Close Encounters at The Johnny Cash House in Jamaica

The house and covered patio at the Johnny Cash residence in Jamaica. (staff photo)
The house and covered patio at the Johnny Cash residence in Jamaica. (staff photo)

By Greg Latimer, Mysterious Destinations Magazine Research Director
with Tim and Laurie, Mysterious Destinations Magazine Correspondents
(Note: Mysterious Destinations Magazine captured some compelling videos at this location, which are featured later in the article.)

Music icons Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash are known throughout the world. Lesser known is the fact that they owned a home in Jamaica and spent considerable time there, especially in their later years. Even lesser known is that the home is open to the public through special arrangement (link later in this story), and that the location has a history of paranormal activity.

All of these factors made the Johnny Cash house a “must see” on the 2012 Mysterious Destinations Western Caribbean Expedition, a cruise ship-based excursion with guests that included mysterious destinations on Cozumel and Jamaica.

‘Ghost Adventures’ at the Johnny Cash House

The Johnny Cash house first came to our attention when the crew from “Ghost Adventures” visited Jamaica (Season 5, Episode 9, original air date 12/9/2011). Based on the dialogue during the show it appeared that the team’s original intention was to visit the Rose Hall Great House, home of the “White Witch” Annie Palmer and considered one of the most haunted places in the world. (Mysterious Destinations Magazine will cover Rose Hall in a future edition.)

However, when the “Ghost Adventures” team learned that Johnny Cash’s house was right in the neighborhood, they diverted to that location to conduct the first known paranormal investigation there. They experienced fluctuations on their Mel Meter (a device that measures a combination of electromagnetic field [EMF] and temperature variations, and sometimes other factors depending on the model), heard unexplained noises in the house, and captured a very compelling electronic voice phenomenon (EVP) that sounds strikingly like the voice of Johnny Cash saying “I do…”. This EVP was tested by a sound engineer on specialized equipment, and was found to be a very close match to Cash’s voice. (Link to video follows this article.)

Mysterious Destinations Western Caribbean Expedition

EMF detector indicating an anomaly (left) on a couch at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. The pillow was hand sewn by June Carter Cash (right), shown in photograph on display at the house. (staff photo)
EMF detector indicating an anomaly (left) on a couch at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. The pillow was hand sewn by June Carter Cash (right), shown in photograph on display at the house. (staff photo)

The Mysterious Destinations Western Caribbean Expedition was to find even more evidence to support the possibility of paranormal activity at the Johnny Cash house.

The Mysterious Destinations team arrived at the Johnny Cash house under a blue Jamaican sky. The home, known as Cinnamon Hill, is a former plantation house built in the 1700’s by Samuel Barrett and later finished by his son Edward. It’s a two-story stone walled structure nestled into a coastal hillside overlooking Montego Bay, surrounded by well-kept gardens and including a spacious patio protected by an overhang of the roof, allowing visitors to enjoy both the scenery and the ocean view.

Things at Cinnamon Hill weren’t always so idyllic. The Barretts ran a large sugar plantation there beginning in the mid 1700’s. Hundreds of slaves toiled in the cane fields, and the basement floor of Cinnamon Hill was a dungeon where errant slaves were punished. Steel bear traps some 3-feet long were hidden on the edges of the plantation, intended to grievously wound any slave attempting to escape into the jungle and to keep other slaves on the property fearful of making their own attempt.

Needless to say, Cinnamon Hill was the site of considerable human anguish long before the arrival of Johnny Cash, who had personally observed paranormal activity while at the house.

Sightings by Johnny Cash

“Memory wall” at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. (staff photo)
“Memory wall” at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. (staff photo)

In his book “Cash, The Autobiography,” Cash recalls seeing apparitions of a woman and a young boy throughout the house on numerous occasions.

