Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Green Brier Swamp 7 Big Liz. Ghost

GREEN BRIAR SWAMP
BUCKTOWN
Due to the Legend of Green Briar Swamp there were people of this area
who feared to leave the safety of their homes after dark , so said Mrs
Ralph Lewis , who runs the Bucktown country store with her husband who
have lived many years in the Bucktown area between Blackwater and
the Nanticoke. The area, thirty square miles of dense marsh grass and
murky waters, is a peaceful farming section, sunshine, with song
birds, the steady drone of farm tractors cultivating the rich soil and
the rustling of tall corn.

Come evening a hush settles over the fields and forest lands, sort of a
mist droops over Green Briar Swamp and night swallows the swamp
and the ghosts of Green Briar prowl undisturbed.
Yes, outsiders are skeptics, cynics scoff and the tales are sometimes called
downright fibs. Yet, there are some who lived on the edges of the swamp
who had their fears.

Green Briar Swamp, pronounced “ gumm b ' rar “, is seven miles north and south long and almost the same wide, the name is ancient. It was
once owned by governor John Henry of Vienna in the late 1700's. It
is flat full of wild huckleberry bushes. Maple Dam and Bucktown roads
box it in. The southern most of Green Briar is the source of our hair
raising tales.

The legend , so old that it is lost in the cobwebs, has it that there is
a “ treasurer “ buried somewhere in the swamp in a grave vault by
a wealthy plantation owner of Bucktown who was assisted by a female
slave when it was buried. When she told him she though the treasure
would be searched for, he cut her head off with his sword, then buried her
deep in the marsh. This is a story by Mary Picket of Cambridge.

The Negro slave woman, Miz Big Liz, is said to be seen at DeCoursey
Bridge. To summon Big Liz one must visit the bridge in the dead of night,
sound it's horn six times, blink it's lights three times. She approaches
slowly, shuffling, shoulder stooped as she carries her head in her hands,
with it's eyes aglow like branding irons fired to a white heat.


Several tails concern the legend are of an older man, name Charles Jackson , a area native and knew the swamp well stayed a bit late when
picking huckleberries and night overtook him.. He came out of the swamp
running so hard he had a heart attack that put him on his deathbed. What he saw is not known but it was highly out of the usual.

Toby Barris, who used Longfield road through Green Briar as a short cut
between Bestpitch Ferry and Canes Ditch saw something and came out
in a state of shock.

Harriet Tubman also comes into play. After her escape from her
Bucktown plantation she became a scout for a Union Army troop.
It is told that her former master feared her so much, he too buried treasure
in the Green Briar Swamp for fear the Union troops would plunder his
plantation. Searches have been made but always end with something
unusual happening, ghost,, high winds, strange lights, so forth.

The burial graves are unusual to find. There are two which location is
known, one is the one that Big Liz and the treasure are in and another,
miles apart, with the remains of another slave.

Another Cambridge man, Ben Robinson, says he has seen the vault,
way back in late 1930's. It is describes as a three foot high brick vault
with mossy cement to top it out. While picking huckelberries he even
rested on the wall. Buckets full, he was on his way our, then heard a shrill
voice, looked around and saw a Negro woman, sitting on a log, staring a
him with blazing eyes. As he was staring at her, she disappeared. A
recent attempt to find that grave was unsuccessful. So, does a grave
vault indeed exist in Green Briar Swamp ?

Corporal John Bramble, Cambridge police officer, has said there is a vault
in the place where Robinson, sat and rested . Herb North, of Bestpich,
has told of strange things happening in that swamp and that there is a
treasure in there, someplace. .

Source: Between The Blackwater And The Nanticoke, by Brice Neal
Stump.. 1967


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