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Curse of the murdered Bangor fur trader

E.Wright30 min ago
Editor's note: This story was originally published in October 2018.

It was a frigid night in February 1791, when Joseph Junin died. A fur trader from a settlement on the Penobscot River, Junin was found on the floor of his home with a gunshot wound in the head, surrounded by luxurious furs, or so the story goes.

His death is a story of mystery, vengeance, curses and resurrection.

It's also one of the highlights of the Bangor Historical Society walking tour "The Darker Side of Mount Hope Cemetery," hosted multiple times each Halloween season.

"Junin was a great trader with the Penobscots [a native tribe in the area] and had a very good working relationship with them," said Matt Bishop, who is the curator for the Bangor Historical Society and leads many of the society's walking history and ghost tours.

By now, Bishop knows the story by heart. Preserved in historical documents and memoirs, the tale of Junin's death is thought to be the first recorded murder in what is now Bangor.

It starts with Junin's nephew, Louis Paronneau, waking his neighbors by pounding on their door in a frantic state, pleading for help. He claimed the Penobscots were coming to kill his uncle, but the neighbors weren't convinced. They tried to calm the young man, but he ran off into the night. A little while later, they heard gunfire.

An investigation followed, as Bishop tells it, but they could find no evidence of Penobscots visiting Junin that night. In fact, the only footprints in the snow they found were prints belonging to the nephew, who lived with Junin at the time.

Paronneau then became the prime suspect, was charged with murder, went to trial in July and was acquitted of all charges . But during the ghost tours in the cemetery, the part of the story Bishop focuses on is the curse.

"They believe at his burial that some of the local Penobscots, the local medicine women and the elders, put a curse onto his body so he would seek out the person who wronged him," Bishop said.

Junin was buried in a small cemetery near his home. But after the larger, grander Mount Hope Cemetery opened in 1831 in the southeast corner of Bangor, Junin's coffin was unearthed and re-interred there, not far from the cemetery superintendent's house.

"When they re-interred all these people over at Mount Hope and brought Junin over, they opened up his coffin, for whatever reason, and found his body remarkably well-preserved," Bishop said, reciting the story as he tells it during the tour. "And that was the point in time where they decided to hopefully put a stop to this curse."

To do this, they added a phrase to the bottom of his new gravestone, Bishop said.

"May his soul rest in peace."

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