Dead and Gone

It was a typical morning at the Reed family home in August 1891 when the oldest son, twenty-five-year-old Charles J. Reed, walked into the house. The family house in Xenia was not very large, containing two bedrooms, the dining room / kitchen area, and one sitting room. The family was gathered around the table eating breakfast when Charles entered. He had walked just a few steps past the table when he suddenly collapsed. He fell to the floor in a heap and never woke up.

Immediately, the father sent a boy to fetch a doctor while the remaining family members carried Charles’s body into the bedroom and laid him on the bed. Efforts to resuscitate him failed and he was positioned and covered with a sheet until the doctor could arrive.

The doctor walked into the home within twenty minutes of the collapse. He noticed that the door to the bedroom was closed and the entire family was sitting in the room outside it. When he noticed the arrival of the doctor, the father jumped up to open the bedroom door for him. The doctor walked into the bedroom with the grieving members of Charles’s family (mother, father, two sisters) close behind. He noticed the rigid outlines of the body under the sheet and a cloth over the face. Through the cloth, the doctor could see facial features and the profile of Charles’s face.

When the doctor approached and lifted the cloth from the corpse’s face, he was stunned to see nothing under the cloth. He quickly pulled the sheet away from the body and saw only empty space. Despite having seen the outline of a body through the cloth, there was nothing on the bed. Stunned, the family members and doctor simply looked from one another to the bed, speechless. It took a moment for the three ladies present to react, swooning onto the floor. While the doctor attended to the ladies, the father stood in a dumbfounded state, muttering incoherently and staring unseeing into the distance.

Once the ladies were brought back to consciousness, the doctor walked to the only window in the room and studied it. The window was locked from the inside and had clearly not been opened for a while. Since there was no body, no coroner’s inquest was held. An investigation into the disappearance was made but no answers have ever been found. Charles J. Reed was dead and gone

Read this and other tales of the weird in Dayton Ghosts & Legends, available through Amazon and major book retailers. Autographed copies available directly from the author on SaraKaushal.com

1911 Pearls of Wisdom

An article from the Dayton Herald dated June 1911 titled “Current Credulities” shared pearls of wisdom common at the time. Here they are:

  • A cold, wet May, a barn full of hay
  • Rain before seven, clear before eleven
  • Tea kettle suddenly sings means news
  • Move in the light of the moon for luck
  • Broad front teeth mean that one is generous
  • If a baby does not fall out of bed, it will be a fool
  • A group of bubbles on a cup of coffee signifies money
  • If a child cries out during baptism, it is the devil going out of it
  • At cards it is bad luck to play against the grain of the table.
  • Water spilled on the doorstep means the coming of a stranger
  • Whoever eats the last piece of bread on the plate will be an old maid

The Stranger

When a small family disembarked from a stage coach on a bitterly cold day in January 1851, nobody paid them much mind. The man, woman, and young boy walked into the old Phillip’s Tavern (replaced in 1852 by Phillip’s Hotel) and rented a room for the night. They were tired and covered with dust, telling the proprietor they were on a long journey and intended to stay one night and be on their way the next day. Despite her tired and dirty state, the woman has consistently been described as extraordinarily lovely in recountings of the story.

Unfortunately, the journey did not continue for the lovely woman. The man roused the innkeeper in the middle of the night and told him to fetch a doctor quickly, there was something wrong with his wife. Despite medical treatment, she died that night.

During this time period, it was not customary or required for guests to register or identify themselves to get a room for the night. Despite renting the room and receiving medical treatment, this woman’s identity was not revealed, nor was her husband’s. As the undertaker prepared for the funeral and presented the bill to the husband, he asked for their names. The traveler remarked, “I will pay you, but I will not tell my name.”

At every turn, he was asked again for her name, but again he declined to reveal their identities. Although they were certain he’d reveal her name for the tombstone, they were again denied. Instead, her tombstone was simply inscribed with:


A Stranger
Died Jan 4, 1851
Aged 24
Her kind and gentle spirit’s gone,
To a world of light above.

The unidentified woman was buried at Old Greencastle Cemetery, located at the intersection of South Broadway and Miami Chapel Road. Shortly after the funeral service ended, the man and child quickly left the cemetery. Nobody reported seeing them after that day.

Adding to the mystery, flowers started appearing on her grave every Memorial Day. This tradition continued for years and was still occurring 81 years later in 1932 when Dayton Daily News reported on this story. The groundskeeper for Old Greencastle Cemetery, where she is buried, reported the flowers would mysteriously show up at the grave, but he never saw a person leaving them. A man with gray hair and long gray beard had been frequently spotted walking through the graveyard. Some speculated he was the husband, long since dead but making an appearance from beyond the grave to leave flowers. Could it have been the son leaving flowers on his mother’s grave? The question remains, who was this woman and why wouldn’t they identify her?

Local Author – Betsy Hughes

Oakwood resident Betsy Hughes moved to Dayton as a newlywed and became one of the founding faculty at the Miami Valley School, where she taught for 30 years. Betsy earned her Masters in English from UD and after retiring, returned to UD to moderate courses in literature, creative writing, and the arts for the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. Betsy has had a lifelong passion for poetry.

