HER! Here is the most famous ghost story of your state
These tales of the country's crypts will give you chills.
Everyone loves a good ghost story, especially aroundHalloween. This is the perfect time to learn everything that is Spooky - and there is no better place to start with ghosts that haunt your own state at home. Tales of ghost groups infamous ghosts to legends on agitated spirits that haunt backups at night, it is the most prolific ghost stories of each state. Keep reading if you dare!
Alabama: The haunting of the tooth oven
The American arrow of America from the early 1900s required a constant stream of iron for steel production and high demand led to terrible conditions for oven workers. The tooth oven (it's a photo of the complex, above) in Birmingham, Alabama, was particularly dangerous, with a creepy foremanJames "Slag" WORMWOOD Force workers to take more and more dangerous risks, resulting in at least 47 deaths. In 1906, the workers had enough, andAs the legend hasThey pushed the slag in the oven. However, Slag seems to have obtained the last word workers said he heard you heard it screaming "to return to work" and feeling him to have pushed them from behind.
Alaska: Curious gravestones of Kennecott copper mines
It takes a lot of persistence to get to the ghost town ofKennecott, Alaska-your options areAir travel and a Haphazard gravier road. As strong as for us to get there, it seems that spirits are also difficult to go out. Once the site is a massive operation of copper and gold of gold (it is a photo of one of the above buildings), Kennecott was abandoned in 1938 when the mines are dried, and it has never been repopulated.
Hikers in the region, which is now part of a national park, have reported seeing tombstones disappearing. In fact, according to theStudent conservation association"When the state-sponsored construction teams have attempted to redevelop the region in the 1990s, they have been so frequently terrified by ghost visions (including but not limited to gravestones) and the disembarmed obstacles for long-lasting minors that they finally had to abandon the project. "
Arizona: The painful cries of Llorona
Known in English as "the mourning woman", "LLORONA Is it a presence in almost all Latin American cultures and Mexican immigrants brought these stories with them to Arizona. The Llorona is a kind of Banshee, the ghost of a woman who drowned her two children in a river in the hope of having a rich man to marry her (as the story happens, he did not want children). As such, it usually haunts the banks of the rivers and the rivers Gila and San Pedro are two of its favorite spots in Arizona. "To date, people always claim to see a woman dressed in any dark in an obsolete dress. She cries the streams looking for her children. It is said that she is cursed to browse the rivers until the bodies be awarded burial, "according toWeird U.S.
Arkansas: Grizzly murder behind Gurdon light
Gurdon, Arkansas, a mysterious phenomenon that has been part of the 1930s, is about 85 miles south of Little Rock. At night, a mysterious light overlooking railway tracks just outside the city. The explanations range from swamp gas in quartz crystals in the rocks, but the most famous theory involves the murder of the railway foremanWilliam McClain. During the Great Depression, jobs were rare and the McClain employeeLouis McBride wanted more hours paid. In 1931, he killed McClain with a tip of railway by stripping him, and theGurdon light It is said to be the lantern of McClain, which he was looking for his disembodied head.
California: The Suicide of the Hotel del Coronado de Kate Morgan
TheHotel del Coronado In San Diego, California, has a number of ghost stories, but the most famous is the one that concernsKate Morgan. In November 1892, just before Thanksgiving, Kate, who was described by the staff as a beautiful but melancholy woman, checked under the pseudonym "Lottie A. Bernard". Five days later, she was found dead on an outside staircase of a ball injury, an apparent suicide. But more than 120 years later, Kate's Spirit always haunts the hotel, which sometimes pushes shelves shop gift products or transforming the TVs from the guests.
Colorado: Dead employees of real lifeShinyHotel
ColoradoStanley Hotel famous served asStephen King Muse for the hotel dealer onShinyAnd the real hotel is just as scary as fiction. Chamber 217, where the king himself remained, would be haunted by the former head of household.Elizabeth Wilson. A ghost named Paul hases the concert hall, telling the staff and guests to "go out" after 11 hours. The 428 room houses a friendly spectral cowboy and the list continues and on.
Connecticut: The Penfield Reef Lighthouse Guardian Periée
Connecticut's most famous ghost is namedFrederick A. Jordanand in life, he was the guardian of the head of thePenfield Reef Lighthouse. In 1916, while trying to bring back to the coast to visit his family, Jordan drowned after his little capped boat in a sudden wind. The guardians of the recordings claimed to have seen the spectral form of Jackson and the flagship log is repeatedly turned on the day of his death.
