I recently took a trip down south to visit the historic, and truly beautiful, French Quater district of New Orleans. During my stay, I was fortunate enough to meet a local named Tony, who gave me an intimate and,what he thinks to be, an accurate account of the Madam Lalaurie mystery. I was standing directly in front of the home when he told me the story. Here is the account:

One early morning, Lalaurie was seen by neighbors cow-hiding a young slave girl. The young girl ran back through the house, screaming the entire way. Lalaurie chased her and the girl ended up throwing herself out of the third story window, falling to her death. Lalaurie was said to have carried her lifeless body back into the house. Rumors have it that she was buried in a very shallow well in the backyard of the Lalaurie estate. Now, back in this time, it was illegal to purposefully damage or destroy your own property. Because slaves were considered property, it was actually illegal for slave owners to "damage" their slaves. The death of the young girl went unpunished.

On April 11, 1834 a few slaves, sick of Lalaurie's awful treatment, chained themselves to the furnace located in the kitchen in protest, refusing to move until the police came to investigate. Knowing full well Lalaurie would not succumb to their civil protest, the slaves sacrificed themselves and lit their bodies on fire. The police arrived and discovered the horrific experiments Madam Lalaurie had been performing, confirming the rumors of torture and abuse. Lalaurie fled and was never seen again. Some say she bribed a boatsman to take her up the Mississippi, others say she was killed by an angry mob, and some go so far as to claim she was poisoned by Madam Lavaeu. Though there are two grave sites for Lalaurie, her final resting place still remains a mystery.
The plot thickens!
After the house was recovered and the fire damage had been repaired, a traveling furniture salesman decided to buy the house and turn it into a shop. He loaded all of his goods into the house and set up shop and retired to his home. The next morning, he arrived at the house anxious to get selling. What he discovered was an unidentifiable green goo covering all of his furniture. Outraged he called the local authorities, convinced he was being pranked. The police found no sign of a break in and could not tell him what exactly was covering his products. That night he decided to stay in the house and wait for the pranksters to return. He slept through the night, awaking to the same green goo. It was all over him and all over his furniture. Thoroughly spooked, he declared the house haunted. He packed up his stuff and went on his way, telling everyone he knew to stay away from the evil Lalaurie home. To this day it is regarded as haunted and is a must-see-destination for anyone traveling to New Orleans.
So that folks is the story of Madam Lalaurie. Take it or leave it but note that she was in fact a real person who did do a lot of terrible things to her slaves.
Personally I am very excited to see where this season of AHS takes this legend and how Lalaurie's end finally comes.
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