Betsy’s first book of sonnets, Breaking Weather was published by the National Federation of State Poetry Societies Press in 2014. Other published collections include Bird Notes, Forest Bathing, and The Lyric. Betsy’s book The Sixth Sense of Loss is dedicated to her husband of 56 years Jim Hughes, who died in 2020. This book includes sonnets and various other genres of formal poetry, including poems of grief.

Summer Events

  • What’s Your Favorite Scary Movie? Art Show
    Includes Hearse Cruise-In, Vendors, and Food
    Secret Chamber of Oddities and Artwork
    17 W Main Street, Fairborn
    Friday June 13th, 3pm-5pm for the less energetic, 5pm-9pm, for those all in
  • Pickle Fest
    Austin Landing
    3700 Rigby Rd, Miamisburg
    June 21st, 3pm-10pm
  • Greene County Strawberry Fest
    Greene County Fairgrounds
    120 Fairground Rd, Xenia
    June 21st-22nd, 10am-5pm
  • The Great Dayton Food Truck Rally
    104 Front Street, Dayton
    July 11th, 5pm-9pm
    July 12th, 11am-8pm
  • Columbus Book Festival
    Columbus Metro Library
    96 Grant Ave, Columbus
    July 12th 10am-6pm
    July 13th 10am-5pm
  • Gem City Comic Con
    Marriott at UD
    1414 South Patterson Blvd, Dayton 45409
    July 19th & 20th 9am-4pm

Dayton TikTokers

As you scroll through TikTok, you may be surprised to see some local people and places pop up. Here are some of our favorites:

Check out these businesses from Dayton with their own TikToks:

Sara’s Appearance on WYSO Book Nook

Sara was interviewed on WYSO’s Book Nook about her latest book, Murder in Victorian Dayton: The Tragic Story of Bessie Little!
To read the article about her book and interview: Dayton Daily News article.

Upcoming Spring and Summer Events

  • Children’s Free Book Fair
    29 West First Street, Dayton
    May 17th-18th
  • Food Truck Rally
    Thomas Cloud Park
    May 20th at 4 pm
  • Summer Flea Market
    Charles Lathrem Senior Center
    June 7th
  • Troy Strawberry Festival
    405 Public Square, Troy Ohio
    June 7th-8th
  • Yellow Springs Street Fair
    101 Dayton Street
    June 14th
  • Greene County Strawberry Fest
    120 Fairground Rd, Xenia
    June 21st-22nd
  • Hunger Days Food Truck Rally
    2910 Trebein Road (Hobson Freedom Park), Fairborn
    July 24th at 4pm
  • Art on the Commons
    695 Lincoln Park Blvd, Kettering
    August 10th
  • Greater Dayton Lebanese Festival
    50 Nutt Road, Dayton
    August 22nd-24th

Dayton Codebreakers – Sir Dermot Turing’s Visit

Did you know Dayton played a big part in World War II? Local electric engineer and inventor Joseph Desch was the Research Director of the Navy’s program to design and build a bombe – a machine to read coded communications from Germany (coded by the Enigma).

Desch and his team worked in one of NCR’s buildings decoding the messages using the American Bombe Machine and would then send the messages to Washington D.C. as intelligence. While working with the American Bombe Machine, Alan Turing – known for cracking Germany’s Enigma code – visited Joseph Desch in Oakwood and at the NCR building.

Retired RAF Captain Andrew Lloyd, along with the organization he founded, Oakwood Unsung Heroes, have been working to showcase this piece of history by having a City of Oakwood proclamation for the month of May to be Codebreaker Month, and they have an exhibit on display at Wright Memorial Public Library in collaboration with the National Cryptologic Museum.

On May 8th, the nephew of Alan Turing, Sir Dermot Turing, will be speaking at the Dayton International Peace Museum and at Carillon Park. For both events, tickets are free, but limited.

  • May 8th at 11am @ Dayton International Peace Museum
  • May 8th at 7:30pm @ Carillon Park

If you’re interested in reading more about this topic:

Dayton Area Book Crawl

Celebrate National Independent Bookstore day with local bookstores! All stores listed will be open from 10am-6pm on April 26th for the event.Stores:

  • Jay and Mary’s Book Center
    1201 Experiment Farm Road
    Troy, OH 45373
  • Browse Awhile Books
    118 East Main Street
    Tipp City, OH 45371
  • Around About Books
    8 West Main Street
    Troy, Ohio 45373
  • New and Olde Pages
    856 Union Boulevard
    Englewood, OH 45322
  • The Cozy Booknook
    4720 South Dixie Avenue
    Moraine, OH 45439
  • Rabbit Hole Books
    29 West First Street
    Dayton, OH 45402
  • Star City Booksellers
    55 South Main Street
    Miamisburg, OH 45342

Start your journey at any location and pick up a passport. Get the passport stamped at each location and be entered to win prizes! Make sure to stop in at New & Olde Pages for author speed dating from 1 to 3 pm. Sit for 3 minutes with each author and let them pitch their book or series to you.