Lincoln Tea Room

Lincoln  Tea Room

The Lincoln Room, a little luncheon and tea room, tucked below street level in the Everhart building on W. Market street in West Chester, apparently has a spiritual side – folks feel a ghostly presence and hear odd noises, but it doesn’t seem to bother anyone. The owner mentions that sometimes you can hear laughter and there are some who won’t set foot in the place at night. So who’s haunting the Lincoln Room?

The most likely candidate is a horse thief from the late part of the 1700’s. John Tully was his name. He was sentenced to 60 days in jail and to stand in the pillory while being lashed 39 times and to have his ears cut off. Pretty heavy duty punishment, but folks took horse thieving quite seriously in those days.

Apparently, Tully was groaning so loudly in his pain that he was becoming a nuisance. So he was moved to a cottage across the street, where the Everhart building now stands. He lay on the cot in that little cottage and as the hours went on, his moans were slowly replaced by laughter, perhaps maniacal in nature, but laughter all the same. When dawn approached and someone went to check on him, they found him dead. Laughed himself to death, as it were.

A lot of times, these stories don’t quite check out when we look at the background, but this one has the basics right.

It is a rather peculiar circumstance in our county annals, then including Chester County, that after the passage of the act of Sept. 15, 1786, which specifically abolished the punishment of the pillory, whipping, branding, cutting off of ears of criminals and nailing these to the pillory for certain crimes, that on Nov. 27, 1788, John Tully, who was convicted of horse-stealing, was sentenced ‘to stand one our in the pillory between the hours of nine and twelve o’clock tomorrow morning, to be whipped with thirty-nine lashes on his back, well laid on, to have both ears cut off and nailed to the pillory and to be imprisoned six months,’ besides the payment of a fine and the costs. 1Ashmead, History of Delaware County. Everts, 1884.

But why was he laughing?

It might have been from nervousness, or maybe he already knew that he wasn’t likely to survive to serve his time in jail, or perhaps he had an ironic sense of humor and realized that he had just finished being served with a punishment that had been specifically abolished by the local courts two years earlier. 

The Cultural Alliance of Chester County now occupies the building and the tea room is closed. But does John still laugh?

Notes & Sources

  • 1
    Ashmead, History of Delaware County. Everts, 1884

Leave a Reply

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