himself (via ouija boad) as "Kevin." They
see him in mirrors and walking in translucent silhouette. More often,
they hear him treading over floors, opening doors, turning on appliances.
As a group of brothers watched nervously one night during finals week,
he even activated their telephone answering machine several times, then
caused the phone to ring but declined to speak at the other end.
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Update:On April 7, 2005, fire destroyed the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Luckily, no one was hurt, but it remains to be seen if their ghost will follow the brothers to their new home. . . . |
Home
|| Barnes-Campbell || Kentucky
Bldg. || Lambda Chi || McLean
|| Pearce-Ford || Potter
|| Rodes-Harlin || Schneider
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All images courtesy of Department
of Library Special Collections, Western
Kentucky University.
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