Known as the Valley of Death, the little town of Jatinga in Assam is the place of an annual mass death of birds that has puzzled scientists for years. The locals have long thought the seemingly suicidal birds were angry spirits from the sky come to torment them.
Deep in the heart of the Dima Hasao district of Assam lies a small village shrouded in mystery and surrounded by eerie legends. This is Jatinga, a place where birds fall from the sky in droves, and strange lights flicker in the darkness. For years, scientists, researchers, poets and curious visitors have tried to unravel the secrets of this enigmatic village, but the truth remains elusive.
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Some believe the small town of Jatinga with only 2500 people is a cursed place, haunted by the spirits of the dead. Others claim that it is a vortex of strange energies that attract birds and other creatures to their doom.
The Mystery of Jatinga: Birds committing suicide
Jatinga is known for its strange phenomenon of birds committing suicide and it has at least been happening for over a century. Every year, during the months of August to November, between 7 pm to 10 pm, hundreds of birds come crashing down to the ground in Jatinga. It is said it happens mostly on moonless and foggy dark nights.
The Birds of Assam: Jatinga in Assam, India has long been known as the Bermuda Triangle of Birds. The strange case of countless of birds seemingly plummeting to their death has puzzled scientists for years.
It is a bizarre sight that has puzzled researchers for years. The birds that are affected are usually night migratory species that come from the Himalayan ranges. The birds that are affected by this phenomenon include the tiger bunting, black bittern, and little egret, amongst others.
Theories Behind the Bird Suicides
The local tribals first took this natural phenomenon to be spirits flying from the sky to terrorize them and is also believed to be behind killing many of those that have plunged to death with bamboo poles. Many studies over the years have dispelled the bird suicide theory, but says it is actually the village on a killing spree of the birds to eat them.
There have been many theories behind the bird suicides in Jatinga. Some people believe that the birds are attracted to the lights in the village and become disoriented, leading to their deaths. It could also be the wind that makes them go towards the lights as safety but are hit with bamboo poles on their way down and killed.
Others believe that the birds are driven to suicide by a magnetic force that emanates from the hills surrounding Jatinga. However, none of these theories have been scientifically proven.
Legends and Myths Associated with Jatinga
Jatinga is steeped in legends and myths that add to its enigmatic aura. One of the most popular legends associated with Jatinga is that it is a cursed place. It is also said that this is why the villagers set up the bamboo poles, who feared the birds that they thought were evil spirits sent from the sky to cause them harm and it was meant as more of a protective measurement when the birds got attracted to the lights from the village. Or whatever that is making the birds drop from the sky that is.
The Green Country: Assam at the eastern foot of the Himalayas is often associated with mysteries and mythical tales and the hill village of Jatinga is just one of them. The place is also known for its diversity of faun and flora.
According to the legend, a powerful witch cursed the village, causing the birds to fall from the sky. The witch is said to have been angered by the villagers who refused to help her when she was in need. Another legend states that Jatinga is the gateway to the underworld, and the birds that fall from the sky are the spirits of the dead trying to communicate with the living.
The Enduring Mystery of Jatinga
Jatinga is a place that continues to baffle scientists, researchers, and visitors alike. Its strange phenomenon of bird suicides, haunted places, and legends have made it an enigmatic destination that draws people from all over the world. While the truth behind the mysteries of Jatinga may never be fully understood, one thing is for sure: it is a place that will leave a lasting impression on anyone who dares to explore its secrets.
The sound of thundering hooves and whinnying of abandoned mustangs in the Canyonlands National Park and the Dead Horse Point State Park is said to haunt the canyons. Left by the cowboys trying to break them in, Ghost Horses were left to starvation and thirst.
Canyonlands National Park in Utah, with its otherworldly rock canyons and vast landscapes, offers visitors a journey through the remnants of the Wild West. Amid the breathtaking scenery, however, whispers of an eerie tale persist—a haunting legend that brings forth the mournful echoes of ghostly mustangs.
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Dead Horse Point State Park in San Juan County offers a dramatic view over the National Park, often called Utah’s Little Grand Canyon and also where the movie, Thelma and Louise was filmed. According to legend, the park is so named because of its use as a natural corral by cowboys in the, where horses often died of exposure. Dead Horse Point has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names
The haunted Canyonlands: Dead Horse Point State Park Utah USA overlooking the Colorado River. It is said to be haunted by the horses that were left for dead there.
