American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation
Could the Fox sisters actually speak to the dead—or were they frauds?

Rap. Rap. Rap. The eerie sound was first heard in March of 1848 at the home of the Fox family in Hydesville, New York. The family’s two daughters, Kate and Maggie, soon discovered that they could communicate with the spirit that was making these uncanny noises; he told them he had been a traveling peddler who had been murdered. This strange incident, and the ones that followed, generated a media frenzy beyond anything the Fox sisters could have imagined. Kate and Maggie, managed (or perhaps manipulated) by their elder sister Leah, became famous spirit mediums, giving public exhibitions, and advising other celebrities of their day.

But were the Fox sisters legitimate? In the years that followed their rise, the Civil War killed roughly 1 in 4 soldiers, increasing the demand for contacting the dead. However, media campaigns against the sisters gathered steam as well...

This thrilling and mysterious true story from veteran author Barb Rosenstock (Caldecott Honor winner) will spark teens’ interest in American history, encourage media literacy, and reveal insights into the Civil War era, fake news, and women's rights.
1146010313
American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation
Could the Fox sisters actually speak to the dead—or were they frauds?

Rap. Rap. Rap. The eerie sound was first heard in March of 1848 at the home of the Fox family in Hydesville, New York. The family’s two daughters, Kate and Maggie, soon discovered that they could communicate with the spirit that was making these uncanny noises; he told them he had been a traveling peddler who had been murdered. This strange incident, and the ones that followed, generated a media frenzy beyond anything the Fox sisters could have imagined. Kate and Maggie, managed (or perhaps manipulated) by their elder sister Leah, became famous spirit mediums, giving public exhibitions, and advising other celebrities of their day.

But were the Fox sisters legitimate? In the years that followed their rise, the Civil War killed roughly 1 in 4 soldiers, increasing the demand for contacting the dead. However, media campaigns against the sisters gathered steam as well...

This thrilling and mysterious true story from veteran author Barb Rosenstock (Caldecott Honor winner) will spark teens’ interest in American history, encourage media literacy, and reveal insights into the Civil War era, fake news, and women's rights.
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American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation

American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation

by Barb Rosenstock
American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation

American Spirits: The Famous Fox Sisters and the Mysterious Fad that Haunted a Nation

by Barb Rosenstock

Hardcover

$24.99 
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Overview

Could the Fox sisters actually speak to the dead—or were they frauds?

Rap. Rap. Rap. The eerie sound was first heard in March of 1848 at the home of the Fox family in Hydesville, New York. The family’s two daughters, Kate and Maggie, soon discovered that they could communicate with the spirit that was making these uncanny noises; he told them he had been a traveling peddler who had been murdered. This strange incident, and the ones that followed, generated a media frenzy beyond anything the Fox sisters could have imagined. Kate and Maggie, managed (or perhaps manipulated) by their elder sister Leah, became famous spirit mediums, giving public exhibitions, and advising other celebrities of their day.

But were the Fox sisters legitimate? In the years that followed their rise, the Civil War killed roughly 1 in 4 soldiers, increasing the demand for contacting the dead. However, media campaigns against the sisters gathered steam as well...

This thrilling and mysterious true story from veteran author Barb Rosenstock (Caldecott Honor winner) will spark teens’ interest in American history, encourage media literacy, and reveal insights into the Civil War era, fake news, and women's rights.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781635928051
Publisher: Astra Publishing House
Publication date: 04/15/2025
Pages: 244
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

