Piedmont College in Demorest, Georgia was founded in 1889 as an educational institution dedicated to providing opportunities for higher learning in the rural mountain regions of northern Georgia. The college was established with the mission of advancing education in a region where access to advanced learning was limited, and it developed over the following decades into a respected regional institution known for its academic standards and community engagement. The campus features characteristic late nineteenth and early twentieth-century collegiate architecture, with a mix of Victorian, neoclassical, and early modernist structures arranged across the attractive mountain campus. Among the dormitory buildings that house student residents, Getman-Babcock Dormitory occupies a particularly prominent position in both the physical layout of the campus and the paranormal folklore associated with the institution. The dormitory was constructed in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century to accommodate female students.
The paranormal history of Getman-Babcock Dormitory centers on the figure of an unidentified young woman in a blue dress, a student of the college whose death occurred within the dormitory building during the early decades of the twentieth century. The precise circumstances of her death remain unclear, with accounts varying regarding whether she died from illness, accident, suicide, or foul play, though the fact of her death and its location within the dormitory are well established in campus oral tradition. The emotional significance of her death, and the possible unresolved circumstances surrounding it, appear to have created a powerful paranormal presence concentrated within the building. Campus folklore attributes to this ghostly presence a strong emotional connection to the dormitory, with the deceased student seemingly bound to the space where she lived and died, unable or unwilling to move beyond the location.
The paranormal phenomena documented within Getman-Babcock Dormitory are characterized by both visual apparitions and other manifestations consistent with locations of residential hauntings. The most frequently reported phenomenon is the apparition of a young woman dressed in a blue dress, described as appearing solid and three-dimensional, moving through the hallways and appearing in student rooms as if unaware of her spectral nature. Witnesses describe the apparition as possessing consistent physical characteristics across multiple sightings, with detailed descriptions of her facial features, hairstyle, and clothing provided by numerous independent observers. The apparition is often accompanied by other paranormal phenomena, including the sensation of sudden cold spots, the smell of perfume or floral scents without discernible source, and emotional impressions of sadness and loneliness. Doors throughout the dormitory exhibit unexplained behavior, with door handles turning on their own, doors opening and closing without physical intervention, and locks engaging and disengaging without human action. Residents have reported hearing disembodied voices and footsteps in hallways and on stairs.
Piedmont College acknowledges the paranormal history of its campus, with administrators and staff openly discussing the documented phenomena with students and visitors. The college has not discouraged investigation of the paranormal activity, allowing paranormal research teams and ghost hunting groups to visit the campus and conduct investigations within dormitory buildings and other structures. The reputation of the dormitory as a haunted space has become part of Piedmont's contemporary cultural identity, featured in campus folklore, student orientation programs, and tourism materials highlighting the unique characteristics of the Georgia institution. The apparition of the ghostly girl in the blue dress has achieved near-iconic status in regional paranormal folklore, with her image and story referenced in paranormal television programs and paranormal investigation reports. The documented phenomena persist across multiple decades and multiple generations of student residents.
Apparitions
Disembodied Voices