Rudolph ItenThe deputy guard at the time, tried to save Jordan, but to no avail. He told theBridgeport Sunday PostIn the 1920s, "a few days later, what was one of the worst nights of the story of Penfield [when] the waves rushes on the lantern, I was awake - I was out of service - by a feeling Strange that someone was strange that someone was in my room. Sitting me, I have distinctly a gray and phosphorescent figure emerging from the room formerly occupied by Fred Jordan. He flew over the top of the stairs, then disappeared in the dark below. "
Delaware: The victims of "general terrorism"
Fort Delaware was virtually cursed to start. Built as a prison to hold Confederate soldiers during the Civil War, the Fort was chaired byGeneral Albin Shoepf, more commonly called "general terror". He said that rats threw rats into crowds of detainees to watch the prisoners fight to eat rodents. Nearly 2,700 soldiers perished in horrible conditions and ghosts always haunt the loud halls and tunnels.
Florida: The inability to launch at the Kennedy Space Center
Just two weeks before the first inhabited mission at the moon was set at the launch of the Kennedy Space Center of Florida Central in 1967, theApollo I capsule Pull the fire on the complex-34 launch pad, killing the three astronauts inside:GUS GRISSOM,White éd, andRoger Chaffee. NASA closed this complex shortly after, and today, only the launch platform is still standing, but visitors and employees say that the location is not entirely abandoned. Some have heard the cries of dying astronauts and others simply felt a feeling of fear and overwhelming fear.
Georgia: The victims of the yellow fever of the hotel City of Savannah
With its supported history and suspended foam, Savannah, Georgia, seems to present hotels and restaurants more haunted than almost elsewhere in the country. Maybe the most notorious is the current site of theMoon River brewing company And restaurant, formerly the City Hotel. The hotel was used as a fortune hospital during the epidemics of the city's yellow fever and the children who died there and still play in the upper floors of today. The basement houses a ghost nicknamed Toby, known for moving bottles around and plays tricks on employees.
Hawaii: Hawaii Sacred Soil Night Walkers
Indigenous Hawaiians consider that most islands are a holy land and some of them are still used regularly by the minds of the ancestors. Places like Ka'ena Point and Kalama Valley are reasons forHuak'i, or night walkers - the ghosts of ancient Hawaiian warriors traveling in training. People who met the night walkers see torches and footprints and hear singing and blowing a conch shell. "All you decide to do,notlook at them!"Honolulumagazine WARNING.
Idaho: The ice princess of shoshone ice caves
Fifteen miles north of Shoshone, Idaho you will find theFamous ice cellars, a series of hollow lava tubes buried deep under the ground. Even in summer, the temperature in the caves remains frozen. According to legends,Edahow, a Shoshone princess, wasburied in the cavesAnd his mind stays there. The tour guides will swear that they hear steps and voices hushed in cavernous tubes.
Illinois: Cold hands of the resurrection marie
There is a whole kind of ghost stories focusing on the Hitchhipker of the disappearance, but justice, Illinois, could be at home to the original. According toChicago ReaderOne night in the 1950s, a man named Vince ended up at the ballroom Oh Henry, where he met and danced with a woman named Marie, whose hands were as cold as ice. At the end of the evening, he offered to bring her home and gave him directions to what turned out to beResurrection cemeterywhere she came out of the car ... and disappeared. Vince then discovered that the True Marie was dead four years earlier on the way to the same dance hall.
Indiana: The lean-soaking ghost in the Ogden dunes
Alice Mabel Gray was a woman in front of her time. Born in 1881, she obtained degrees from the University of Chicago and the University of Gottingen in Germany, but employers refused to hire a woman for the job she was looking for. Disillusioned, she chose to live as an hermit in theDunes Ogden By Lake Michigan, and has become a legendary figure of its unconventional lifestyle, which understood a habit of leanlifting. Tragically, she finally married a man who may have killed him. Now, residents sometimes see the ghost of a naked woman flowing in the waters of Michigan Lake.
Iowa: Iron Hill Ghost Children
The details are fuzzy, but the legend said that there was aHorrible train crash Around 1920 near Charles City, Iowa. The train cars at the time will still be largely made of wood, which meant that if they caught fire with passengers inside, the escape was almost impossible. Quite well, a train car filled with orphans perished in buckling andtheir ghosts are said to haunt the woods Near Iron Hill. Visitors report to the sound of children playing, and if the wind is right, they can catch the scent of hot wood.
