Young Husband Resented His Invisible Rival

 One of the most intriguing stories in Alyce Weinberg’s classic Spirits of Frederick is consigned to two sentences on the last page, Page 97:

A young man told me that something pulls the covers off his bed, and caresses his wife while he is asleep beside her; and that some invisible force crowded him off a bench in Baker Park after dusk. He believes a ghost is in love with his wife.

I would love to know the wife’s side of this story. I would love to know many things.

The history on the Friends of Baker Park website gives no indication of the place being haunted, but the implication in Weinberg is that the ghost in the park is also the ghost in the home, and that it’s the people who are haunted, not the place. This arguably is the case with all hauntings, including ones much better documented than this jealous husband’s.

Still, this cryptic claim is probably a good excuse to visit Baker Park, which is bounded on the east by North Bentz Street and on the south by Carroll Parkway.

Sources:

“Baker Park in Frederick, MD.” VisitFrederick.org. https://www.visitfrederick.org/things-to-do/parks-and-outdoor-recreation/local-parks/baker-park/. Accessed 19 Nov. 2021.

“Park History.” Friends of Baker Park. https://friendsofbakerpark.org/park-history/. Accessed 19 Nov. 2021.

Weinberg, Alyce T. Spirits of Frederick. 1979. 2nd ed., 1992. Photos by C. Kurt Holter. Illus. by Audrey. Self-published; graphics and typesetting by Greenleaf Graphics, Frederick, Maryland.

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