Canyonlands National Park
Canyonlands National Park, located in southeastern Utah, is a stunning expanse of dramatic desert landscapes sculpted by the Colorado River and its tributaries. Divided into four distinct districts—Island in the Sky, The Needles, The Maze, and the rivers themselves—the park offers a diverse array of geological features, including towering mesas, expansive canyons, unique rock formations, and ancient petroglyphs. Each district provides a unique experience, from the breathtaking panoramic vistas at Island in the Sky to the intricate sandstone spires in The Needles and the remote, rugged wilderness of The Maze.
The Dead Horse Point State Park is much smaller and under another administration. It is located near the Island in the Sky district of Canyonlands National Park and is easily accessible from Moab, Utah.
The Abandoned Mustangs
In the moonlit solitude of Canyonlands, the air is said to stir with the phantom clamor of hooves and the sorrowful whinnies of spectral horses among the Juniper trees. These apparitions are believed to be the lingering spirits of a once-vibrant herd of wild mustangs whose tragic fate was sealed by the negligence of heartless wranglers in the 1800s.
The tale unfolds with a group of cowboys rounding up dozens of wild mustangs in the part of the park now known as The Neck or The Gooseneck, intent on breaking them and selling them to the highest bidders. Life back then was hard back then, only people of spirit and grit survived it. This also came at the expense of the innocent animals they used.
Ghost Horses: The thing said to be haunting the Dead Horse Point State Park and Canyonlands National Park are the spirits of the horses that were left for dead by the Cowboys.
Having chosen the select few that promised the greatest profits, the wranglers callously abandoned the remaining horses, or they simply forgot to release them. Left to fend for themselves in the harsh canyons, the forsaken mustangs found themselves captive without sustenance.
They were trapped in a makeshift corral and didn’t manage to get to the Colorado River closeby. Slowly, they succumbed to starvation, many leaping to their death as they could both see and smell the river, their haunting cries filling the desolate landscape.
The Ghost Horses
Now, as the moon graces the night sky, the Ghost Horses of Canyonlands are said to gallop through the park, their ethereal forms unrestrained by the earthly confines that once betrayed them. The haunting echoes of their hoofbeats serve as a poignant reminder of the cruelty they endured, seeking solace in the afterlife with wild abandon.
People that visit the Dead Horse State Park as well as Canyonlands National Park come back with stories about hearing the mournful whinnying of horses and the thunderous hooves over the ground. Visitors are always advised to give them their space if you ever hear them coming, on their eternal path to the Colorado River to drink, to freedom.
In the serene landscape of Killua Castle, visitors have reported about seeing something that look like a ghost. It is thought to be the former steward, Jacky Dalton, that drowned himself after betraying his master.
In the scenic landscapes of Ireland lies Killua Castle, a historic estate with a rich past and a few ghostly tales that continue to intrigue visitors. This elegant castle close to Clonmellon in County Westmeath, is now lovingly restored that you can stay in to visit the place as well as hosting different events.
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The castle is not far from The Raleigh Obelisk that were erected in 1810 by Sir Thomas Chapman some 200m to 300m from the house, marking the position where Sir Walter Raleigh planted some of the first potatoes that he imported to Ireland.
The History of Killua Castle
Killua Castle’s story begins in 1667 when Benjamin Chapman, an army captain under Oliver Cromwell, was granted ownership of the castle and its vast surrounding lands. While the castle we see today took shape around 1780, it underwent several expansions as it passed through generations of the Chapman family.
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This family had intriguing connections to prominent historical figures, such as Sir Walter Raleigh and Lawrence of Arabia. Lawrence never lived at the castle but did visit it and was inspired by its splendor.
For many years, Killua Castle lay in ruins, a silent witness to its bygone glory. It wasn’t until the early 2000s that new owners took up the mantle of restoring the castle to its former splendor.
The Death of Jacky Dalton
One of the most intriguing tales associated with Killua Castle revolves around Benjamin Chapman’s land steward, Jacky Dalton that was working there in the late 18th century. This land steward is described as a short man with a charismatic and jovial personality. With his wild yellow wig and bagpipe skills, he became a beloved presence among Chapman and his guests.
However, Dalton’s loyalty would ultimately waver and end up betraying his master. Because the man was also described as a small cunning man with weasel eyes. He deceived Chapman and embezzled his wealth for his own gain and drinking habits. Regret and guilt would haunt him in the years to come, particularly after his master’s passing.
