On July 7, 1909, the
Cleveland Plain-Dealer published a multi-page spread in its magazine section titled "The Veiled Lady of Kirtland". This article reported a number of local rumors about Martindale. It alleged that she "had worn a heavy veil for more than forty years" and that this was "based on a love affair and a resolution that no man again should see her face." It also reported a story told by the Kirtland Postmaster, who alleged that she started wearing the veil after going for a midnight ride to be alone. It also alleged that the main character of the novel "The Spinner in the Sun" by
Myrtle Reed was based on Martindale. This story was
syndicated to the
New York World newspaper, which syndicated it to newspapers in the United States, Australia and New Zealand in 1910–11. In 1916–17, the story of the "Veiled Lady" again circulated in over fifty newspapers in the United States. During this time, an additional element was added to the story:When a young woman Miss Martindale was engaged to marry a man a few years her senior. One night when walking alone a country road near her home, she saw her sister in the arms of her fiance. Three weeks later the man she was to have wed became the husband of her sister. Heartbroken, she solemnly vowed no man should see her face again, and through the use of a heavy veil and a life of seclusion she has kept her word.In 1940, another version of the "Veiled Lady" story was published in the
Cleveland Plain-Dealer by
Grace Goulder Izant. This version added alleged details about Martindale's supposed wedding dress. In 1959, Martindale's great-nephew, J. Morley Nutting, wrote to Goulder asking her to help him stop these rumors, and indicating that the reason his grandaunt wore a veil was because of a treatment for an ongoing debilitating eye disorder.
Debunking the myth The Plain Dealer published versions of this story again in 1970 and 2000. Additionally, Martindale's story was reinterpreted as the subject of a local ghost story by local paranormal enthusiasts, who allege that she haunted the Kirtland North Cemetery and houses nearby. In October 2022,
Belt Magazine published an article debunking the "Veiled Lady of Kirtland" myth, and
The Plain Dealer ran "A correction 113 years in the making" to its previous reporting of the story. == References ==