• The Farnsworth House Haunting

  • On the Gettysburg Ghost Trail
  • By: Richard Estep
  • Narrated by: AZ Francsa
  • Length: 5 hrs and 25 mins
  • 4.2 out of 5 stars (10 ratings)

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The Farnsworth House Haunting  By  cover art

The Farnsworth House Haunting

By: Richard Estep
Narrated by: AZ Francsa
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Publisher's summary

July, 1863. The small Pennsylvania town of Gettysburg is torn apart when two armies collide. Over the next three days, more than 50,000 men will become casualties, while the residents of Gettysburg take shelter in their cellars.

On the southern edge of town, a brick house, owned by one Harvey Sweney, is taken over by Confederate skirmishers. From upstairs in the attic, snipers pour a withering hail of fire down on the Union position at Cemetery Hill. The Union soldiers fight back, peppering the south wall of the Sweney House with hundreds of bullet holes.

The numbers of dead begin to mount on both sides, until General Lee finally withdraws his forces. Now, more than 150 years later, the Sweney House has become the Farnsworth House Inn. Echoes of those bloody days still linger. Phantom boots thud across the attic floor. Apparitions and shadow figures haunt the guest rooms and prowl the hallways.

Join TV's Richard Estep (Haunted Case Files, Haunted Hospitals, Paranormal 911) as he learns why the Farnsworth House is rightly regarded as one of Gettysburg's most haunted places.

©2019 Richard Estep (P)2020 Richard Estep

What listeners say about The Farnsworth House Haunting

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Great Book

I have always been a friend of GETTYSBURG and it’s one of my favorite places to go listening to the stories draw you in so much more. The stories told well by the author

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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Gettysburg Ghosts

Very interesting read. I love everything Gettysburg and the stories that were included here, as well as the history that was shared. I had no idea that there were so many stories around this one place. I know where I need to stop on my next visit to Gettysburg!

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Another finely woven tale

Richard Estep has a knack for weaving in enough of both the paranormal and historical accounts to make a riveting book. He makes the characters come alive so to speak.

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    1 out of 5 stars
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Regurgitation of local lore

There is nothing new or interesting in this story, and the audio performance is awful. Who the heck mispronounces Appomattox and Potomac in a work about the Civil War?

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