Consumed by remorse, Dalton turned to heavy drinking, and his life spiraled out of control. There was no more of his cheerful disposition and music in the halls of Killua Castle anymore. Tragically, he met his end by drowning himself in the castle’s lake.
The Haunting of Killua Castle
Ever since then, it is believed that he has been haunting the estate. Over the years, witnesses have reported eerie sightings of a spectral figure on the grounds of Killua Castle.
This apparition is described as a man with yellowish hair, an eerie reminder of Jacky Dalton. Whether he roams the estate seeking redemption or simply to remind us of his tragic tale remains a mystery.
The Haunted Killua Castle
In the serene landscape of Killua Castle, visitors have reported seeing something that looks like a ghost. It is thought to be the former steward, Jacky Dalton, who drowned himself after betraying his master. This haunting tale continues to captivate the imagination of those who visit this beautiful estate in Ireland.
For centuries, Killua Castle stood in ruins, a silent testament to its glorious past. However, in the early 2000s, a dedicated group of individuals took up the mantle of restoring the castle to its former splendor. With great care and attention to detail, they brought the castle back to life, ensuring that its historical significance would not be forgotten.
Today, Killua Castle stands as an enchanting destination for those seeking a blend of history, beauty, and the allure of the supernatural.
The ghost of a woman on the beaches of Lake Michigan in Indiana National Park is said to disappear into the water. The ghost is believed to be the spirit of Alice Mable Gray, or as the legend dubbed her: Diana of the Dunes.
Along the southern end of Lake Michigan, the Indiana Dunes have long been celebrated for their natural allure, earning the prestigious designation of a U.S. National Park in 1966 with the older Indiana Dunes State Park not far from it. The primary feature of Indiana Dunes National Park is Lake Michigan that in the winter can bring ridges of ice on the beaches and in summer can create rip current sweeping swimmers out into the lake.
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Beyond the sun-kissed sands and windswept dunes lies a tapestry of haunted rumors, casting a spectral veil over the picturesque landscape that has captivated visitors since the 1910s when she packed her bags and became a legend.
Diana of the Dunes
Amidst the undulating dunes and whispering winds, one ghostly tale emerges—a narrative woven around a woman named Alice Mabel Gray. Her real life story was warped by the media even when she was alive. Testimonies from newspapers, locals have been exaggerated and at times, even contradictory.
Many stories about where she came from circulated, many rumors about her being a socialite of a rich family. But she was really the bright daughter of a laborer, and at 16, she entered the University of Chicago and graduated with honorable mentions in astronomy, mathematics, Greek and Latin. She worked briefly at the U.S Naval Observatory as a mathematician, but left for further studies in Germany.
When in Germany, she discovered the Wandervogel movement, or the Birds in Passing. The movement was made up of young people giving up their possessions to live off the land in nature.
Diana of the Dunes: Alice Gray, also known as the ‘Diana of the Dunes’. Undated photo. She was a celebrity of her time, choosing to live in the dunes at a time when the expectations of a woman’s life was much narrower. She was a legend back then, now she remain as a ghost story told.
Disenchanted with urban life in Chicago as a stenographer a few years later, Gray sought solace in the untamed beauty of the Indiana wilderness in 1915 when she was 34 years old. There were rumors about her having an affair with a professor that ended badly, but like much about her life, it remains a private and secret thing.
Opting to abandon the trappings of city life, she chose to live off the grid, finding refuge among the dunes that would become her eternal home. She lived in a shack abandoned by fishermen she called Driftwood.
The fishermen started to talk about the young woman bathing naked and living alone by the shores of Lake Michigan. She was described as a hermit, foraging for food. Sometimes she went into the city to buy supplies and borrow books from the library.
The reporters heard about the story and came flocking to these strange things, a woman just walking into the wild, dubbing her Diana of the Dunes from the Roman goddess of hunting and nature. If she really gave interviews to the reporters is unclear, but when they ran a story on her, they quoted her saying: “I want to live my own life – a free life,”
Driftwood: Diana of the Dunes outside of her shack she lived in called Driftwood. The winters could be harsh, life could be harder. Nevertheless it was the life she had chosen for herself.
She met Paul, a drifter and a man with a dark past, and together they got in trouble with the police as well at times as they were suspected for stealing food. Although they never officially married, she referred to him as her husband.
When she was diagnosed with kidney disease, she decided to not get any treatment for it, and died on February 8 of uremia poisoning. And with her death, her intentions and what about her life was true or not died with her. What drove her into the dunes? How much of what was written about her, about her skinny dipping for instance?
