The Berkeley Springs Castle was built by Maryland businessman, investor, landowner, and state senator Samuel Taylor Suit. The story goes that he built it for love, but the whole tale is much more complicated â and carries a good investment lesson. [Outsider Club Header]
Oct 12, 2022 By Luke Burgess for the Outsider Club This Haunted Castle Teaches a Stark Investment Lesson In the spirit of the October month, I want to tell you a story about a haunted castle in West Virginia. [juiub] Itâs called the Berkeley Springs Castle. And as far as it being haunted⦠well, I donât know if the castle is haunted by ghosts or a poltergeist like in the movies. But I think by the end of this youâll agree the story of the Berkeley Springs Castle is haunting itself. And I promise thereâs an investment lesson at the end. [juiublk] Itâs kind of a long story, so Iâm not going to include all the details. Moreover, in doing research for this article I came across multiple pieces of conflicting information about the castle's builder and his life. But hereâs what I gathered⦠The Berkeley Springs Castle was constructed between 1885 and 1891. The castleâs website says it took more than 100 skilled masons to complete the structure. Built with local silica sandstone and set among lush garden terraces, the exterior features a round castle keep and crenelated battlements, all kept under careful watch by statues of apex predators and Gothic gargoyles. [juiublkj] Inside the castle measures 9,300 square feet and features a large foyer with a grand staircase, formal dining room, ballroom with stone fireplaces, original furnishings, tapestries and fine art, secret passageways... even a dungeon. [nljbj] Berkeley Springs Castle Entrance Hall The Berkeley Springs Castle was built by Maryland businessman, investor, landowner, and state senator Samuel Taylor Suit. And the reason he built it? Well, according to the castleâs website, âWhile most castles were built to prevent â or launch â invasion, Berkeley Springs Castle, also known as Samuel Taylor Suit Cottage, is a product of love.â And if youâre telling the story in polite company or to children, thatâs probably a good enough explanation. But the whole tale is much more complicated than a man building a castle for love. New battery technology "could eat lithiumâs lunch" Itâs a "breakthrough," says the U.S. Department of Energy. Thatâs a "totally new approach to battery technology." Powermag says it is "the trillion-dollar holy grail" of battery technology... And this new battery could be at the center of it all. This video reveals why 5 billionaires are investing in [this tiny $4 company behind it.]( And how it could unleash a $130 trillion energy revolution. [Click here for the full story.]( Our story begins with conflicting information. Samuel Taylor Suit was born in Prince George's County, Maryland in 1830 or 1832, depending on which source you believe. As a teenager, Samuel Suit worked for his father, Fielder Suit, who was an innkeeper. Little did Samuel Suit know it at the time, but his experience working with his father would pay off later in life. As the story goes, one day Samuel had a falling out with his father over schooling and ran away from home at the age of 14. He first went to Iowa and then to Louisville, Kentucky. It was there the young Suit got a job at a whiskey distillery. Although he didnât have much education, itâs said that Samuel Suit had âextraordinary business talents.â Those talents may have been a result of Suitâs experience working with his innkeeper father. Either way, Samuel Suit ended up buying his own distillery and making a fortune in the whiskey industry by the time he was in his mid-20s. [grrgb] Samuel Suit as a Young Man It was also in Louisville that Samuel Suit met his first wife, Sarah Ebenezer Williams. They married sometime around 1855. Suit was at least 23 years old and Sarah Williams was about 18 or 19. Tragedy struck, however, soon after Sarah gave birth to their first child. In 1857, only days after she turned 20 years old, Sarah Ebenezer Suit died. Her death seemed to have deeply affected the young Samuel Suit, because shortly after she died Suit moved his life to New York City. While in New York, Suit became heavily involved in the stock market. He even managed to obtain a seat on the New York Stock Exchange, which was quite prestigious at the time. [grrgbfere] Samuel Suit in New York, March 1860 Through his new position on the stock exchange, Samuel Suit met many wealthy and powerful people in New York. One of them was Arthur Wilmarth, president of the New York Home Life Insurance Company. But more important to this story is Wilmarthâs young daughter