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Morrill Hall is one of the oldest buildings on campus and perhaps the most haunted. Students love to visit it for that reason. Over the years it housed everything from the Departments of Agriculture to Veterinary Science. But its source of spirits may come from the many cadavers - brought into the basement more than 80 years ago - for dissection by medical students.
The psychic energy here is overwhelming say investigators. A few years back , workers in Morrill Hall found human remains under a sink while the building was undergoing renovation. Additionally, the staff in Morrill has heard noises late at night. They say people trip and fall for no apparent reason.
There have also been mysterious smells. A few years ago workers were installing a new air conditioner and called firefighters in to check on strange oders. It was determined that drilling had released fumes and ashes left over from the disastrous Thanksgiving fire of 1912.
Morrill Hall was constructed in 1898 and is the oldest campus building
with its original facade intact. It was named after
U. S. Senator
Justin
Morrill, who sponsored the Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862. That act established
federal land grant colleges, including the Maryland Agricultural
College (later to become the University of Maryland.
(See Diamondback story about Morrill Hall below for more scarey stuff.)
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Marie Mount loved Maryland so much she didn't want to leave - even in death. So tradition has it the first dean of the College of Home Economics stayed - ultamately to haunt a building named after her. A few of her friends may have joined her.
Campus
employees claim to have seen Mount's ghost and heard
her playing the piano on dark, stormy nights. An expert in
the paranormal reported feeling the spirits of Mount and others
in that 2002 Diamondback article. Constructed
in 1940 as an addition to Silvester Hall, the building's corridors
and ceilings are a mixture of ashen, concrete walls and yellow
floors. They slant strangely to merge with the old construction.
The building was first called, simply, the Home Economics
Building. In 1959 it became Margaret Brent Hall after
a colonial businesswoman considered the first American woman
to request the right to vote.
Finally, in 1969, the Board of Regents renamed it Marie Mount
Hall in appreciation of Marie Mount's innovations in home
economics at the university. Under her guidance, the "Department
of Home and Institution Management" became its own division
and later the College of Home Economics. Today the building appropriately houses the Department of Family Studies, the Department of Nutrition and Food Science and other offices.
Marie Mount Hall used
to house student dormitories as well as classrooms.
There are still signatures of students who wrote their names
on the walls of their old rooms. Perhaps a few of those former students have joined Mount to hear her play the piano on stormy nights.
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Less well
known than "haunted" Marie Mount and Morrill Halls, H.J. Patterson Hall
is allegedly spooked. Once, a facilities management employee saw a shadow move across
the wall while working alone in the building. He does not believe
the shadow belonged to another worker.
Nicknamed "Steinberg Castle," the building is named after
Maryland Agricultural College President Henry Jacob Patterson (1913-1917).
It was built in 1931 and houses the Department of Plant Biology,
the Department of Natural Resources, a soil testing lab and
the Center for Agricultural Biology.
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Former University Registrar Alma Preinkert was much beloved on campus. That's why her brutal murder in 1954 was so devastating at the time. Oh, and did we mention that the murder was never solved?
Preinkert's soul may still be unsettled, because members of the campus sorority she helped found, Kappa Delta, say she haunts their sorority house. Members of the sorority told The Diamondback in 2002 that there are other spirits too. They described "crazy paranormal things" that included "girls in white dresses dancing on the KD sundeck over the summer" when the house is closed.
Another Maryland sorority, Alpha Omicron Pi, says their members have seen or heard the ghost of Julie Renee Peace - a sorority sister who died in a tragic 1995 car accident.
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Resources:
The Diamondback Student Newspaper
New! October 29, 2004, Tales From The Campus Crypt, Caitlin Evans
(October
31, 2002, A Haunted Halloween, Justin Fenton); (October 29, 2002, Haunts Spook Sorority Members, Justin Fenton) and University of Maryland A to Z:MAC to Millennium.
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