The Ghost of the Dunes
Known by the evocative moniker “Diana of the Dunes,” Alice Gray’s spirit allegedly continues to roam the landscape she once called home. Most ghost stories come from the passing fishermen that have seen something strange and visitors to the beaches.
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Some claim to have witnessed her ethereal figure indulging in moonlit skinny-dipping escapades in the cool embrace of Lake Michigan. People say that they sometimes see a ghostly woman running on the shore before disappearing into the water. Abandoned homes, where Gray sought shelter during her earthly existence, serve as spectral remnants of her unconventional life.
As visitors traverse the dunes and stroll along the serene shores of Lake Michigan, the ghostly echoes of Alice Gray’s unconventional life persist. The Indiana Dunes, with its idyllic scenery, bears witness to a haunting legacy—a series of rumors, spectral sightings, and the lingering mystery of a woman who embraced the wilderness in both life and death. The winds that sweep across the dunes seem to carry with them the whispers of a bygone era and a plea to preserve the dunes as the wild place it is.
When the miners dug deep into the ravines on Tenerife, they encountered something otherworldly. Strange glowing people as well as legends about time ticking away differently in the Mines of Barranco de Badajoz, the place have become a place of wonder and mystery.
Deep down in the ravines on Tenerife in Spain there is a mystery about the strange things living down in the mines. These mystical Barranco de Badajoz mines hold a captivating secret that has left locals and explorers mesmerized for centuries.
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The Barranco de Badajoz is a ravine found south of Tenerife on the Canary Islands in Spain, close to Güimar. It can only be reached by car via the road that goes to the volcano. Many years ago, the place was known for the mining in the ravine walls. The ravine itself holds a rich history, with tales of hidden treasures and supernatural occurrences. However, it is the stories surrounding the glowing people that truly capture the imagination.
The Mines of Barranco de Badajoz: The caves on Tenerife have many legends and strange stories coming from it. //Source: Mataparda/Wikimedia
It is in these ravines we have found Guanche mummies from the aboriginal people that were the ancient inhabitants of Tenerife.
Numerous legends come from this place, where angelic beings, UFO’s and Satanic rituals and other paranormal phenomena. But no stranger story is the stories about the glowing people found in one of the mines in the ravine.
The Glowing People in the Ravine: Legends and Encounters
One of the mysterious legends about Barranco de Badajoz revolves around the strange lights and glowing beings that people claim to have seen in the ravine, especially in the mines in the cave known as Cueva del Cañizo.
These beings are said to wear white and have an otherworldly glow that captivates all who lay eyes upon them. Witnesses describe them as silent observers, watching intently without making any discernible movements. Some even claim to have had conversations with these ethereal creatures, forever altering their perception of reality.
The Missing Girl with the Pears in the Mines of Barranco de Badajoz
The most perplexing tale is that of a 15-year-old girl who vanished while playing in the ravine, searching for pears. This was supposedly in the 1890s. They looked for her all over the ravines, but she was nowhere to be found.
For 30 years, her disappearance remained a haunting mystery until she resurfaced and came home, knocking on her parents door, not a day older than when she went missing. When questioned about her whereabouts, she shared a chilling account of her encounter with the glowing people. Apparently she fell asleep at the foot of the pear tree and was awakened by a tall being wearing all white.
She claimed that they took her to a cave where she claimed there was a large garden filled with these beings, where they conversed with her for a brief moment before she was returned home. To her astonishment, she discovered that three decades had passed in the span of those fleeting moments.
Parallel Dimensions: A Gateway to the Unknown
What could possibly be happening within the ravine and its mysterious caves? The strange stories and legends surrounding Barranco de Badajoz have led many to believe that the cave acts as a gateway to a parallel dimension or world from which these enigmatic beings originate. The notion of parallel dimensions has long fascinated humanity, and the experiences shared by witnesses in the vicinity of the ravine only fuel these speculative theories.
In 1912, the workers in the deeper mines stumbled upon a landslide near the ravine at sunset. Intrigued, they began to dig and unearthed a ladder that seemingly emerged from the deepest depths of the cave. Curiosity getting the best of them, they descended and were met with the sight of two glowing beings dressed in white. These beings watched them intently, neither moving nor uttering a single word. Filled with fear, the workers fled and reported their encounter to the Civil Guard. However, upon returning to the spot where they had seen the creatures, there was no trace of them.