Aurelia. I canât find exactly when Samuel Suit met Aurelia Wilmarth. But the two were married around 1859. Suit was at least 27 years old, while itâs said Aurelia was nearly 10 years his junior at 18 years old. Suitâs marriage to Aurelia rapidly advanced his already climbing social status. However, the marriage was said to be tumultuous from the beginning, with the couple spending long times apart. They had only one son, in 1861, although they would officially be married for the next 20 years. During the Civil War years, Samuel Suitâs story goes a bit cold. There is at least one source that claims Samuel Suit fought in the Civil War under Robert E. Lee. However, at the same time thereâs another source that claims Suit fought for the Union Army during the war. So I donât know. Given his social and business positions, it seems more likely Samuel Suit would have fought for the Union Army. But, again, I donât know for sure. Either way, after the war (sometime around 1867) Suit moved his family back to his hometown in Prince George's County, Maryland. In PG County, Suit bought up large tracts of land right outside of Washington, D.C â somewhere between 300 and 800 acres, depending on the source. On one large property, Suit built a mansion with lush gardens and animals he imported from around the world. Suit called the estate âSuit Land.â Perhaps harking back to his childhood growing up as the son of an innkeeper, Suit turned Suit Land into a popular resort destination for D.C. politicians. The grounds were visited by U.S. presidents Ulysses S. Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes, and Suit Land was the scene of negotiations to settle the Alabama Claims. Today much of the unincorporated community of Suitland, Maryland, sits on top of Samuel Suitâs former property. [grrgbferegr] [grrgbferegrg] Over the next decade Suit would remain in Maryland with his family making new political friends and eventually open a new distillery. With his new political clout, Suit would continue to do well in business, climb the social ladder further, and eventually become a Maryland state senator in 1873. However, tragedy struck again in 1876 when the Suit Land mansion was destroyed by a fire. This forced Suit to declare bankruptcy. Soon after, Aurelia left him, and the couple was divorced by 1879. But again, Samuel Suit didnât let tragedy keep him down. Shortly after Aurelia left, Samuel Suit met Rosa Pelham, daughter of Alabama Rep. Charles Pelham, at a spa in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. By this time Suit was almost 50 years old. Rosa Pelham was only 17. But that didnât stop Suit from asking Pelhamâs hand in marriage. Nevertheless, Rosa Pelham initially refused Suitâs proposal â due to the age difference. Now, Iâve got to pause the story here for a moment⦠Here Lies Silicon Valley, RIP If you thought the tech crash was bad... you havenât seen anything yet. Due to a massive shortage of one rare resource thatâs critical to their existence... Silicon Valley and the $5.2 trillion tech industry are facing a death sentence. And only one tiny company can save them from disappearing. [Read more about the $1 company ready to revive Big Tech.]( I donât know if it was socially acceptable for a 50-year-old man to pursue a 17-year-old in the 1880s, but itâs obviously not acceptable today. Can you imagine the media circus behind a story involving one 50-year-old state senator pursuing the 17-year-old daughter of another state senator today? It would be the dream story for one political side or the other. Either way Samuel Suit continued to pursue the young Rosa Pelham, visiting Berkeley Springs often. As the story goes, in 1883 Rosa Pelham mentioned to Suit she had always wanted to live in a castle. So Suit told Rosa that he would build one for her if she agreed to marry him. She did. And three days later the new couple was married in Washington, D.C. [grt] Rosa Pelham Construction on the Berkeley Springs Castle began a little more than a year later. And although it was not complete, the Suit family moved to the estate in 1887. In total itâs said the structure cost $100,000 to build, which would be more than $3 million today. The following year, however, tragedy would strike again. And for Samuel Suit, this would be his last tragedy. In the fall of 1888, Samuel Suit would suddenly die of unknown causes while at one of his residences in Washington, D.C. But thatâs not where the story ends. Thatâs when the party started. Rosa was now a very wealthy, attractive widow in her mid-20s⦠with an awesome party castle. And party she did. Rosa became well-known among socialites for lavish parties. And with her castle she was dubbed âQueen Rosa.