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Bobby Mackey's Music World Honky Tonk and Tavern

PictureBobby Mackey's parking lot c.2014
In August 2014, Miami Ghost Chronicles stopped by Bobby Mackey’s Music World, unfortunately at the wrong time since it was too early and it was not open. The attraction of course was all the paranormal sightings that have been witnessed at this location for so many years. 

​Luckily though we were able to interview Wanda Kay from Wanda Kay’s Ghost Tour, who for many years DJ’d and conducted paranormal tours at Bobby Mackey’s. We were really surprised when Wanda Kay said she no longer offered any tours, because she felt that it was too dangerous due to the type of entities that haunted the building. She said the area had a lot of death connected to it, before and after the well-known stories of Pearl Bryan and Johanna. She described seeing apparitions that she felt were demonic, and on more than one occasion had felt that “something” had followed her home.

PictureNew Year's Eve with Wanda Kay at Bobby Mackey's c.2008
As MGC started to research the history of these sites, which is very important in understanding how any haunting came about, we found out that she was exactly right. There’s more to this story than what is overly documented in the media, in which many instances is absolutely wrong.

Note: Since we spoke with Wanda Kay Stephenson she became very ill, and passed away on October 15, 2017, at the age of 59.

The Murder of Pearl Bryan

Picture1896 Newspaper article about the discovery of a decapitated woman's body
On February 2, 1896, The Courier-Journal wrote a short piece about the mysterious remains of a woman who was found beheaded in a lonely area, about one mile south of Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The crime was compared to the work of Jack the Ripper. Only 5 years before H. H. Holmes had stalked the World’s Fair for his victims, and the year after that Lizzie Borden’s parents had been hacked to death in their home. 

Initially it was suspected she was an “abandoned woman” from Cincinnati, and law enforcement was unable to find her head, despite bringing in blood hounds to find it. A soldier in Fort Thomas reported seeing a man and a woman walking out late at night along Alexandria Pike close to where the body was found, and a sergeant claimed he had heard a woman scream around midnight.

The stylish, but unusually petite, size three, cloth topped boots she was wearing eventually led to the identification of the victim. Mr. Poock a local shoe vendor using the imprint and numbers inside the boots, contacted the manufacturer who confirmed that only one size 3 had been sent to a store in Greencastle. On February 7, the body was identified as Pearl Bryan. Lewis and Hayes where she bought her shoes from, identified her as the purchaser of that particular pair of boots. The public was riveted when it became known the victim was a pretty, country girl.

PicturePearl Bryan Sunday school pic (she is above Z) c.1891
​The brutality of Pearl Bryan's murder had far reaching effects even to those with the best intentions, who were horrified over the fate of this girl. L. D. Poock, who had helped in identifying Pearl's body through her unique boots, lost his once thriving business by July 1896. This was due to ignoring his business, and devoting so much time to solving the mystery. The article describes where other residents in the area had gone insane over the tragedy.

However, this was not the end of Mr. Poock as an intrepid investigator. In January 1898, the police department from St. Paul, Minnesota contacted him in order to identify the murdered remains of a woman, using her shoes of course, since all that was left of her were skeletal remains. The article was titled Another Pearl Bryan Case. Mr. Poock said he had identified the shoe manufacturer and stated that he was sure the mystery would be solved.

PictureThe gruesome nature of Pearl's murder grabbed the headlines across the country
Pearl was one of twelve children born on October 12, 1872, to Alexander and Susan Farrow Bryan, a wealthy farming family who lived on the outskirts of Greencastle, Indiana. She was a music student at DePauw University, and she worked at her sister Mary’s dress shop in Greencastle. 

Pearl lied to her parents when she told them she was going to Indianapolis to visit some family friends, but went instead to Cincinnati. It was during these three days that events unfolded, which ended as she fought an assailant intent on separating her head from her body while she was alive. As the investigation evolved, it had all the factors that attract the public today: illicit love affair, sex, unwanted pregnancy, drug use, double lives, and a violent death of one of the participants. One wonders if Pearl was a simple country girl tricked into thinking she was running away with her lover, or did she go with the full intent of having an abortion performed. It was apparent she had run out of options as she was 5 ½ months pregnant when she was killed.

Her torn and bloody clothing were brought to the family’s home, and her mother confirmed they belonged to her daughter, also the fact that she had webbed feet, which she had been teased about by her siblings when they were children.

Based on information provided by Pearl’s family, William Wood, a pastor’s son and second cousin to Pearl was sought out. He was known among friends and family as being Pearl’s confidant, and the one who had introduced Pearl to Scott Jackson in the spring of 1895. Jackson quickly became a main suspect. When Wood was questioned by the police and faced being charged with murder, he disclosed that Scott Jackson had led Pearl on after she had fallen in love with him. Jackson contacted him when she had become pregnant to help him get rid of the pregnancy, because he did not intend to marry her. During the trial, questions arose as to whether the father of Pearl’s child was Scott Jackson or William Wood. Both admitted to having intercourse with her, but Jackson claimed he had done so only after he was aware she was pregnant by Wood.