We don’t have a paper trail with the Civil Guard to prove the story, but the galleries in the mines were abandoned after the walls collapsed in the landslide and filled with water.
A Modern-Day Mystery: The Legacy of the Glowing People
Today, the Barranco de Badajoz has become a popular hiking area, attracting adventurers from far and wide. Yet, even in modern times, reports of strange phenomena continue to emerge from those who venture close to the ravine. From inexplicable lights that dance in the darkness to an overwhelming feeling of being watched, the allure of the glowing people persists. These encounters leave witnesses in a state of awe and intrigue, forever questioning the boundaries of our reality.
Exactly who is haunting the Nahargarh Fort in Jaipur, India? Could it be a spirit that was said to haunt the area even before the fort on the hill was built? And could it have something to do with the tragic death that happened in recent times?
Perched on the rugged edge of the Aravalli hills, Nahargarh Fort stands as a silent sentinel overlooking the Pink City of Jaipur. Its towering walls, designed to seclude the royals from the world, enclose not only a rich historical legacy but also a chilling reputation as one of Rajasthan’s most haunted places. Despite its architectural grandeur, the fort’s eerie atmosphere and ghostly tales continue to captivate and terrify visitors.
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Built in 1734 by Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II, Nahargarh Fort was part of a triad of fortresses, including Amer Fort and Jaigarh Fort, constructed to bolster the defense of Jaipur, although it never really came under attack in the end.
The Nahargarh Fort: Overlooking Jaipur from its surronding hills. There are many haunted stories about this place, even from the time it was built. // Source: Photo by Mayur Sable on Pexels.com
The Ghost of Nahar Singh Bhomia
The Nahargarh Fort, originally named Sudarshangarh, was later renamed Nahargarh, meaning ‘abode of tigers.’ Legend has it that the fort was named after a spirit named Nahar Singh Bhomia, a Rathore prince, or perhaps a guardian of the place, whose restless soul was appeased by dedicating the fort in his name and building a temple in his honor.
The Rathore dynasty, or Rathor, was an Indian dynasty belonging to the Rathore clan of Rajputs that has historically ruled over parts of Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh.
It is said that when they built the fort, the workers would come in the mornings and find their work damaged, walls knocked over in the night when no one was there. They believed it had to be the work of a ghost, not pleased about the building of the fort. This was said to have happened for many days until they took action.
Ponderik Ji was a royal Brahmin, the highest caste and hindu priest, and tried to appease the ghost by performing Tantric rites and promising to build a temple on the Amagarh hill, one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world, of the unhappy prince that had his former territory taken over by someone else. You can still see and visit the temple in Ghat Ki Guni. In addition they also built a temple in the fort itself, just to be safe.
The Ghost of Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II
However, the most enduring ghostly presence associated with Nahargarh Fort is that of Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II (3 November 1688 – 21 September 1743) himself. He was the 29th ruler of the Kingdom of Amber and moved his kingdom’s capital from the town of Amber to the newly established walled city of Jaipur in 1727.
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His passion for this fort, built as a retreat much used by him and his 12 wives, was so profound that it is said his spirit still lingers within its walls after he died after never recovering from the Battle of Gangwana.
Despite the passage of centuries, the ghostly presence of the Maharaja continues to cast a shadow over the fort, entwining his legacy with tales of the supernatural.
The Many Ghosts of the Fort: Exactly who is said to haunt the Nahargarh Fort today? Many believe it is the king who built it, possibly the original ghost that was haunted as it was built. Or could it be some of the other tragic legends that are left on the fort?// Source: Photo by Kenneth Christopher on Pexels.com
The Imprisoned Dancer at the Nahargarh Fort
One of the legends of the Nahargarh Fort is that one of the dancers of the Jaipur court, Ras Kapoor, was imprisoned here. She is said to have been at the court during the reign of Sawai Jagat Singh (1786-1818 AD).
Her mother was a court dancer and she was born as one and learned dancing under Paro begum, the department for skills, arts and talents. He was in love with the dancer and wanted to marry her and gave her half the empire and wealth. Although at the time he already had 21 queens and 24 concubines.
This gave her the right to sit in the court right beside the king on the throne and immense power. She used her power as well and started to govern. He became disinterested in local affairs and the story about why and who the dancer was spread among the locals. The court and the public didn’t like it one bit and some of the feudal lords opposed Ras Kapoor publicly.