About the Author

Barb Rosenstock is the author of many nonfiction books for young people, including Mornings With Monet, Fight of the Century, Prairie Boy, and Dorothea’s Eyes. Her picture book on Vasily Kandinsky, The Noisy Paint Box, won the Caldecott Honor. Visit barbrosenstock.com.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1
FOOL’S EVE
Rap. Rap. Rap.
What was that sound?
Half an hour after the light had been snuffed out, Maggie and
Kate Fox snuggled under the covers. On early spring nights in rural
Hydesville, New York, the chill dampness from Mud Creek seeped into a person’s bones should a foot, or a finger, escape thick layers of homemade quilts. Maggie, fourteen, and Kate, who had just turned eleven,
peered into the shadows near their parent’s bed across the room. Sure enough, there was Mother padding about in the darkness. Father relit the candle and joined his wife in hunting for the cause of the odd noises.
Rap. Rap.
The family had just moved in a few months ago, in early December of 1847. The rented cottage had just four rooms—bedroom, front room,
kitchen, and buttery. Mother and Father crisscrossed the floorboards,
wiggled the front door latch, listened to the individual creak of each stair,
They searched from the slanted loft down to the dirt cellar. Like last night, and every night of the past week, they found nothing that might make a strange rapping sound. Maggie and Kate watched their parents give up and climb back into bed. Father blew out the candle.
Mother closed her eyes.
Rap. A mystery.
The unsettling sounds continued night after night until Mother felt
“almost sick.” The weather that spring of 1848 wouldn’t settle either.
After a few warmer days, on March 29 it turned so cold that around midnight an ice wedge stopped the constant crash of New York’s Niagara
Falls. Religious feeling had been whipped up by waves of Christian revivals throughout the western part of the state. In Niagara’s eerie silence, some of the newly faithful predicted miracles, others the world’s end.
Maggie and Kate’s much older brother, David, stopped by that
Friday, March 31. He tried to soothe Mother’s complaints about the house’s strange sounds. David reminded her that soon they’d be moving out of this tiny rental to a new home on his nearby peppermint farm.
The rappings were probably “the simplest things in the world.” Before he returned to his wife and children, David told Mother to ignore the nighttime noises and get a good night’s sleep.
The wind whistled across the marsh grasses that afternoon. Father stayed in the front room with his Bible. Maggie, Kate, and Mother went to bed before the sun set. As the bedroom darkened . . .
Rap.
Five minutes passed.
Rap. Rap.
Kate sat up and snapped her fingers.
“As fast as she made the noise with her hands or fingers, the sound was followed up in the room,” Mother would later explain.
Snap. Snap. Snap.
Rap. Rap. Rap.
In the dim light, Maggie said, “Now do this just as I do. Count one,
two, three, four,” while clapping her hands.
Clap. Clap. Clap. Clap.
Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap.
Were the knocks responding? Mother ordered, “Count ten.”
Ten raps sounded like a drumbeat.
Kate touched two of her fingers together, lightly, without making a sound. Once, twice, three times.
Rap. Rap. Rap.
“Only look, mother! It can see as well as hear!” said Kate.
It? What was It? And what could It know about her family? Mother asked the night sounds to tell her the number of children she’d born.
Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap.
Seven. Everyone knew the Fox family had six children—Leah, Maria,
Elizabeth, and David, now grown; Maggie and Kate, still at home. Mr. and Mrs. Fox were lucky parents; about half of American babies born in the mid-1800s died before their fifth birthday. There was no protection from common childhood illness like tuberculosis, rheumatic fever, diphtheria, or whooping cough. But the Foxes hadn’t entirely escaped that all-too-common tragedy. They’d buried a stillborn baby years back. No one in Hydesville knew. Seven was the correct number.
Stunned, Mother asked the night air if the mysterious sounds were made by a human. The answer? Total silence.
Then Mother asked, “Is it a spirit?”
Rap!
Hearing his girls’ voices, Father entered the bedroom. He found his wife convinced that she was speaking to an invisible presence from beyond the grave. Mother Fox later insisted she was “not a believer in haunted houses or supernatural Appearances.” But a mystic strain ran through Mother’s extended family. Her sister had visions of her future headstone, and her mother was known to fall into a dreamlike state and predict neighbors’ funerals weeks before their deaths took place.
