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  1. The Face in the Window is the ghostly image of a man that stares from a window in the Pickens County Courthouse in Carrollton, Alabama. It is said to be the ghost of Henry Wells, a suspect who was peering from the window when it was hit by lightning.

  2. Aug 7, 2016 · At that very moment, lightning struck the window and the image of Henry’s face was etched into the glass. The mob finally made their way into the courthouse and forced Henry to go outside. They then lynched him. Today, the face in the window remains as a reminder of that eventful night.

  3. Built-in 1877-1878 as the third courthouse in the city, it is noted for a ghostly image that can be seen in one of its garret windows. This is claimed to be the face of freedman Henry Wells from 1878.

  4. An arrow indicates a window in the old Pickens County Courthouse in Carrollton that is said to carry the image of Henry Wells, who allegedly burned down the county's second courthouse in 1876. According to legend, it was etched into the glass by lightning.

  5. Oct 30, 2020 · Wells later died in police custody but promised to curse the mob who wanted to kill him. As the legend goes, Wells pressed his face up against the glass to look down on the mob, at the same time a thunderstorm passed through town. Lightening etched his image to the glass window.

  6. At that exact moment, a lightning bolt struck the window, leaving an image of Wells’ face etched onto the glass. Meanwhile, the mob made its way in the courthouse and forced Wells outside where they lynched him. Multiple efforts made by the sheriff to wash away the image were unsuccessful.

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  8. Feb 10, 2023 · Legend, and history, placed the blame for the burning courthouse on the shoulders of Henry Wells, a formerly enslaved man who was said to be not the kindest of individuals and was in fact known to have participated in robberies.