While New Orleans cemeteries like [St. Louis Cemetery #1](https://ghostcitytours.com/new-orleans/haunted-places/haunted-cemeteries/st-louis-cemetery/), which is located on the boundary of the French Quarter, have claim to fame for being the oldest grave site still in existence within the Crescent City, Metairie Cemetery has a different claim to fame. Of the forty-two cemeteries in the New Orleans-metro area, Metairie Cemetery is considered the most beautiful and elaborate. With tombs structured like Egyptian pyramids, abandoned British castles and grandiose mausoleums, it's no wonder that this historic cemetery was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1991. Over 7,000 tombs and 150-acres comprise this century-old grave site, and visitors can spend days meandering through the wide, open lawn space. Have I mentioned the ghosts which still haunt this grave site? After all, it only makes sense that the dead buried at Metairie Cemetery that they simply may not want to pass over to The Other Side.
The History of Metairie Cemetery
The subject of "burying" people was allegedly the prime reason for establishing Metairie Cemetery.
The Ghosts of Metairie Cemetery
The Ghost of a Police Chief
"Who kill da chief?" were the words chanted as an angry mob swarmed the parish prison in Congo Square. But who killed him? Well, it wasn't just one person but a whole slew of them.
David Hennessey was the New Orleans police chief during the late nineteenth century. The era was known for its police corruption, political corruption, and all around civic corruption. (New Orleans, more than any other city, has been unable to shake off its debauched origins). But Police Chief David Hennessey was a good guy, an honest guy, and was relatively well-liked within the city.
But disputes with the Italian mafia had struck up, occurring with more regularity, and Hennessey had had enough. When two mafia groups erupted into an all out battle amidst the streets of New Orleans, Hennessey ordered his officers to make a "Keep Watch" List. Others called it the "Lists of Undesirables" but it was all the same: the majority of the people on the list were of Italian descent.
The Italians called it "racist" and "discriminatory" while Hennessey no doubt probably would have viewed it as taking precaution against anyone who could have been involved with the mafia.
David Hennessey was shot in front of his house not long after. And the suspects? The police department targeted the Italians, rounding up nineteen that they suspected of having their hands red with blame. Ultimately the Italians were acquitted, as the prosecutor refused to use the confession from one of the accused.
Hennessey's murderers were never arrested, and it is for that reason that the mob rallied together to take action. When they reached Congo Square, they brutally murdered eleven of the acquitted suspects, all in the name of "vengeance." The United States was actually forced to pay reparations to the Italian government, as three of the dead suspects were Italian citizens.
The actions taken against the Italians that day in New Orleans remains the largest mass lynching in American history, but is it for that reason or the fact that Hennessey's life was stripped away that his ghost still haunts Metairie Cemetery?
Visitors of his nineteenth century tomb have remarked upon seeing Hennessey's ghost walk around the cemetery. His spirit is always dressed in his police uniform and, according to witnesses, it seems as though Hennessey has stuck around after death in order to look out for vandals and grave robbers threatening any of the tombs or memorials.
A police chief to his dying day—and after, too, it seems.
The Spirit of the Louisiana Lottery Winner
You read that correctly. How haunted would Metairie Cemetery be if the grave site's own founder wasn't still camping out?
While Charles Howard's tomb is situated in the epicenter of the cemetery, people have claimed to hear his ghost . . . within his tomb. Disembodied noises emanate from the nineteenth century memorial; so distinctly loud are they that visitors passing by stop to glance at each other.
But no. It's never the case of the living, and always the case of the dead. What could Charles Howard's spirit be doing in his tomb, causing all of that ruckus and commotion? Your guess is as good as mine, but it's safe to say that he's just as much of a character now as he was when he was alive.
The Madame and the Flaming Tomb
Before the US Navy Department shut down Storyville for good in 1917, it had had a good run leading back to 1897, when it was conceived by Alderman Sidney Story. The notorious red light district took off running, and one of its most famous madams was a woman by the name of Josie Arlington.
That wasn't always her name—she'd actually been birthed Mary Anna Duebler in 1864. By the age of four, Josie was orphaned, however, and placed in St. Elizabeth's Home under the Sisters of Charity. (It's safe to say that the nuns' "guidance" didn't quite rub too well with Josie).
She was only a teenager when she turned to prostitution under the more masculine guidance of Philip Lobrano. Together, they operated a bordello. That it, until Lobrano got into fisticuffs with her brother, Peter, and shot him right in the heart in the parlor of the brothel. Josie kicked Lobrano out, and decided to shed her violent reputation for a more luxurious one.
(By this time, she'd already bit off a fellow prostitute's ears and lips).
Still, Josie did incredibly well for herself. She disallowed virgins from working at her brothel, and was known to charge visiting johns exorbitant fees for some time with one of her girls. Then, in 1905, her brothel the Arlington burned down. Josie never truly regained her same level of gumption from before the fire, and as the story goes, she grew obsessed with the subject of death.
She purchased a burial plot at Metairie Cemetery, among the uppercuts of society, for $2,000, and then built her elaborate tomb for a subsequent $8,000. The mausoleum was a masterpiece, though, and was equipped with a womanly statue who turned her back against all of the other tombs; the statue exists in motion, as if seeking entry into through the bronze door into the tomb itself. Two flaming urns are positioned on either side of the entrance.
When Josie died in 1914, her body was interred within her tomb. It didn't stay there for long. Her lover had married her niece, and within a decade had squandered nearly all of Josie's money. Her body was then exhumed and moved elsewhere, and it seems as though Josie Arlington has still not found peace.
Her tomb is allegedly the most paranormally active in all of Metairie Cemetery. Across the street from her tomb was a streetlight, its bulb glowing red. Except that the light was known to flash against Josie's tomb, and reports surfaced that the matching urns were known to be lit with flame. Her mausoleum earned the nickname, "The Flaming Tomb."
Then, crowds began to gather on a near-nightly basis to watch. People claimed to see the statute crack from its frozen position and begin to bang angrily on the tomb's bronzed door, demanding entrance. Some wondered if perhaps the statue was possessed by the spirit of one of the virgins turned away from working at Josie's brothel.
The nightly vigil by locals and tourists grew to such masses that Josie Arlington's body was once again exhumed and moved to an unknown location, where she is still buried today.
But the paranormal activity has not stopped. Gravediggers have witnessed the statue move from its position, and visitors have still spotted the urns glowing red with fire. If it is Josie's spirit haunting the site of her first tomb, it's quite likely that she has not found closure after death leaving her ghost to wander the plane of the living for all eternity.