Maggie and Kate knew these family tales. Like most young people of their time, the sisters also grew up with popular ghost stories like author Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and
Methodist founder John Wesley’s family haunt, “Old Jeffrey.” Ghosts were everywhere in nineteenth-century America. Now, it seemed, the
Fox family had one of their very own.
Mother intended to find out what this particularly noisy spirit wanted.
By asking simple yes or no questions, listening for raps or silences,
Mother learned that their spirit was a man. He’d been fatally injured in the Fox family’s cottage. She asked how old he was when he died.
Thirty-one raps sounded, one right after the other.
Mother asked, “Will this noise continue if I call in my neighbors?”
A pause, and then . . .
Rap.
She sent her husband into the cold night to a nearby neighbor, Mrs.
Redfield.
Mrs. Mary Redfield hadn’t known the family long; but she’d run into the girls on the main road a few days back. Such friendly, pretty
girls! Maggie had brown hair, dark eyes; skin like a porcelain doll.
Raven-haired Kate’s best feature was her unusual gray-violet eyes. They were “smart girls, bright, full of life.” The girls had told Mrs. Redfield some wide-eyed tale about hearing strange sounds in the night.
Mary Redfield knew the parents, Peggy and John Fox, to be sensible folk. She hadn’t given Maggie and Kate’s silly story a second thought.
Yet, here was John Fox at her door, after dark, insisting that
Mrs. Redfield listen to these strange sounds immediately. Mary Redfield grabbed a wrap and followed her good neighbor out into the cold, spring night. She expected to endure a few minutes of foolishness with the Fox girls and be in bed before nine.
Instead, she found Maggie and Kate Fox in bed, clinging together,
“much frightened.” Their mother, Mrs. Peggy Fox, was sitting on the bed, her face unearthly pale. To comfort the woman, Mrs. Redfield sat beside her.
“Now count five,” she heard Peggy mumble.
Mary Redfield realized that Peggy Fox was talking to the night air.
The poor woman has lost her reason, Mary thought. Then, she heard a rhythm, like a beating heart.
Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap.
“Count fifteen,” said Peggy.
Fifteen raps shook the bedstead. Mary both heard the sounds and felt them jar her bones. What in this room could be making such a powerful
sound?
Peggy Fox asked the spirit to give Mary Redfield’s age.
Thirty-three raps sounded one right after the other. Correct. Mary ruffled through the possibilities. Who knew her exact age except her husband?
Mrs. Redfield took over the questioning, “If you are an injured spirit, manifest it by three raps.”
Rap. Rap. Rap.
She repeated several questions trying to prove that the raps sounded randomly. All were answered correctly, same as before. After an hour or so with the rappings, Mrs. Redfield agreed, a spirit had indeed entered the Fox family’s humble cottage.
Across the bedroom, Maggie and Kate trembled. Mrs. Redfield consoled them. She told the girls they would not be harmed. As a
Christian, Mary trusted that this spirit was from God. In one of the earliest accounts of that night’s events, Kate replied, “we are innocent—
how good it is to have a clear conscience.”
Mrs. Redfield didn’t ask Kate why her conscience was bothered.
Then again, it’s hard to think straight when talking to a dead man.
Mrs. Redfield fetched her husband. When they returned, loud raps again echoed about the Fox home. As the night went on, the Redfields brought their neighbors, who brought other neighbors. Question by question, guess after guess, the small group learned further details of the spirit’s story.
The spirit had been a traveling peddler.
The peddler had been murdered.
His throat was cut with a butcher knife! He’d been robbed of $500!
How many years ago? Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap. Rap.
Midnight brought a new day, Saturday, April 1. At least a dozen of the Fox family’s neighbors remained crammed in the house, asking questions and receiving rapped answers. Like Mary Redfield, they came anticipating a bit of nighttime fun, until the raps correctly answered personal questions about family members, living and dead. In the early morning hours, the rappings simply stopped. The rumors about the two girls who had first talked to the peddler’s spirit were just getting started.

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