Western Union agent, A. W. Early testified that Jackson and Wood in the months leading up to the murder, had exchanged various recipes thought to cause a miscarriage. Apparently none of them worked. That was when plans were made for the abortion in Ohio, and Pearl was instructed to lie to her family in order to make the trip to Cincinnati.

Scott Jackson and Alonzo Walling were brought in for questioning, and they immediately accused each other of the crime. Friends of both Jackson and Walling hired a dozen eminent attorneys to defend them.

William Wood met Scott after he had moved to Greencastle with his mother in the spring of 1895. They left Indianapolis after Scott got kicked out of dental college, due to accusations he had embezzled money from the railroad and was involved with prostitutes.

Walling and Jackson had become friends while attending dental school in Indiana, and struck up their friendship again, sharing a room at a boarding house while they both attended the Ohio Dental School. Walling was implicated because he had told Jackson of performing a successful abortion on May Smith, a girl he had seduced. Afterward the situation was hushed up and no one was the wiser of the indiscretion. 

​They had agreed on Walling performing an abortion on Pearl, and Wood acting as intermediary to pay Walling $50 for it afterward. As to why Alonzo’s role went beyond procuring an abortionist to committing murder is not clear. Some stated that he was led into it by his older roommate, others that he was totally complicit in the planning and execution of a murder plan.

The autopsy confirmed that Pearl had a significant amount of cocaine in her stomach enough to make a person unconscious. In a ghoulish move her fetus was removed and stored in alcohol in a peppermint stick jar, and ended up at A. F. Goetz Pharmacy where people paid to see it. Over time it was removed from the shelf, and  it's present  whereabouts are unknown.

PictureWoman wants fillings pulled that were put in by Scott Jackson c.1899
Crossing paths with either Walling or Jackson proved fatal for not only Pearl, but for May Smith as well.  In May 1899, May Smith committed suicide with an overdose of laudanum. She was a tragic figure, and it was reported that in 1892, her father had shot and killed her husband, but was acquitted of the crime since he claimed he had done it because his daughter had been betrayed. In March 1896, her brother Joseph Carson was scalded to death in a boiler explosion.

​In November, 1899, a young lady requested to have gold fillings removed from her teeth that Scott Jackson had put in while he was a student at the Indianapolis Dental College, claiming that since the death of Pearl Bryan her teeth had hurt, but had found relief once they were replaced.

William Wood was charged as an accomplice but charges were dropped when he agreed to testify against Jackson and Walling, however his involvement in the whole affair tainted him for many years afterward. After the execution, he was shunned by all including his parents, which forced him to join the Navy and he served on the Iowa. In July of 1900, he eloped with 18 year old Blanche Daily whose father had been opposed to their relationship. His parents were prostrated when they heard the news, and Blanche's father who was the ex-auditor of the state and quite wealthy, claimed he was cutting her out of his will.


That Jackson was the main perpetrator is apparent after a letter he wrote to William Wood was intercepted. Among this group of friends, Pearl was known as Bert and Jackson as Dusty. This was contained in the letter:
Hello, Bill
Write a letter home signed by Bert’s name telling the folks that he is somewhere and going to Chicago or some other place–has a position etc.–and that they will advise later about it–Say tired of living at home or anything you want. Send it to someone you can trust–How about Will Smith at LaFayette–tell the folks that he has not been at I[Indianapolis] but at LaFayette and traveling about the country. Get the letter off without one seconds delay and burn this at once. Stick by your old chum bill and I will help you out the same way sometimes. Am glad you are having a good time
D.[usty]
Be careful what you write to me

PictureOld Alexandria jail where Walling and Jackson were held
From the moment the body was discovered until the day Walling and Jackson were waiting to hang, there had been a search for Pearl’s head. Two different testimonies were taken during the trial that Jackson was seen carrying Pearl’s valise the day after she was killed. The bartender at Legner’s Saloon, commented after Jackson asked him to store it, if he carried a bowling ball inside since “the weight [inside] rolled around”. The valise was found to have hair and blood stains, and later analysis of this forensic material proved it had carried her head.

Detective Crim who investigated the crime believed that Jackson had brought the head back in the valise, in order to cremate it in the furnace of the cadaver room of the dental college. In those days dental students practiced on corpses, and the furnace was used to dispose of the bodies afterwards. Walling and Jackson gave different stories as to how the other had disposed of the head, none of which proved accurate.
​
Pearl's parents held out hope that their daughter could be buried with her head, and they waited seven weeks before realizing this might never come to pass, so she was laid to rest on March 27, 1896, at Forest Hill Cemetery.
​
Scott Jackson and Alonzo Walling were both convicted of the murder and hanged on March 20, 1897. Their necks did not break during the hanging and they both took quite a while to die of asphyxiation.

The Ghost Reveal

PictureDetectives Crim and McDermott kept the rope used in the execution of Walling and Jackson
It is said that Pearl and her murderers haunt Bobby Mackey's because Walling and Jackson dumped her head into a well on the property. Sine they had committed the crime as part of a satanic rite, they refused to say what happened to the girl's head, even up to the moment they were standing at the gallows. However...