Kansas: The intrepid men of the pony station Hollenberg Pony Express
The famous Pony Express, which met an email of 2,000 miles from Saint-Louis in Sacramento, operated since 18 months, but it stands on knees in American history. The biggest stop along this road wasHollenberg Station In Hanover, Kansas. Between the rugged terrain and the violent weather, the driving for the Pony Express was dangerous work, both for the announcements of the publication contained the phrase "preferred orphans". Hollenberg is now the only station standing on its original location and the visitors swear, they can hear the hammering of hooves and the cries of men and horses who have given their lives to deliver the mail.
Kentucky: Waverly Hills Sanatorium Patients
Open in 1910 to accommodate tuberculous patients, theWaverly Hills Sanatorium In Louisville housed decades of human suffering. Some of the tuberculosis treatments were low cruel and the building contains a chute where the corpses of the deceased patients could be eliminated. All kinds of supernatural phenomena have been reported from Waverly's hill terrain, including the smell of baked bread, traces and shadows move.
Louisiana: Queen Voodoo from St. Louis Cemetery # 1
If you like ghost stories, New Orleans is the place for you - there is a haunting at every corner of the French Quarter. However, for a pure number of ghosts, you can not beat the oldest cemetery in the city,St. Louis Cemetery # 1. Although it covers a single square block, it is packed with tombs and vaults above the earth, break-up and marked with indeciprable symbols. The twoMarie Laveau, the famous priestess of Voodoo, andMs. Lalaurie, a slave hat, is buried here. Wash in particular appears here and throughout the French district with some regularity, usually carrying colorful clothes and a red and white turban.
Maine: The Hexadécoise tomb of Colonel Buck
Bucksport, Maine, is named for his founder,Colonel Jonathan Buck. His grave, a large granite monolith, wears a very unusual spot in the indisputableshape... or say, a boot of witch. According to the legend, Buck condemned a woman to die for the crime of witchcraft and just before she was hanging, she cursed her - and later her grave - to always bear the mark of his death. There are variations on the tale, one of which claims that the innocent woman was pregnant with her child out wedlock and a sorcellery sentence provided an easy dollar for Buck. Anyway, the ghost of the woman continues to haunt her grave.
Maryland: The obsession of Edgar Allan Poe
Although renamed horror writerEdgar Allan Poe Has lived in many places along the east coast during his short life, he is very closely associated with Baltimore. He is buried there, in the catacombs ofWestminster HallAnd perhaps as a result of his mysterious death at the age of 40, his ghost appears in various places throughout the city. His old house, now a museum dedicated to his inheritance and in the hospital where he died, is said as special favorites of his.
Massachusetts: The four-year loss of Mount Wachusett
In 1755, a 4-year-old girl namedLucy KeyesI went to disappear from his family's house on the east side of Mount Wachusett, and the search parties were unlucky to find it. It may have been murdered by a neighbor, who then hid his body, but it is more likely that it was adopted by a local Amerindian tribe. Anyway, his parents have been helpless, driving the family in poverty to continue finance the search for their daughter. A few nights you can hearMartha Keyes Shout for his daughter and see footprints of the size of a child size in the snow.
Michigan: The innovative and haunted Whitney House
BaronDavid Whitney, Jr., Built himself an opulent mansion in the 1890s in Detroit (this is a picture of it above). The indisputable rose Jasper outside even contained the first elevator for personal use in the state. After Whitney's death, the building was briefly used as a hospice for tuberculosis patients. Since the mansion has been renovated in the 1980s, there have been comments fromThe Whitney Ghost Throughout the house, but especially on the elevator. The house is now a restaurant and staff report sounds of plates and stacking utensils themselves.
Minnesota: The murdered gangsters of the Caves of Wabasha Street
On the south shore of the Mississippi River, where it crosses Saint-Paul, the water dug a series of limestone caves. Over the years, these caves served dozens of goals-silica were taken from caves, mushrooms had become out there and hid gangsters of the law. It was even the site of a notorious independent in the 1920s. Due to the combination of caves with shaded transactions, especially the deaths of three men who were slaughtered in the 1930s, they have a reputation for 'Be haunted. The caves are now a popular event place called theWabasha Street CavesAnd visitors report a number of foreign events in these catacombs.
Mississippi: The mummies of the king's tavern
To predict the United States Foundation itself,TaverneIn Natchez, Mississippi always looks like something among the 1700s. As a stop along a trading trail, the tavern has hosted merchants and boat boats, which have done off the -Loi looking to steal these travelers and that the hostel therefore lives a substantial amount of violence. When the owners tried to renovate the place in the 1930s, they found three mummy bodies, one of whom belong to a young female server that was murdered in the tavern. His mind always provokes personnel and visitors.
