• 404
  • About
    • Copyright Notice
    • Distribution
      • Where to find
    • Our Advertisers
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
  • Account
  • Advertise
    • Building Your Audience
    • Why Dimple Times?
  • Business Review Inquiry
  • Calendar of Events
  • Cart
  • Celebration of Life
  • Comics
    • Esther & Forrest
    • Happy Circa
    • Pumpkin Rollers
    • Toilet Talez
  • Community
    • Community Sponsors
    • Dimple Bites
    • Events
    • Fairfield County Events
      • Fairfield County Stories
    • Fayette County Events
    • Pickaway County Events
      • Pickaway County Stories
    • Ross County Events
      • Ross County Stories
  • Contact
    • Ask a gardener
    • Become a Contributor
  • Coupons
  • Fayette County Stories
  • Features
  • Home
  • Home – All Post
  • Home 1
  • Home 2
  • Home Test
  • My account
  • Podcast
  • Radio
    • Song Request
  • Read Current Digital Edition of Dimple Times
  • Reader’s Contest
  • Roundtown Christmas Light Contest – 2020
  • Shop
  • Store
  • Subscribe
  • Vote
Dimple Times
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Dimple Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Scatter Entertainment

Was the Headless Horseman real

Editors by Editors
October 14, 2022
in Entertainment, Informative, Scatter
2 0
0
Was the Headless Horseman real

Was the Headless Horseman real

10
SHARES
96
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

Way back in 1820, author Washington Irving wrote a little story that today, 200 years later, still haunts us, especially at Halloween.

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is set in the New York Dutch settlement of Tarry Town in 1790. In the countryside surrounding the town is a lonely and mysterious glen, feared by the superstitious — which was just about everyone in the area. Among the spirits inhabiting the glen is the Headless Horseman, a Hessian soldier who was killed in the American Revolution and still “rides forth to the scene of battle in nightly quest of his head.”

In the tale, the spindly, eccentric schoolmaster Ichabod Crane who, Irving wrote, looked like an escaped scarecrow, has a memorable confrontation with the Horseman, after which all that remains is Crane’s melancholy spirit haunting the hollow. Or maybe Crane just ran away — the book suggests both outcomes could be true.

Yet on Staten Island, visitors to the Springville Cemetery can see an actual gravesite dedicated to who else but Ichabod Crane.

This Ichabod Crane was a real person and a contemporary of Washington Irving. In fact, they served together during the War of 1812 at Fort Pike in Sackets Harbor, New York, in 1814.

The real Ichabod was a soldier for 48 years, a man from a military family who had a distinguished career and retired as an Army Colonel. Ironically, the name Ichabod means ‘without glory’ in Hebrew. But Ichabod’s name would be forgotten today had it not been laid on a character in a ghost story. But Irving never said he named his school teacher character after the real Ichabod, though certainly he knew of the man. In fact, Irving said he based his schoolmaster on a real teacher who lived in Kinderhook, New York.

Previous Post

How to care for your teeth over winter

Next Post

Cost of living crisis: How to take control of your money

Next Post
Cost of living crisis: How to take control of your money

Cost of living crisis: How to take control of your money

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Choose Your News

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • View Digital Issues
  • Subscribe
  • Features
  • Informative
  • Interactive
  • Inspiring
  • Reader’s Contest
  • Dave Says
  • Max Life
  • Poetic Pauses
  • Home & Garden
  • Business
  • 404
  • About
  • Account
  • Advertise
  • Business Review Inquiry
  • Calendar of Events
  • Cart
  • Celebration of Life
  • Comics
  • Community
  • Contact
  • Coupons
  • Fayette County Stories
  • Features
  • Home
  • Home – All Post
  • Home 1
  • Home 2
  • Home Test
  • My account
  • Podcast
  • Radio
  • Read Current Digital Edition of Dimple Times
  • Reader’s Contest
  • Roundtown Christmas Light Contest – 2020
  • Shop
  • Store
  • Subscribe
  • Vote

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • 404
  • About
    • Copyright Notice
    • Distribution
      • Where to find
    • Our Advertisers
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
  • Account
  • Advertise
    • Building Your Audience
    • Why Dimple Times?
  • Business Review Inquiry
  • Calendar of Events
  • Cart
  • Celebration of Life
  • Comics
    • Esther & Forrest
    • Happy Circa
    • Pumpkin Rollers
    • Toilet Talez
  • Community
    • Community Sponsors
    • Dimple Bites
    • Events
    • Fairfield County Events
      • Fairfield County Stories
    • Fayette County Events
    • Pickaway County Events
      • Pickaway County Stories
    • Ross County Events
      • Ross County Stories
  • Contact
    • Ask a gardener
    • Become a Contributor
  • Coupons
  • Fayette County Stories
  • Features
  • Home
  • Home – All Post
  • Home 1
  • Home 2
  • Home Test
  • My account
  • Podcast
  • Radio
    • Song Request
  • Read Current Digital Edition of Dimple Times
  • Reader’s Contest
  • Roundtown Christmas Light Contest – 2020
  • Shop
  • Store
  • Subscribe
  • Vote

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.