The True Story of Alexandria’s Burning Bride

Posted by junketseo in Alexandria Ghost Tours
The True Story of Alexandria’s Burning Bride - Photo

In a previous post, we told the tragic tale of Laura Schaffer of Alexandria. A young lady on her wedding night is killed in a freak accident when her wedding dress catches on fire. The incident, unfortunately, turned her into an urban legend and led generations to refer to her as “The Burning Bride of Alexandria.” However, this story is a remnant of years of rumor and gossip, a game of telephone that went on for almost two hundred years. While this version of the story is heartbreaking, the real thing is even more of a travesty.

 

Who is The Burning Bride of Alexandria?

 

The story- with some slight variations throughout the years- told and written about Laura is that she died in June of 1868 on her wedding night. While trying on her wedding dress, she spilled a kerosene lamp on herself. The dress goes right up in flames. Laura understandably panicked, but the door to her room was stuck, and she couldn’t escape. She went on to die from her injuries, and her funeral was held in the parlor on her wedding day. But what is the real story? Keep reading to find out!

Want to learn more about the legends of Alexandria? Book an Alexandria ghost tour with Alexandria Ghosts!

 

The True Story of Laura Schaffer

 

There is a kernel of truth to the legends that have been passed down for generations.

The real Laura Schaffer was the youngest child of Christian and Susan Schaffer, a prominent couple who owned a confectionery shop in Alexandria. On the fateful night of June 27, 1868, after they closed the shop for the night, the family retired to their upstairs apartment.

Laura’s upcoming nuptials to a young man named Charles Tenneson were the talk of the family, if not the entire town. Even in the newspapers where their engagement was announced, Charles was regarded for his “kindness of heart and agreeable manners” and “he had been her constant companion for years.” Laura had never had another beau and wanted no other. They would wed soon, looking forward to a lifetime together.

While getting ready for bed, Laura took a kerosene lamp to her father’s bedroom to bid him good evening. It was then that the lamp’s glass cracked, and burning oil splashed onto her clothes. Her Victorian clothes, consisting of the standard hoop skirt, corset, and thick layers of fabric, fed the raging fire and prevented her from stripping out of the flaming materials.

Dropping the lamp in her father’s room and causing a fire there, she fled through the house, screaming in pain as the fire caught her skin and hair. Running fanned the flames, and by the time she got to the stairs, her mother and brother-in-law tried to help her. The fire in her father’s bedroom was extinguished, though the flames had reached the ceiling.

Laura was covered in 2nd and 3rd-degree burns; parts of her skin were even described as “the consistency of a crisp” by the summoned physician, Dr. Lewis. There’s speculation that she may have had to suffer for over fifteen hours until she passed away at 11 a.m. on June 29, 1868, at the tender age of 26 years old.

As usual, her beloved Charles was by her side when she died.

 

Charles Tenneson’s Dark Fate

 

Charles, despondent over the death of his beloved, decided to drown his grief with copious amounts of alcohol. With the company of his friend Henry Green to bolster his mood, Charles went to a wholesale liquor warehouse where his friend was a member. Letting themselves inside, Henry pulled two ales, and they drank in stunned silence.

Laura was widely regarded as a pillar of her community, described in the Gazette as a pretty ornament with a large circle of friends and family devastated at her tragic passing.

Charles, known for his cheerful attitude previously, quickly became dreary and depressed. When Charles finished his drink, Henry grabbed the mugs to clean them.  Behind him, the sudden loud retort of gunfire tore through the air and echoed around the warehouse.

Henry turned in time to see his friend’s limp body hit the ground; a self-inflicted bullet wound bleeding from his temple from his Whitney revolver. Henry summoned a doctor, but Charles’ injury was too severe. The bullet had not exited smoothly but rather bounced around in the skull. Instead of a painless and instant death, he was now dying slowly in a catatonic limbo.

Twenty minutes later, he breathed his last breath, not four hours after his beloved Laura had died.

 

Together at Last?

 

A story worthy of Shakespeare’s quill, this tale of star-crossed lovers is sadly true. Unfortunately, the story becomes warped over time as details, dates, and people are added or subtracted to make the tale more interesting. Charles is usually never mentioned, or he died later, usually of a broken heart (which is not exactly wrong). Laura always dies in her wedding dress at some point on her wedding day.

Still, their story may not have ended with the newspaper obituaries. It seems that both male and female spirits have been felt in the house and nearby properties.

It’s believed that Laura is the female spirit and has manifested herself over the years. Children claim to see her in her wedding dress, crying in a corner. Adults have seen the lit kerosene lamp move from room to room after hours. There’s been the smell of burning hair. A cold wind will whip past people down the stairs, believed to be Laura sprinting for her life. A woman’s voice was recorded saying “Hello” to a paranormal investigator.

When the building was a real estate office, a woman claimed that the doors swelled shut on her, and she couldn’t leave. Suddenly, the door flew open, and a gush of cold air flew past her. She claimed to hear the panting breaths of a person at the bottom of the stairs, but there was no one there.

It seems that Charles did not stay as amiable as he was in life. If people sense a male presence, he is considered angry or inspires feelings of dread. There’s a sense of doom and claustrophobia inside. A male voice was recorded telling a business owner, “Enough!” and “Leave!” The candy store has had displays knocked over and items moved in the night.

 

Haunted Alexandria

 

Tragedy can sometimes leave a scar on a place, and it may be that Laura’s death was so sad and awful it left an imprint on the very building itself. Residual hauntings can be understood as a “recording” of an event playing on a loop. Some of the things reported by witnesses suggest that Laura’s sprint left a literal impression that will “play” when the time is right.

Whether it is a recording or whether Laura and Charles are spirits who try to reach out to people. Their story is one for the ages, and it doesn’t seem they will go away anytime soon.

For more haunted tales of Alexandria, keep reading our blog. To see these cursed hot spots in person, book an Alexandria ghost tour with Alexandria Ghosts!

 

Sources:

https://boundarystones.weta.org/2018/10/22/phantoms-north-fairfax-street

https://alexandriadailyphoto.wordpress.com/2006/10/25/the-tale-of-the-burning-bride/

http://phantasticphantoms.blogspot.com/2012/05/old-town-alexandria.html

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/3-of-alexandrias-spookiest-ghost-stories/30408/