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Part III - The Haunted Boy: the Inspiration for the Exorcist. Debunking the Myth of 3.
Bunker Hill Road. Mount Rainier. Rumors that the haunted boy had actually lived at 3.
Bunker Hill Road in Mount Rainier have been around since the early ’8. I went back to the literature and determined that the first printed references. The Prince George’s Sentinel. February 4, 1. 98. October 2. 8, 1. 98. No definitive source. The next article to highlight this.
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The Washington Post of May 6, 1. Father Bober. as saying that Father Hughes never told him exactly where the boy lived. In fact, there is no printed reference to Father Hughes ever having identified.
Bunker Hill Road as the boy’s home. These articles set the rumors. Furthermore, if the “diary” kept by the Jesuit priests. Bunker Hill Road, then Thomas B. Allen certainly would.
He doesn’t, but instead cites The Prince. George’s Sentinel article of February 4, 1. He goes. on to say that the diary gives another address for the family, about a. Mount Rainier. I realized, however, that there was no evidence demonstrating that the.
Mount Rainier in the first place. Something was amiss. The first stop on my mission to determine who it was that really lived. Mount Rainier address of 3. Bunker Hill Road was the Hyattsville. Branch Public Library in Prince George’s County, a facility that would.
It was there. that I found an extremely rare copy of the Prince George’s County. Metropolitan Directory of the Mt. Rainier- Hyattsville- College Park Area.
C. E. Wooten. This directory listed the families and. Looking at the. entries for Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier, I scanned down the listings. I found “3. 21. 0” and discovered the listed occupants as being. Joseph Haas and Grace Miller.
Now that I had a name to work with I next went to the Prince George’s. County Historical Society Library at the Marietta Mansion in Glenn Dale. Maryland and checked out information pertaining to the last name of “Haas.”. While searching the index of a book titled Gleanings From The Records. Of The Francis Gasch’s Sons Funeral Home, Prince George’s County. Maryland 1. 86. 0- 1. Prince George’s. Genealogical Society Inc.
Bowie, Maryland) I found a highly significant. Haas family. It read. Miller, Martina Gregory—3. Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier, Maryland.
Jun 1. 92. 6. (Note Evening Star 0. Jun 1. 92. 6 p. 9 reports died on 0.
Jun. 1. 92. 6 at the residence of her daughter Mrs. Joe S. Haas, 3. 22. Bunker Hill. Road, Mount Rainier, Maryland.) Wife of the late Lemuel E.
Miller (Morristown. NJ papers). This entry clearly states that Joseph Haas and his wife were in a house. Bunker Hill Road in 1. While at the Historical Society Library, I. Atlas Of Prince George’s County, Maryland, Volume. Franklin Survey. Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1.
Indeed, the map listed in. Mount. Rainier and the home at 3. Bunker Hill Road sat right on the corner of.
Street. It was in the exact location of the vacant lot where 3. I was later told by Susan G. Pearl of the Maryland. National Capital Park and Planning Commission’s Historic Preservation.
Division that all of Mount Rainier’s house numbers, along with many. Cottage City. There was no question that 3. Bunker Hill Road and 3. My research, then, has revealed beyond any doubt that. Joseph Haas lived in the house at 3.
Bunker Hill Road from at least 1. Common sense would then dictate that the possessed boy was a son of Mr. Joseph Haas. That is, if this were the actual site, as was almost universally. I began scouring the microfilm newspaper holdings at the Hyattsville. Branch Public Library and found that they had a complete run of The. Prince George’s Post newspaper, a weekly that was published in.
Hyattsville, Maryland and dated back to 1. I read every copy from 1. Columns on Mount Rainier, Brentwood, Cottage. City, and Hyattsville (along with numerous others) were in every issue. I began intensely searching these columns for information on Joseph.
Haas and the possession case in general. In the Mount Rainier column I found numerous references to Joseph Haas. December 2. 8, 1. February 8, 1. 95. On March 8, 1. 95. Mrs. M. E. Davis writes that “Mr.
Joseph Haas 3. 21. Bunker Hill Road is. They include updates on his condition in the. March 2. 2nd, March 2. April 1. 2th, July 2.
August 9th editions. In the August 2. 3, 1. Joe Haas died on Thursday.
August 1. 6, 1. 95. I felt it was odd that no other family members. Checking his obituary.
August 2. 0, 1. 95. Washington Post confirmed my suspicions. In part. it read: “Joseph Stroup Haas…. On Thursday, August 1.
Bunker Hill Road, Mt. Rainier, Md. JOSEPH STROUP HAAS. Emily G. Haas (nee Miller)…. A special. communication was also published by the Mount Hermoa Lodge No.
Joseph Stroup Haas at the Masonic Temple in Hyattsville.”. No survivors to Joseph Haas were listed.
It was clear that he never had. Bunker. I needed corroboration and instinctively checked the 1. Bunker Hill Road at that point in time. There. were ten homes listed in the 3. Prince George’s County over the last thirty.
I realized that the chance of locating someone who remembered the. Haas household was slim. I noted that Richard and Irene Ashton were listed. Bunker Hill Road in 1. I located their daughter Peggy Lanahan. The Ashtons, it turned out, had lived at 3.
Peggy spending most of her childhood in the home. She recalls visiting. It was an older couple and. Grace Miller who lived there. Grace Miller was an elderly.
I was going over to their. I never thought it (the possession) happened there because I was in that. I never knew of anything like that happening. I never saw any kids in that house. I asked my mother about that too.
Grace Miller living in that house. As one of the few who can actually remember visiting 3. Bunker Hill Road. Mrs. Lanahan continued with her vivid memories: It was a big, old, three- story house. Note how this description drastically. August 1. 0, 1. 94.
The Evening Star, Washington, D. C. newspaper. account.] It was gray and drab—didn’t have a coat of paint on. There was never any talk of a. The first story I ever saw about it was the.
I went to a class reunion and my girlfriend at the time. Mount Rainier also, said to me,“Did you see the. That exorcism took place in the house next to. I said, “No, it couldn’t have been there because how. Especially since I was taking piano lessons in there every. None of the neighbors ever mentioned it.
I told her it couldn’t. She showed me the article and there was a picture of the. I couldn’t. believe it. They are wrong! Many Mount Rainier residents spoke warmly of Herbert and Mary Landolt and. Street in 1. 94. 5 and remained.
They had a large, well- known. Catholic family of nine children and it was recommended. I talk with them about 3. Bunker Hill Road, a house that their backyard.
Having already spoken with Herbert’s brother Dean. Landolt, who was instrumental in my pursuing this case, I called Robert.
Landolt (a son of Herbert and today a very successful Howard County attorney). The people in the. Mr. Landolt affirmed. You know, that was just a strange house and we. My brothers and I all served The Washington Star. The Washington Post and I probably served that house for a.
I don’t remember there being kids in that house until later. Mr. Landolt went on to state that he had heard about the case shortly after. Mount Rainier. “My dad and Uncle Dean were very good. Father Hughes and I gained my knowledge of the incident through. Honestly, I had always heard he (the haunted.
Cottage City and he was a Lutheran who later converted to. Catholicism. That’s what I was told and that’s what I believed.”. Other longtime Mount Rainier residents told similar tales about 3. Bunker. Hill Road. Joan Flanagan, who grew up in the town and worked in City Hall.
My mother knew everyone in this town and. Haas lived in that house and that they didn’t. All of the other old- timers said the same thing.
It couldn’t. have been that house.”. Mrs. Flanagan directed me to Mary Prosperi, who had also grown up in the. These two women had attended eighth grade at St. James School together. St. James) and had maintained.