Fearing the court and public opinions, Sawai Jagat Singh felt he had no other choice but imprison her in the fort. Or was it the court that imprisoned her there while her Maharaja was fighting the Pindaris?
How it ended varies. Was she killed there by the court ministers or queens? Thrown out of the window of her room? Did the king then die from a broken heart the year after? Some say that when the king died, Ras Kapoor was alive, but she fled from her prison and threw herself into the pyre at his burial.
Did it happen though? Some claim that it was not in Nahargarh Fort it all went down, but that she was imprisoned in Jaigarh. Some also say that this legend has a contribution to the haunted legends that are said to go on in the fort. Could it be that some of the victims of the court and society rules of the time here are still haunting it?
The Mysterious Murder or Suicide
One of the newer rumors about the Nahargarh Fort though, is how the ghost of whoever is haunting it came back when restoring it at some non-specific time. It is said that the work angered the ghost so much that they had something to do with the sudden death of the leader of the restoration work who were found dead in his home.
But what really happened here, and how did it affect the legend of the haunted fort?
One of the incidents that got the murmuring haunting a bigger voice again was when a 40 year old man was found hanging from one of the bastions of the fort inside one of the rooms that caused a stir and reminded everyone about the haunted tales. The man was a local gem polisher named Chetan Kumar Saini and he was found on November 24th in 2017.
A strange charcoal scribble with a mysterious writing “We don’t just hang effigies, Padmavati.” was the only message close by. Perhaps directed to the protests over Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Padmavati. People in Rajasthan had protested against the portrayal of Padmini’s character in a movie about it, causing muslim’s and hindu’s to clash. There were other writings, like “Each infidel will meet this fate,” “ we are Allah’s men, we are powerful”.
Strange Writings: On the stones around the body, there were strange messages left. This mysterious case started people talking about The Nahargarh Fort haunted rumors again.
The death was suspicious and the police never concluded if it was a murder or a suicide. The family of the man claimed that it was actually a murder. The police found anti-morti injuries on his body that suggested suicide. It also showed he owed a huge amount of money that was due.
Whatever really happened that tragic day is uncertain, and the mysteries remain. It did however remind people about the other mysteries about the fort that have been there before it was even built.
Tales from the Dark
Stories of ghostly apparitions and unexplained phenomena are common among those who have spent time within the Nahargarh Fort’s imposing walls. Some claim to have seen the specter of the Maharaja himself, wandering the corridors and ramparts as if still overseeing the fort. Others report hearing disembodied voices, footsteps echoing in empty halls, and doors that open and close on their own.
As the sun sets over the Aravalli hills and the shadows lengthen, Nahargarh Fort transforms from a monument of historical splendor to a place of eerie mystery. The tales of restless spirits, mysterious deaths, and supernatural occurrences ensure that Nahargarh Fort remains a haunting presence, its walls whispering secrets of a bygone era to those who dare to listen.
The Transfer by Algernon Blackwood was first published in the magazine, Country Life, in 1911, tells of a child’s fascination with a barren patch of land in a big garden known as the Forbidden Corner. A story involving a mysterious and vampiric transfer of life force. It follows a governess who witnesses the visit of her employer’s brother, a psychic vampire who seems to suck the life force from all around him.
The Transfer by Algernon Blackwood (1911)
The child began to cry in the early afternoon—about three o’clock, to be exact. I remember the hour, because I had been listening with secret relief to the sound of the departing carriage. Those wheels fading into the distance down the gravel drive with Mrs. Frene, and her daughter Gladys to whom I was governess, meant for me some hours’ welcome rest, and the June day was oppressively hot. Moreover, there was this excitement in the little country household that had told upon us all, but especially upon myself. This excitement, running delicately behind all the events of the morning, was due to some mystery, and the mystery was of course kept concealed from the governess. I had exhausted myself with guessing and keeping on the watch. For some deep and unexplained anxiety possessed me, so that I kept thinking of my sister’s dictum that I was really much too sensitive to make a good governess, and that I should have done far better as a professional clairvoyante.