Missouri: The suicides of the LEMP family
With respect to hanters, suicide deaths are particularly powerful stimuli for ghost stories. It is therefore not surprising that the mansion belonging to the tragically bounded Lemple Family of Saint-Louis, Missouri, would beinvaded with ghosts. The family moved into the house in 1878 and between 1901 and 1949, four members of the LEMP family took their own lives in his walls. Now a restaurant and inn, theLeather Is one of the most haunted buildings in Missouri and members of the LEMP family seem as disturbed in death than in life.
Montana: Laura Duchesnay Chirup Canaries
During prohibition, places that stored Moonshine needed a front to explain why potential customers were aligned outdoors. Reeder's Alley in Helena, Montana, the explanation was canary. ResidentLaura DuchesnayLoved birds and guarded canaries in his house - if someone stopped with an illegal liquor, they could just say they were there to buy a bird. Prohibition ended and when Duchesnay died, her husband brought her body to the house so that birds could say goodbye. The old house is now a restaurant and the staff often hears unexplained sounds, including the pissed and floating canaries.
Nebraska: The fall of Fred without face
The speakeasy Restaurant in Sacramento, Nebraska, is one of the best places to get a steak throughout the state. It is also the site of a ghaling haunt. Before it was a restaurant, the building housed a general store belonging to a man named Fred, who deceived his wife. His wife discovered and was so angry that she murdered Fred andcut one's face. She eliminated the body in the well out of the front of the general store and the Ghost of Fred errates the region. If you see a ghostly figure in a shirt and a flannel combination, do not wait until you turn around.
Nevada: The lady's dagger in red
TheMizpah HotelIn TonoPah, Nevada, is sometimes called "the jewel of the desert". The historic building of five floors was once the social hub of the mining city. A sex worker without name rent a sequence of rooms on the fifth floor. Tragically, she was stabbed to death in the corridor outside her suite and her mind-known as the lady in red can sometimes be wandering in the hallway or in room 502.
New Hampshire: The frightening dolls of the Museum of Amos J. Blake House
Once the office of the house and the law ofAmos J. Blake, theBlake House Museum In Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, is home to no less than 12 ghosts. Full of decorations and landscaping dating from 1837, House Blake contains rooms full of ancient toys and medical facilities that will even crawl the most skeptical visitor. Guardian reports that find that objects move alone and paranormal investigators have recorded disembodied voices. There is even a ghost cat!
New Jersey: The ghost boy from Clinton Road's death curve
Many roads have a "death curve", a trick so dangerous than many drivers find themselves in accidents. TheDeath curve on the road from ClintonLocated in West Milford, New Jersey, is in an area as sorry as even ghosts seem to be lonely. In a bridge just after the curve lies the ghost of a young boy; If you throw coins in the river, it will take you immediately to you. Some say that if you look in the river while you launch the room, you will see your face.
New Mexico: The death of the death of Lieutenant Jalouse Waltz
Although a national monument is all that remains today, Fort Union in County Mora, New Mexico, was an animated outpost between 1851 and 1891. Meanwhile, it is said that aYoung lieutenant of the army Has fallen in love with a woman who promised that if he had to die in combat, she had never married another one. However, when the lieutenant came out in combat and did not go back, she only made during a short time before taking with another man. The day of his wedding, the door of the reception room flew away and, as the story goes, there remained the body of the rotten lieutenant. Without a word, he took the bride shocked from his new husband's arms and went out around the dance floor.
New York: The Fort Niagara headless ghost
Fort Niagara, located north of Buffalo, New York, is the most famous for having undergone a 19-day seat during the French and Indian War. The French finally lost the Strong of the British, but during the fighting, two French soldiers would have had the opportunity to settle a personal score.Jean-Claude de Rochefort andHenri Le Clerc had fallen in love with the same woman and fought for her hand in the wedding. Rochefort won the duel, Leclerc's beheaded and throwing his body into a well. Now, Leclerc's headless ghost can sometimes be seen emerge from this property, looking for the grounds of the fort for his lost head.
North Carolina: The tramping field of the devil
In the midst of Chatham County Bois, there is a circle of about 40 feet in diameter. More than just a clear tree release, nothing will grow up in the ground here, and all that is planted in the circle will die. So-called, dogs refuse to enter the circle and become worried when brought nearby. Old Irish immigrants-Irish called this place theDevil tramp ground And claimed the devil came up every night to browse his borders. Others say it was the place of an amateur massacre of America where the blood degenerates the soil so carefully that nothing would grow again. Anyway, it's not somewhere you want to be taken after nightfall.
