Among the ruins of an old sugarcane plantation in the Caribbean island, Nevis, it is said that the ghost of the plantation daughter is haunting the place after her wedding celebration ended in a blood bath. Legend holds that the Eden Brown Estate is still haunted by the dead in a history of love and betrayal.
If you’re a fan of the paranormal, you’ll want to hear about the strange and eerie occurrences at Eden Brown Estate in Nevis. Nevis is one of the islands forming the Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis in the Caribbean Sea.
The name Nevis comes from the Spanish Nuestra Señora de las Nieves meaning Our Lady of the Snows, perhaps alluding to the clouds covering the top of Nevis Peak.
In one of the least populated areas of Nevis, the old Eden Brown Estate is now in ruins. This historic plantation, once a bustling hub of sugar production during colonial times, has long been rumored to be haunted by the ghost of Miss Huggins haunting the grounds, “lamenting her sorrow and searching for her lost love”.
History of the Eden Brown Estate and its Paranormal Activity
The Eden Brown Estate was built in the 1740s and was home to many enslaved Africans who were forced to work on the sugar plantations. When the Huggin family took over, they turned the simple mill into a big sugar plantation and wanted it to grow further.
One of the owners, Edward Huggins, was actually brought to court because he treated his slaves so cruelly. He was acquitted though by the all white plantation owners jury. However, this case sparked the movement to free the slaves of Nevis and led to the 1833 Act of Emancipation.
The paranormal activity at Eden Brown Estate has been documented over the years. Visitors and locals have reported hearing unexplained footsteps, voices, and even screams coming from the abandoned buildings. Ghostly apparitions have been spotted walking through the estate, and some have even reported being touched or pushed by an unseen force. The Eden Brown Estate has become known as one of the most haunted locations in the Caribbean.
The Tragic Love Story Haunting the Plantation
The ghost story told comes from a tragic love story. Daughter of the notorious Edward Huggins was Julia Huggins, according to this story. She was the heiress to the plantation and was in 1822 set to marry Walter Maynard. The Maynards were from a neighboring estate and the two families were openly enemies and didn’t get along.
Still, their marriage would ensure the Huggin’s place as powerful plantation owners, and Edward wanted to impress their wealthy neighbors. For the wedding, he bought furniture from Africa, silverware from China and imported food from all over the world.
Read More: Check out Myrtles Plantation and the Ghosts that Remains for more ghost stories from plantations
The story goes that the groom and Julia’s brother, John Huggin shot and killed each other in a duel. Sometimes John Huggin is said to have been the best man. They were all gathered at the plantation to celebrate the oncoming wedding and an argument broke out between the two men. It was said that the Maynard treated their slaves better and was appalled by the Huggins. This is what the argument started as. Or perhaps was it because they argued about a ‘mulatto’ slave mistress? Today, we will never really know.
If there was true love between Julia and Walter is also unknown, but it is said she was left heartbroken and alone, having lost both her fiance and brother. Some say that the incident made her mad. She isolated herself at her family home of Mountravers and years later, she died as a spinster.
The plantation was closed and left to decay, eventually crumbling down to the ruins still left.
Famous sightings and experiences at the Eden Brown Estate
There have been many famous sightings and experiences at Eden Brown Estate over the years. Reports talk about seeing the ghosts of Julia, John and Walter roaming the ruins in the night.
According to the tourism board, people have also heard Julia’s wailing and seen her on the steps of the Great House in her tattered wedding gown she never got to attend.
The Truth of the Tragic Story
How much of this tragic tale is true though? It has certainly been used as a tourism tool and by locals to spook each other. But what really happened that day?
There are many theories and explanations for the paranormal activity at Eden Brown Estate. In some versions, Julia isn’t even mentioned and it’s John who is haunting the place with his bride. This is unlikely as he already was married to Elizabeth Mary Moreton.
What is true though is that there was true ill will between the two families, as the Maynards were the one who first made a move against Huggins when he ordered the flogging of his slaves from Mountravers in the public market.
A letter written by Peter Thomas Huggins to his friend Charles Pinney says this about the incident that allegedly happened at the Eden Brown Estate.
‘I am sure you must have been shocked on hearing of the melancholy death of my most excellent Brother John by the hand of that ferocious wretch Walter Maynard persecuted as my Father has been by this man and his family by rancorous hatred and the blackest malevolence instigated by no other motive but envy. Yet upon all occasions he has been ready when in need to solicit favors from my Father and to abuse his neighbourly kindness after. The origin of this lamentable occurrence (was this) Maynard’s Blacksmith got a severe injury which rendered him incapable of any service, Maynard applied to John for the loan of my Father’s smith. John did not feel himself authorized to lend the smith without my Father’s knowledge and accordingly he wrote to my Father and his answer was do as you like, “but I wish to have nothing to do with him for he has always been hostile to me”. However poor John wishing to live on friendly terms lent the smith to work for Maynard at noon every day. About this time Maynard prosecutes my Father’s overseer for purchasing some boards which he suspected were stolen from him. And as it was in the middle of the crop my Mother sent and requested Mr Maynard not to have judgement called upon this unfortunate fellow before the crop was off as they had no other overseer on the estate and my Father was blind and could not attend to it. His answer to this was by G- he would put him in goal. My Father thought as he had so little consideration for his convenience he wd not suffer his smith to go every day to Maynard upon wch Maynard wrote him a letter and it was answered in as mild and temperate a way as possible. However a week after Maynard assaulted my Father in Town publicly in the street and challenged him who was blind to fight. John wrote him a letter wch I have requested Christopher Claxton to show you and the result was he sent John a challenge. Poor John had no alternative left. John’s friend used every exertion to avoid going to extremities and after the first fire he endeavoured but in vain to prevent further proceeding. Maynard void of religion or feeling glories from what I can learn in this heartrending transaction which has overwhelmed a whole family with grief.’
But were the Maynards truly any better? It is said that Walter Maynard had a bad reputation among the plantation and slave owners as well, and had been turned down by another woman because she had heard about how bad he treated his slaves. This makes it rather unlikely that the argument started because of the treatment of their slaves. And if the argument was about the beautiful slave girl, it puts a tear in the love story the ghost story is based on.
Because what about Julia? Although the ghost story revolves around her, the details around the dates and names are hazy at best. There really was a Julia Huggins, but she was the daughter of John, Peter Thomas Huggins of Mountravers. Could this be the woman set to marry a Maynard that turned into the deadly duel?
The Haunting of Eden Brown Estate
Whether a true story, or just a local legend, the story about the Eden Brown Estate is a fascinating and eerie location that offers a glimpse into the dark history of the Caribbean plantations.
If it is Julia or someone else, the ghosts of the old sugar plantations seems to linger, even after the Great House is crumbling to dust.
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References:
Haunted Plantation Ruins of the Caribbean, Nevis