Mr. Frene, senior, ‘Uncle Frank,’ was expected for an unusual visit from town about teatime. That I knew. I also knew that his visit was concerned somehow with the future welfare of little Jamie, Gladys’ seven-year-old brother. More than this, indeed, I never knew, and this missing link makes my story in a fashion incoherent—an important bit of the strange puzzle left out. I only gathered that the visit of Uncle Frank was of a condescending nature, that Jamie was told he must be upon his very best behaviour to make a good impression, and that Jamie, who had never seen his uncle, dreaded him horribly already in advance. Then, trailing thinly through the dying crunch of the carriage wheels this sultry afternoon, I heard the curious little wail of the child’s crying, with the effect, wholly unaccountable, that every nerve in my body shot its bolt electrically, bringing me to my feet with a tingling of unequivocal alarm. Positively, the water ran into my eyes. I recalled his white distress that morning when told that Uncle Frank was motoring down for tea and that he was to be ‘very nice indeed’ to him. It had gone into me like a knife. All through the day, indeed, had run this nightmare quality of terror and vision.
‘The man with the ‘normous face?’ he had asked in a little voice of awe, and then gone speechless from the room in tears that no amount of soothing management could calm. That was all I saw; and what he meant by ‘the ‘normous face’ gave me only a sense of vague presentiment. But it came as anticlimax somehow—a sudden revelation of the mystery and excitement that pulsed beneath the quiet of the stifling summer day. I feared for him. For of all that commonplace household I loved Jamie best, though professionally I had nothing to do with him. He was a high-strung, ultra-sensitive child, and it seemed to me that no one understood him, least of all his honest, tender-hearted parents; so that his little wailing voice brought me from my bed to the window in a moment like a call for help.
The haze of June lay over that big garden like a blanket; the wonderful flowers, which were Mr. Frene’s delight, hung motionless; the lawns, so soft and thick, cushioned all other sounds; only the limes and huge clumps of guelder roses hummed with bees. Through this muted atmosphere of heat and haze the sound of the child’s crying floated faintly to my ears—from a distance. Indeed, I wonder now that I heard it at all, for the next moment I saw him down beyond the garden, standing in his white sailor suit alone, two hundred yards away. He was down by the ugly patch where nothing grew—the Forbidden Corner. A faintness then came over me at once, a faintness as of death, when I saw him there of all places-where he never was allowed to go, and where, moreover, he was usually too terrified to go. To see him standing solitary in that singular spot, above all to hear him crying there, bereft me momentarily of the power to act. Then, before I could recover my composure sufficiently to call him in, Mr. Frene came round the corner from the Lower Farm with the dogs, and, seeing his son, performed that office for me. In his loud, good-natured, hearty voice he called him, and Jamie turned and ran as though some spell had broken just in time—ran into the open arms of his fond but uncomprehending father, who carried him indoors on his shoulder, while asking ‘what all this hubbub was about?’ And, at their heels, the tailless sheepdogs followed, barking loudly, and performing what Jamie called their ‘Gravel Dance,’ because they ploughed up the moist, rolled gravel with their feet.
I stepped back swiftly from the window lest I should be seen. Had I witnessed the saving of the child from fire or drowning the relief could hardly have been greater. Only Mr. Frene, I felt sure, would not say and do the right thing quite. He would protect the boy from his own vain imaginings, yet not with the explanation that could really heal. They disappeared behind the rose trees, making for the house. I saw no more till later, when Mr. Frene, senior, arrived.
To describe the ugly patch as ‘singular’ is hard to justify, perhaps, yet some such word is what the entire family sought, though never—oh, never!—used. To Jamie and myself, though equally we never mentioned it, that treeless, flowerless spot was more than singular. It stood at the far end of the magnificent rose garden, a bald, sore place, where the black earth showed uglily in winter, almost like a piece of dangerous bog, and in summer baked and cracked with fissures where green lizards shot their fire in passing. In contrast to the rich luxuriance of death amid life, a centre of disease that cried for healing lest it spread. But it never did spread. Behind it stood the thick wood of silver birches and, glimmering beyond, the orchard meadow, where the lambs played.
The gardeners had a very simple explanation of its barrenness—that the water all drained off it owing to the lie of the slopes immediately about it, holding no remnant to keep the soil alive. I cannot say. It was Jamie—Jamie who felt its spell and haunted it, who spent whole hours there, even while afraid, and for whom it was finally labelled ‘strictly out of bounds’ because it stimulated his already big imagination, not wisely but too darkly—it was Jamie who buried ogres there and heard it crying in an earthy voice, swore that it shook its surface sometimes while he watched it, and secretly gave it food in the form of birds or mice or rabbits he found dead upon his wanderings. And it was Jamie who put so extraordinarily into words the feeling that the horrid spot had given me from the moment I first saw it.
‘It’s bad, Miss Gould,’ he told me.
‘But, Jamie, nothing in Nature is bad—exactly; only different from the rest sometimes.’