Pearl was beheaded about 4 miles from Bobby Mackey's and the honky tonk was never a slaughterhouse, which was in the area and had already been closed by the time of her murder. As a matter of fact those wells at Bobby Mackey's are for a distillery that was once on the site, and water was being brought in, not used to move waste to the Licking River, and was still in operation when she was killed.

There is no mention of occult practices in the area, tied to Pearl's death or for that area at all. Being sacrificed as an offering sounds much more sinister, but poor Pearl lost her life because she was foolish and in the end proved to be an inconvenience to a psychopath.

A question that begs to be asked is why didn't Scott Jackson just marry Pearl, who was very pretty and came from a wealthy, farming family who had already indicated he would be accepted as her husband? Or is there is any truth there was a dark, secret cult that demanded a blood sacrifice from their members?

​Carl Lawson who acted as a longtime caretaker, lived at the nightclub since 1978. He claimed that by living on the premises he was taken over by demonic entities that inhabited the building. He said he heard voices, had violent outbursts and discovered a diary belonging to Johanna also said to be haunting the building. 

In 1991, he was exorcised by Douglas Hensley, who went on to write a book about the exorcism.

Lawson died on January 27, 2012 due to the effects of alcoholism, at the age of 54.

Another ghostly encounter was retold by Larry Hornsby, a retired police officer. He described  where an auto smashed into a telephone pole outside the club. He was the first to arrive at accident were the occupants had died. As he stood there a woman dressed in an evening gown came out and offered him a tablecloth to cover the dead. He returned the following weeks, and found out the club was closed on the night he was there and the woman he described did not exist.

PictureOld 76 Distilling Co. operated from 1876 to 1919
History of the Site

The site of Bobby Mackey's Music World was once known as Finchtown. In 1876 the distillery of G.W. Robson Jr. & Company was in operation. When the Old '76 Distilling Company was under construction the owners received permission to dig three tunnels below the train tracks that led to the river. This allowed access to pull in water for the production of whisky.

 The factor had about 350 head of cattle and hogs on the premises and fed them spent mash. This might account for the rumors it was once a slaughterhouse.

In September, 1888 one of the boilers exploded, but the only one injured was a night watchman who was burned but survived. The building was repaired, and at this time there were several factories involved in the production of the whiskey.

Almost 20 years passed before another fire struck. On the night of January 24, 1907 a watchman came across a fire that consumed nearby businesses. Once the blaze reached where the whiskey was stored, the barrels exploded like rockets. The buildings were repaired, and the distillery stayed in operation until Prohibition was enacted in 1919. As the years rolled by all Old '76 buildings were demolished except for one.

PictureLatin Quarter would be raided several times throughout the years for illegal gambling and liquor violations
In January, 1946 the Latin Quarter opened in what used to be the Primrose Country Club under the same management, which were Buck Brady and Thomas J. Callahan.

A few months later, Ernest A. "Buck" Brady, bootleg king  was said to have been inside the auto of a trio of assassins sent to kill Albert "Red" Masterson one of Newport's gambling and night life figures. They shot into Masterson's vehicle, but were unable to kill him. The 1942 Chevrolet all the men were in crash into several autos, and they all fled on foot. Brady was captured in an outhouse, and two guns were found in the yard where he was hiding. The charges were eventually dismissed for lack of witnesses, but no doubt hijinks were afoot in this part of town.

In 1947, Harold W. Hancock, a 52-year-old salesman keeled over died after eating at the Latin Quarter. He suffered a hemorrhage due to stomach ulcers. Then a year later, a son of a Campbell county deputy sheriff was robbed of $900 and accidently shot after leaving the Latin Quarter.

In 1952, The Latin Quarter was raided, which resulted in 68 arrests, with four vanloads of gaming equipment being confiscated. The following year its liquor license was revoked, and it tried to operate while only serving "soft drinks", but it did not have the same allure as before. This would one of many times the police would raid the premises to halt the flow of prostitution, gambling and illegal liquor distribution. 

In 1953, William Monsell, age 43,  was crushed to death when hurled by a speeding auto against a parked truck as he walked along the roadside. He had just left the Latin Quarter where he had been playing bingo. The coroner said the victim's head, body and legs were crushed. 

The Latin Quarter operated until around 1975, and then eventually the building would go up for auction.

PictureThe demolition of Bobby Mackey's music world c.Dec. 2024
Bobby Mackey's Music World Demolished

Mackey opened the club in 1978 while looking for a space to play the traditional country music he admired. He got the club’s first mechanical bull in 1979. He said it was the third one manufactured by the man who produced the bulls for the film Urban Cowboy. It was nicknamed El Torro. 

In August, 2024 many of the club’s historical fixtures, memorabilia, and décor were auctioned off; this included El Torro.

The building was demolished December, 2024.

"Warning to our Patrons: This establishment is purported to be haunted. Management is NOT responsible and cannot be held liable for any actions of any ghosts/spirits on these premises."
— sign once in front of Bobby Mackey’s Music World

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