Ghost Hunters International: hmmm...

Ghost Hunters International: hmmm...
Another episode of GHI has come and gone. I'm just not that sure about this incarnation of the Ghost Hunters franchise. It just doesn't have the zing that Ghost Hunters has. Having said that, one of the more irritating things about both of these shows is that they constantly run around saying, "did you hear that?" yet the producers of the show keep that irritating music/sound effects bed running underneath everything, so nobody in the audience can hear anything... That's one really nice thing about the show Ghost Adventures; they don't muddy up their episodes with too much background music and sound effects crap. Message to GH and GHI: turn the background music and sound effects off!!!

A Visit to Haunted Preston Castle in Ione, CA





The picture, just above, shows a taped "X," placed by the Ghost Adventures team when they visited Preston Castle for their season premiere in July, 2009. This "X" was placed in the kitchen area. You can see some of the episode, as well as this X in the video below:



In 1890, the California State Legislature purchased 230 acres from the Ione Coal & Iron Company for construction of the Preston School of Industry, a place where troubled boys could learn a trade instead of being incarcerated in juvenile prisons.

The complex was highly self-sufficient; the large acreage of the purchase allowed the boys to grow their own food, raise livestock and learn farming trades. Additionally, there was a print shop, bakery and cobbler shop where the young delinquents and otherwise homeless boys could learn skills for self-preservation in the real world.

The school officially opened on June 13, 1894, and the first wards moved in only two weeks later. The superintendent controlled life inside the Preston School of Industry, where discipline was extreme. Loss of privileges seemed minor in comparison to starvation, isolation, and public paddling and lashings, severe strategies that were common at Preston.

A convicted burglar, Samuel Goins, arrived at Preston School in July 1918. Within his first year, Samuel attempted to escape Preston three times. On April 19, 1919, during his third attempt, a Preston guard named John Kelly shot Samuel in the back; at 20 years old, he died two months shy of his release date. Samuel is buried in the Preston cemetery, along with 16 other young men who died within the school walls -- most from diseases like Yellow Fever and Tuberculosis.

The murder of Samuel Goins was not the only fatal act of violence that occurred at the school. In 1950, Preston’s head housekeeper, Anna Corbin, was beaten to death in the school’s basement. A flimsy case was formed against Eugene Monroe, one of the few black children at the school. Tried twice, the jury was hung each time; Anna Corbin’s killer was never found.