North Dakota: Lost love on White Lady Lane
There are many places to get lost in North Dakota, but if you find yourself undressing from Tetrault Wooden County 9, you may want to go back. The road continues to become closer and narrower until cars are no longer adapted. When you arrive at the ruin bridge, you will feel overwhelming emotions of fear and sadness, and you could see theWhite Lady who haunts the bridge. The legend has a young woman forced by her religious parents to marry a man she did not like, nor a teenager killed by a traveling seller who refused to marry. Anyway, everyone in the area knows that White Lady Lane is home to a worried feminine looking for a real love.
Ohio: The lumberjack suspended from Panderson Manor
Punderson Manor in Newbury, Ohio, houses someIncredibly strange ghosts. A teenager who drowned in the nearby lake was postponed to the shore a year later. The night guards report opening doors and close only. And the coldest, some employees in 1979 witnessed the appearance of a lumberjack suspended from a rope of dining room rafters. The spectrum stuck for three hours before disappearing.
Oklahoma: Young Sad Spirits of Masonic Children's House Guthrie
There are few real orphanages around today and the abuse of the past clearly indicate why we have developed alternatives. The oldChildren's house in Guthrie, Oklahoma, always wears the scars of his past of mine: the strict director who beat four boys to death for a bad behavior, the employee who hanged himself in the bell tower and the many deceased children of the disease or accidents . However, many visitors have heard cries or traces of children and have seen ghostly faces in the windows.
Oregon: Shanghai tunnel crimes
In the 1860s, Portland was not the only city that had problems with "Shanghairing" - a question of "Shanghairing" where criminals would remove drunk or drugged men and would force them to work on ships - but it is remarkable to have a complete network of underground tunnels dedicated to the process. Today, theseShanghai tunnels Are so-called the most haunted place in the city, full of ghosts of non-unscurmed sailors of the past.
Pennsylvania: Crime guilty of the Penitentiary of the East State
When he opened in 1829, the Penitentiary of the East State in Philadelphia was supposed to revolutionize the goal of prisons, allowing inmates sufficient time for a silent reflection to cure them from their paths of legislation. In practice, however, the combination of isolation and constant surveillance has led many angry prisoners. Today, the cell block 12 is said to be the most haunted place, although visitors to the guard tour have also seen the appearance of an old guard. More famous, detainedal Capone claimed to have been haunted by his victimJames Clark During a lock and a key in the state of the East. Today you can book your own time slot for aparanormal investigation prison.
Rhode Island: Millight bells with rantail mill
On the shores of the Ponagansett River near Foster, Rhode Island, supports the ruins of a former woolen mill dating back to 1799. However, the problem started in 1822 when the mill's night guardian,PELEG WALKER, I entered a disagreement with the owners of theRattail mill. Walker warned them that they should "take the key to a pocket of a dead man" to open the mill. Of course, Walker has been found hanging on the belfry of the mill the next morning. From that moment, the sound of the bells came from the tower every night, even after the owners removed the bells. The Ramtail plant has been declared "haunted" on the state census of 1885 of Rhode Island and visitors say so far you can always hear the bells at midnight.
Caroline from the south: Goshen's Ghost Dog History
A section of Old Buncombe Road through the National Forest of Sumter is haunted by the spirit of aWhite dog. The story goes that the dog belonged to a traveling seller who met his disappearance in Goshen. Townspeople have mistakenly struck the man for a series of small crimes and hangs him with a tree. The faithful dog remained with the body for days, screaming and screaming until he was also put to death. Now the spirit of a dog with hot red eyes upward rod down the road, looking for a revenge of his master.
South Dakota: The boss of the Bullock hotel of the grave
The HBO showDeadwood introduces America to the historic figure of the real life ofSeth Bullock, the first sheriff of Deadwood, South Dakota. In addition to being a lawyer, Bullock built and exploited a hotel of his own name, and although he dies in 1919, some say he always looks at his business of the grave. The staff and guests have seen its great fantomatic figure on the second and third floors. It seems particularly active when employees are standing idle, still wishing to make sure that staff work hard to keep his hotel in business.