On one occasion, Johnny remembered when he and some guests observed the apparitional figure of a woman in the dining room. Cash described her as being in her early thirties and wearing a full-length white dress. She came through the dining room door heading to the kitchen and proceeded across the room toward the double doors on the opposite wall, which were closed and locked. Cash and his guests watched in amazement as the apparition went through the locked doors without opening them. After she passed through the doors, the group heard a “ rat-tat-tat, rat-tat” from the other side.

Cash never felt any threat from these apparitional residents. “We’ve never had any trouble with these souls,” he wrote. “They mean us no harm, I believe, and we’re certainly not scared of them; they just don’t produce that kind of emotion.”

Seeking the Paranormal at Cinnamon Hill

It was in the same hallway that Cash described the apparition’s path from the kitchen to the dining room where the Mysterious Destinations team caught their first EMF anomalies using both a Mel Meter and a standard EMF detector. The entire hallway showed compelling EMF readings, some stronger near the floor under which the dungeon used to be. We checked with our guides Maxine and Daltis regarding an electrical source in the floor for the EMF readings and Daltis said there were none. “It’s only the dungeon down there,” she said, with a hint of amazement as she watched the EMF detectors continue to flash.

The team then conducted a flashlight and EVP session, setting the equipment on a chair that registered an EMF return. The chair and many of the furniture pieces in the hallway had pillows handcrafted by June Carter Cash, which may be one of the reasons the response we had to our flashlight session came from an anomaly that identified itself as June Carter Cash. (A link to a video of the session follows this article.)

(Flashlight sessions, a common tool for paranormal investigators, are often considered controversial. A link to a video, and another to an article, both about flashlight use follows this article.)

We then surveyed the rest of the house, without any discernable responses in the other rooms. Returning to the hallway, which was still registering EMF anomalies, we initiated a copper dousing rod session. (Copper dousing rods are believed by some paranormal experts to be responsive to the electromagnetic fields attributed to paranormal activity. Ghost hunters try to achieve “yes” or “no” responses to questions by asking entities to move the rods. Copper dousing rods will be the subject of an upcoming “Ghost Hunting 101” article on Mysterious Destinations Magazine.)

Dousing Rod Session has Interesting Results

Master bedroom at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. (staff photo)
Master bedroom at the Johnny Cash house in Jamaica. (staff photo)

It wasn’t long before the dousing rods began responding to questions, with the entity identifying itself as Samuel Barrett, who built the plantation in the mid 1700’s.

However, this dousing rod session included some surprises. Quite often, after crossing over each other in a “yes” response, the rods would swing backwards and rest on the breasts of Mysterious Destinations team member Laurie. These repeated actions definitely drew the sometimes humorous attention of other team members (including Laurie’s husband) and led to an investigation by Mysterious Destinations Magazine that resulted in the article “Is There Libido After Death?” (Link follows this article.)

Even our departure from Cinnamon Hill included a bit of mystery. Just before leaving we took the time to enjoy the beautiful gardens surrounding the building. One of our guides, Daltis, suddenly gasped loudly and reached for the back of her neck. “What was that?” she exclaimed. “Something just flew by and brushed my neck!” She originally thought it was a bird or bat, but the with entire group standing right behind her, no one had seen any flying creatures near her. We left feeling that Daltis’ brush with the unknown was just another occurrence to add to the list of mysteries surrounding the Cinnamon Hill Great House once so loved by Johnny and June Cash.

To see a video of the Mysterious Destinations Magazine flashlight and EMF session at the Johnny Cash house, click here.

To find out how you can visit Cinnamon Hill and more about the house and surrounding area click here.

For a link to the segment of the Ghost Adventures analysis of this EVP, click here.

To see a video of the Mysterious Destinations Magazine dousing rod session at the Johnny Cash house, click here.

To check the Mysterious Destinations Magazine article, “Is There Libido After Death?” click here.

To check the Mysterious Destinations Magazine article, “Ghost Hunting 101 – Flashlight Sessions Controversy” click here.

Discover Maine Mysteries in books written by Mysterious Destinations Magazine staff.