Today we are going to take a deep dive into the true
story behind the haunting that inspired The Changeling. Russel Hunter
was a quiet man who had a passion for music and he grew older he was able to
make a living at it. Russel worked as a composer for CBS in New York during the
late 1950´s and early 1960´s then Russel decided to move out west. He decided
to pull the trigger and venture out on his own.
His only concern was that he wanted a property with enough seclusion to
allow him to work on his music without disturbing anyone. Russel eventually
found the house at 1739 East 13th Street. It was a older two-story
building that seemed to sway when the wind hit it just at the right angle,
but that did not seem to bother Russel too much.
The mansion was named after a wealthy attorney who
took over the house years before Russel Hunter, prior occupants were not listed
publicly. There were urban legends about a rich couple that lived there
with their son but no one could seem to remember concrete details. After an eventful
move in, Russel began the process of creating music again, getting back to his
first love. The only issue was that the house had other plans for him.
On February 9 1969, Russel began experience a strange phenomenon within his new home, a phenomenon that he would spend years attempting to convince people actually happened. Every morning the composer would be awakened by a stomping sound that was coming from somewhere within the house. This would go on as long as Russel stayed in bed, but the moment he got to investigate, the noises would stop abruptly. From there things got even more disturbing; faucets would turn themselves on and off. Doors would open of their own accord or if Russel left them open, they would slam shut. The walls would shake and tremor so violently that they would knock painting and photos to the floor. Searching for any plausible explanation for these bizarre occurences,
Russel
reached out to an old architect friend of his.
Perhaps these noises and shaking walls and faulty pipes came from some
sort of construction error. The men went through and inspected the house, but
ultimately nothing was uncovered. Then when they were about to call it a day, the
architect realized that they haven´t checked one of the closets. At first thought
the composer dismissed it saying they´d spent the day going over everything.
The closet was definitely not going to have anything that would shine light on
the problem. However, it did. When they
went in the closet, the two men discovered a small, hidden winding staircase
that led to a third-story annex. What they found on the third floor was so
mundane as it was essentially frightening. They found a cobweb covered
trunk which contained a journal 100 years prior. The journal was from a disabled
boy who´d been forced to live in isolation for his entire life. In the diary the
boy wrote of his daily routine, his struggles with being forced to live alone
in his room and many passages about his favorite toy; a red ball. The two men spent hours poring over the
journal.
A few nights later, Russel was awakened to the sound
of a soft patting coming down the hallway. He swung his feet over the side of
the bed, expecting the sound to cease the moment his feet hit the floor. It
didn´t. It grew louder as if it was steadily coming closer. Russel went out
into the halfway only to discover a small, red ball bouncing out of the darkness
to greet him.
Understandably, Russel grew too frightened to be in
the home alone, instead he stayed at a friend´s house. Finally, he decided that
something had to be done. He organized a seance. He felt that talking to
the spirit of the boy was the only thing to save him. Russel hired a local
medium and during the séance, He was contacted from a spirit from the afterlife.
He was told that the imprisoned child in the annex was the heir to a large
fortune from this maternal grandfather, when the boy´s health took a turn for
the worse, the parents were worried that his inheritance would be revoked and
given to other members of the family, the boy ultimately fell gravely ill and
passed away, they buried him in a unmarked deep grave in the woods. Then the
parents, in order to receive their inheritance, propagated a deceitful lie.
They went to a Denver orphanage and trained the orphan to take over his role in
the family. Russel was in complete disbelief.
As a parting gift and a means by which to substantiate
its stories, the spirit provided Russel with directions to where the boy was
buried. An innocuous house on the corner of South Dahlia Street. After getting permission
from the family who currently lived in a residence about his plot of land,
Russel commenced digging. He found a skeleton of a young boy with a gold
medallion around his neck. It featured an inscription that had the deceased boy´s
name on it. Russel was simultaneously elated and petrified. He simply had proof
now. He could go to the authorities. He took the medallion back to the mansion
deciding that if anything paranormal were to happen this night, he would
attempt to contact these forces and bargain with them. Things did not go as
planned. It was as if the house itself was writhing in pain. It stared quaking
and shaking. Russel went to a glass door in an attempt to get out, but the door
exploded sending shards of glass everywhere. One of them flew into his right
arm and severed an artery. A Russel crawled
to his bedroom where the phone was, blood seeped out of him. The next Russel
knew, he was in the hospital, bandaged and slowly recovering. Russel realized he´d
had enough. He vowed never to returned to the Henry Treat Rogers Mansion again.
He held that vow for close to twenty years. He did come back to the property
during the 1980´s to see it demolished.
Russel story was adapted into a feature film in
1980. It was directed by Peter Medak and starred George C. Scott, Trish Van
Devere and Melvin Douglas. The film follows a composer named Russel
Hunter who moves to Seattle where he takes up residence in a mansion, he believes
to be haunted. Obviously, the movie is based on Russel Hunter´s account of what
happened during his time living in the Henry Treat Rodgers Mansion. The film
was written by William Gray and Diana Maddox, with Russel Hunter receiving a
story- by- credit. The film won numerous awards. Martin Scorsese
called it one of the scariest movies ever made. The Henry Treat Rodgers Mansion
no longer exists, but the film it inspired lives on.
Fiction, real? What do you think?
Sergio Calle Llorens
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