Fernie & Elk Valley Culture Guide Fall 2019 Edition | Page 12

TALES FROM THE PAST... GHOST STORIES OF FERNIE Benson’s life ended near these tracks. Would you walk here, late at night? Fall comes fast in Fernie. Darkness seeps up out of the ground and the trees rustle in the chill wind as though they are trying to share secrets of the past. Listen closely, and you will learn of the ghosts that haunt this hidden corner of the Kootenays… A frontier atmosphere pervaded in the early days of Fernie’s existence. High tempers often got the better of the hardworking people who struggled against the odds. In the nearby town of Coal Creek, a miner named Benson went to his superintendent to complain that his fireboss had moved him from his place in the mine out of spite. The superintendent said that he would speak to the fireboss, named Joyce, but didn’t think there was much he could do. In a sullen rage Benson collected his revolver and set out for the mine offices where he found and shot wildly at Joyce. In terror at his actions, Benson fled to the railway tracks and took his own life with the revolver. 12 As it happened, the superintendent had ordered Joyce to reinstate Benson, and Joyce had only sustained a minor wound in the attack. Had Benson waited just a moment, his life would have been saved. For decades afterward, the inhabitants of Coal Creek swore that Benson haunted that section of the track. A young couple reported feeling cold hands pulling them backward and an elderly Mr. Carmichael, on attempting to greet a young man at the side of the tracks found the dark figure to have only shadows below his cap. Coal Creek is now little more than a few crumbling walls but it appears that Benson’s ghost has chosen to make it home.