â [grtgr] Berkeley Springs Castle Interior Rosa's money and looks attracted multiple suitors. However, Samuel Suit's will stipulated that Rosa would lose everything he left her if she remarried. So Rosa never married again. Buuuuut that apparently didnât stop the young party queen from having many bedfellows. Legend has it that one night there was an argument between Rosa and one of these bedfellows. Following that argument, the young man fell (or was pushed) from the roof of the Berkeley Springs Castle. As the young man fell to his death he cursed the heiress. And that curse has supposedly haunted the castle ever since. Perhaps the curse was real. Because for Rosa, the party eventually ended. While Rosa lived it up, no one was paying attention to Suitâs properties or businesses. As a result, the businesses failed. And the money began drying up. Soon Rosa was tapped out. She had spent or lost Suitâs entire fortune. And by the 1900s, Rosa was evicted from Berkeley Springs Castle, traveled west with a son, and died there. The story of Samuel Taylor Suit is the story of a man who kept bouncing back. After his first wife tragically died, Suit didnât rest on his laurels. He went to New York and doubled his fortune. When his Suit Land estate burned to the ground and his wife left him, he didnât sit around sulking. He went out, found a new wife and rebuilt his whole life. Samuel Taylor Suit kept bouncing back. But in the end, nature dictates that a man can only bounce back so many times before facing that grim fate. The lesson I get from Samuel Taylor Suitâs story is this: Work hard and do well, but donât expect to build an empire that lasts after youâre gone. According to researchers, itâs estimated that 70% of wealthy families lose their wealth by the second generation. And 90% will lose it by the third generation. Samuel Taylor Suitâs wealth didnât last one generation. Put in the work. Live well. But donât expect it to last forever. The Berkeley Springs Castle used to be open to the public for tours. I know this because it was a place my parents took my brother and I too often to visit as children. The castle was only about two and a half hours from our home and it made for a good day trip. And every kid loves castles, so I loved going. Today the Berkeley Springs Castle is owned by a private group, so it's no longer open for public tours. However, they do rent the castle out for weddings and other events. If you want to learn more about the Berkeley Springs Castle, visit its website [here](. And if you want to know more about the life of Samuel Taylor Suit, I would recommend [this]( article by whiskey historian Jack Sullivan. Until next time,
[Luke Burgess Signature]
Luke Burgess Democracy Is Disappearing...
Hereâs How You Fight Back Imagine getting arrested in your own home and then being handed a 34-YEAR prison sentence... All thanks to something you posted online the day before. I know this may sound crazy... But this is the reality of a Ph.D. student at Britainâs University of Leeds named Salma al-Shehab. She was arrested in her home country, Saudi Arabia, after tweeting something that denounced the Saudi authorities. Look, I have no interest in trying to scare you, but itâs crucial that you know about this web of surveillance that NO citizen can escape... Because itâs rapidly coming to America too. You too could lose the right to take out a loan, rent or buy a home, and even earn a living... All because you jaywalked a few times when you were in a rush... or because you drank too much one night. But this doesnât have to be YOUR reality. You see, thereâs a tiny firm set to become one of the biggest defenders of your freedom with a proprietary technology that can protect your and everyone elseâs data... And once this technology goes mainstream, itâll be too late for the average investor like you to possibly make the triple-digit gains I see coming. [Thatâs why you must act fast not only to protect yourself, but to make a killing in the process.]( Follow the Outsiders [Twitter]( | [Facebook]( | [LinkedIn]( | [YouTube]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. You can manage your subscription and get our privacy policy [here](. Outsider Club, Copyright © Outsider Club LLC, 3 E Read Street Baltimore, MD 21202. Please note: It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you're getting this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, get more info [here]( including our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. If you are interested in our other publications, please call our customer service team at [1-855-496-0830](tel:/18554960830).