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Mystery Of The Wizard Clip – Unexplained Half-Moon Clippings And Supernatural Phenomena West Virginia

Mystery Of The Wizard Clip - Unexplained Half-Moon Clippings And Supernatural Phenomena West Virginia

Ellen Lloyd - AncientPages.com - Everything went wrong from the day the stranger knocked on the door. Nothing was ever the same after his arrival, but what did happen, and what was the frightening voice people heard? Where did it come from? To whom did it belong?

As always, it becomes difficult to determine how much of this story is true when historical events turn into a legend. Still, Rev. Alfred E. Smith, editor-in-chief of the Catholic Review and secretary to Cardinal Gibbons, said this incident was the "truest ghost story ever told."

Were people in West Virginia confronted with supernatural phenomena?  Some are still convinced this was the case and avoid discussing the incident.

A Stranger Comes To Middleway

As the story goes, everything started in 1794 when a traveler came to the house of a former Pennsylvanian named Adam Livingston. The stranger stayed with Livingston, but after just a couple of days, his condition deteriorated, and it was evident he was dying. It was a time when Virginia was still being settled before West Virginia became its state.

Lying on his bed, the traveler, whose name remains unknown, asked Livingston to send a Catholic priest who could offer his spiritual services. Still, Livingston, an intolerant member of the Lutheran church, refused and declared "that he knew of no priest in that neighborhood, and if there was one, he should never pass the threshold of his door."

The dying man, a Catholic, repeated his request several times, but no priest came, and finally, he died in Livingstone's house.

That is when the hell broke out. Before moving to Middleway in West Virginia, Livingstone owned a large area of Pennsylvania. However, according to The Mystery of the Wizard Clip, a published account from 1949, his property experienced several disasters for unknown reasons. His cattle died, and his barn was burned to the ground. Livingstone, his wife, three sons, and four daughters needed a fresh start, so they moved to West Virginia. Soon, Livingstone gained a reputation for being an honest, hardworking farmer and may have enjoyed a good life if it hadn't been for the stranger he met in 1794.

The unknown man who died in Livingstone's house was buried nearby without the benefit of a Catholic service.

People Witness Supernatural Phenomena On Livingstone's Property

This entire story is somewhat peculiar because unexplained events took place even before the traveler died.

In 1904, the West Virginia Historical Magazine Quarterly wrote that "on the night of his death, Livingston employed a man by the name of Jacob Foster to sit up with the corpse. But as soon as the candles were lighted in the chamber of the dead, they went out after giving a weak and flickering light, and the room was left in darkness. They were relighted several times, supposing it to result from some remedial defect in the cradle, but with the same result. Livingston then brought two candles into the room he had been using in his family room, about one-third burnt down, which he knew to be good. But so soon as they were placed in the room with the corpse, they were immediately extinguished. This so alarmed Foster that he abandoned his vigils and left the house. Fifty years ago, the stranger's grave could be distinctly pointed out.

On the night succeeding the burial, Livingston's peace was disturbed by the apparent sound of horses galloping around his house. He frequently rose during the night - a beautiful moonlight night - to satisfy his mind. While he could distinctly hear the tramp of steeds, he could see nothing to assure him that it was anything more than a figment of his imagination.

In about a week afterward, his barn was burnt, and his cattle all died; the crockeryware in his house, without any visible agency, was thrown upon the floor and broken; his money disappeared; the heads of his turkeys and chickens dropped off; and chunks of burning wood would leap from the fireplace several feet out into the floor, endangering the building unless promptly replaced.”

The name of the traveler who came to Livingstone's house remains unknown. Credit: Public Domain

Mysterious Clipping, Peculiar Figures And Strange Sounds

“Soon the annoyances, which were then destroying his peace, assumed a new form. The sound of a. large pair of shears could be distinctly heard in his house, clipping in the form of half-moons and other curious figures, his blankets, sheets and counterpanes, boots and shoes, clothing, etc.

This was all in one night, but the clipping operation continued for upwards of three months, a small portion of it only being done at a time, but the inexorable shears never being silent twenty-four hours a time. By this time, the news of these strange proceedings was spread through the country for thirty miles around and attracted especially the curiosity of the citizens of Smithfield.

An old Presbyterian lady of Martinsburg, hearing of the clipping that was going on at Livingston's to satisfy her curiosity, went to Livingston's house. Before entering the door, she took her new silk cap from her head, wrapped it in her silk handkerchief, and put it in her pocket to save it from clipping. After a while, she stepped out again to go home. Having drawn the handkerchief out of her pocket and opened it, she found the cap cut in narrow ribbons.

Many other phenomena are stated and testified to by many witnesses. The long continuance of this mysterious clipping had now aroused the country for many miles around. Three daring and adventurous young men from Winchester came to Smithfield declaring their utter unbelief in the reports and offered to sleep in the house all night and to face the devil himself if he were the author of these doings.

But as soon as they became comfortably seated in the house, a large stone was seen proceeding from the fireplace and whirling around the floor with great velocity when they took to their heels and made their escape." 1

Isn't it strange this was the second time Livingstone's barn had been destroyed? First in Pennsylvania and later in West Virginia. It seems Livingstone's fate had been sealed.

A historical plaque in Middleway, West Virginia with scissors and a half-moon: symbols related to the legend of the Wizard Clip. Credit: Kilo22 - CC BY-SA 4.0

As the legend tells, Livingstone, who was a nerve wreck by now, implored Father Dennis Cahill, an immigrant Irish priest in Shepherdstown, to visit his house to investigate. When Father Cahill sprinkled holy water on the property, some of the manifestations changed, and a sum of previously missing money was deposited on the house's threshold. Later, a mass was held at home, and suddenly, the haunting ceased.

Livingstone's World Changed

"Livingston was relieved from all annoyances of his ghostly visitor, and it is said that "from that time until he left Virginia, he had frequent communications with the Spiritual world."

Nevertheless, though Livingstone had not gotten rid of his ghost, his family reported more supernatural events. Legend tells the family that they started to hear a mysterious voice they feared, or at least at the beginning. Later, they understood that this was a "consoling voice" belonging to a mysterious entity that had stayed with them for 17 years. One day, the voice manifested itself as a bright light. Livingstone and his family were asleep, but the voice told Livingstone to get up, gather his family, and pray. The voice was pleasant and served as a guide. In time, Livingstone became convinced that the mysterious voice belonged to a soul in purgatory, and it shouldn't be surprising to learn that Livingstone and his family had converted to the Catholic faith.

In 1809, Livingston sold his farm and moved back to Pennsylvania.

Today, the land Livingstone once owned belongs to the Priest Field Pastoral Center and the Church. It's a spiritual retreat for believers, but no one talks much about the Wizard Clip story unless visitors ask for more information.

The legend of the Wizard Clip is still alive among locals, and in Middleway, there are historical markers with a crescent moon and shears in opposite corners to honor the legend.

Something did happen in Middleway all those years ago, and those events have not been forgotten.

Written by  Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com

First version of this article was published on December 14, 2020.

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Expand for references
  1. Laidley, W. S. - "WIZZARD CLIP" (Wizard Clip), West Virginia Historical Magazine Quarterly, January 1904
  2. A.L. Marshall - Adam Livingston, the Wizard Clip, the Voice: An Historical Account
  3. Raphael Brown, The Mystery of the Wizard Clip [at Middleway, West Virginia], Richmond, Catholic Historical Society
  4. Bates, Robert L. - The Story of Smithfield (Middleway), Jefferson County, West Virginia
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