Tennessee: The revenge of the Bell witch
A dispute over the earth in Adams, Tennessee, in the early 1800s, led a woman namedKate batsput a curse on his neighbor,John Bell. She promised Hanter Bell and her descendants and John's Betsy's daughter reported years of torment of an invisible mind. Although the Bell family cabin was demolished in the mid-1800s, visitors say that the spirit of theBell Witch always haunts the caveon the property of the family. A local filmmaker attempt to make a film from history has been hampered by a number of strange accidents and fires, and dozens of ownership visitors report strange events in the cave.
Texas: The "kiss and kill the murder" theatrical
The press called the "kiss and kill murder" -in 1960, high school studentMack harer pulled his ex-girlfriend and classmate, aspiring actressBetty Williams. Nothing about the case was simple: Betty was on the wrong side of the slopes and wrote a note asking Mack to kill her. Mack was the football player, perceived by his hometown of Odessa as the real victim. Since then, the students of Odessa High School have seen and heard strange things in the auditorium where Betty played.
Utah: The adjustment accused serious thief
Jean Baptiste came to the United States of Australia in 1855 and returned to Utah in 1859, where he found work like a ditch. Three short years later, a police officer accused him from stealing the graves he had dug. Burial clothing boxes were found at home and Baptiste was exiled to a small island in the Great Salt Lake as a punishment. The last documented evidence that Baptiste was on the island was found six weeks after shipping there, but after that, it just disappeared, although human remains found in 1893 were judged at the time. The legend says he now draws the southern shores of Great Lake Salt at night.
Vermont: The sorrow of a little girl falls
Evoking the story ofIchabod crane and the headless rider, theCovered bridge of gold stream In Stowe, Vermont, is better known as the Emily Bridge. There are many different versions of who is Emily and how she is dead, but the most popular is the tale of a broken heart of the 1800s who, abandoned by his lover, hung the chevrons of the bridge. In truth, a local woman namedBarbara Barawand claims to have composed the story in the 1970s. Nevertheless, there are records of a little girl who falls from the bridge to his death in 1920- "Emily" can be wrong, but haunting seems real.
Virginia: The whistling whizies of Saint-Albans Sanatorium
Built on the site many victims of Amerindian conflicts and civil war,St. Albans Originally opened in 1892 as a boys' school. However, students quickly gained a reputation for violence. The school was therefore closed in 1910. In 1916, a psychiatric hospital opened on the site, where brutal therapeutic patterns and a lack of staff transformed the sanatorium into a nightmare. Dozens of locations inside the hospital - which serves as its own attraction on Halloween-are paranormal foci. There is even a room where you can exchange whistles with a ghost!
Washington: Paranormal neighbors of Port Gamble
According toPETE ORBEA, Director of the investigators and paranormal communications of Port Gamble, there are only 85 living residents in Port Gamble today, but the spirits of the dead haunt everything, from the museum of the city to its unique set of guest pensions . The epicenter of hautes is theWalker-Ames House, an abandoned Victorian mansion where Orbea leads ghost hunting visits once a month. So-called, faces peer peers out of the windows, furniture tips for no reason, and guests have extreme sick feelings when ghosts are around.
Western Virginia: The little girl who lost her life at Lake Shawnee
Fewer settings are more scary than an abandoned amusement park and the ruins ofShawnee Lake Amusement Park In Western Virginia, you will find many more than decomposed rides. The land that the park has already been a bloody story, thanks to the conflict between the Native Americans and the European settlers in the late 1700. The amusement park itself opened in the 1920s and we say that Six deaths occur over the years. The last straw was the death of a little girl, who climbed on the swing snack when a truck supported. The park was closed in 1966, but the visitors of the ruins pointed out to have seen his ghost.
Wisconsin: The bloody bride will take a ride
If you take highway 66 through Stevens Point, Wisconsin, people say you can meet the appearance of a woman in abloody wedding dresshaunt a bridge that connects both sides of the highway. She said to be the spirit of a woman who died in a car accident on the way to her marriage in the 1950s or 1960s, and it's not just the bridge she haunts. If you drive above the bridge at night, you can look at your back and see the softened bride in your car's back!
Wyoming: The lady in green who just wants to be free
Fort Laramie, now a US National Park and a historic site of eastern Wyoming, started in the 1830s as a fur trading station. The legend has the head of this post brought his daughter with him. Although it forbids it to get on the plains, a day, she stole a horse and left the pole, never come back. Decades later, in 1871, a young lieutenant said he saw a woman in a long galloping green dress towards him on a horse. The lieutenant hunted after her, but she disappeared. So-called every seven years, thisLady in green Rides the plains around Fort Laramie. Even some employees of the National Park claim to have seen. And if you want to know more interesting facts, consult the50 Interesting Facts We bet you never knew.
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