‘Miss Gould, if you please, then it’s empty. It’s not fed. It’s dying because it can’t get the food it wants.’ And when I stared into the little pale face where the eyes shone so dark and wonderful, seeking within myself for the right thing to say to him, he added, with an emphasis and conviction that made me suddenly turn cold: ‘Miss Gould’—he always used my name like this in all his sentences—’it’s hungry, don’t you see? But I know what would make it feel all right.’
Only the conviction of an earnest child, perhaps, could have made so outrageous a suggestion worth listening to for an instant; but for me, who felt that things an imaginative child believed were important, it came with a vast disquieting shock of reality. Jamie, in this exaggerated way, had caught at the edge of a shocking fact—a hint of dark, undiscovered truth had leaped into that sensitive imagination. Why there lay horror in the words I cannot say, but I think some power of darkness trooped across the suggestion of that sentence at the end, ‘I know what would make it feel all right.’ I remember that I shrank from asking explanation. Small groups of other words, veiled fortunately by his silence, gave life to an unspeakable possibility that hitherto had lain at the back of my own consciousness. The way it sprang to life proves, I think, that my mind already contained it. The blood rushed from my heart as I listened. I remember that my knees shook. Jamie’s idea was—had been all along—my own as well.
And now, as I lay down on my bed and thought about it all, I understood why the coming of his uncle involved somehow an experience that wrapped terror at its heart. With a sense of nightmare certainty that left me too weak to resist the preposterous idea, too shocked, indeed, to argue or reason it away, this certainty came with its full, black blast of conviction; and the only way I can put it into words, since nightmare horror really is not properly tellable at all, seems this: that there was something missing in that dying patch of garden; something lacking that it ever searched for; something, once found and taken, that would turn it rich and living as the rest; more—that there was some living person who could do this for it. Mr. Frene, senior, in a word, ‘Uncle Frank,’ was this person who out of his abundant life could supply the lack—unwittingly.
For this connection between the dying, empty patch and the person of this vigorous, wealthy, and successful man had already lodged itself in my subconsciousness before I was aware of it. Clearly it must have lain there all along, though hidden. Jamie’s words, his sudden pallor, his vibrating emotion of fearful anticipation had developed the plate, but it was his weeping alone there in the Forbidden Corner that had printed it. The photograph shone framed before me in the air. I hid my eyes. But for the redness—the charm of my face goes to pieces unless my eyes are clear—I could have cried. Jamie’s words that morning about the ”normous face’ came back upon me like a battering-ram.
Mr. Frene, senior, had been so frequently the subject of conversation in the family since I came, I had so often heard him discussed, and had then read so much about him in the papers—his energy, his philanthropy, his success with everything he laid his hand to—that a picture of the man had grown complete within me. I knew him as he was—within; or, as my sister would have said—clairvoyantly. And the only time I saw him (when I took Gladys to a meeting where he was chairman, and later felt his atmosphere and presence while for a moment he patronisingly spoke with her) had justified the portrait I had drawn. The rest, you may say, was a woman’s wild imagining; but I think rather it was that kind of divining intuition which women share with children. If souls could be made visible, I would stake my life upon the truth and accuracy of my portrait.
For this Mr. Frene was a man who drooped alone, but grew vital in a crowd—because he used their vitality. He was a supreme, unconscious artist in the science of taking the fruits of others’ work and living—for his own advantage. He vampired, unknowingly no doubt, everyone with whom he came in contact; left them exhausted, tired, listless. Others fed him, so that while in a full room he shone, alone by himself and with no life to draw upon he languished and declined. In the man’s immediate neighbourhood you felt his presence draining you; he took your ideas, your strength, your very words, and later used them for his own benefit and aggrandisement. Not evilly, of course; the man was good enough; but you felt that he was dangerous owing to the facile way he absorbed into himself all loose vitality that was to be had. His eyes and voice and presence devitalised you. Life, it seemed, not highly organised enough to resist, must shrink from his too near approach and hide away for fear of being appropriated, for fear, that is, of—death.
Jamie, unknowingly, put in the finishing touch to my unconscious portrait. The man carried about with him some silent, compelling trick of drawing out all your reserves—then swiftly pocketing them. At first you would be conscious of taut resistance; this would slowly shade off into weariness; the will would become flaccid; then you either moved away or yielded—agreed to all he said with a sense of weakness pressing ever closer upon the edges of collapse. With a male antagonist it might be different, but even then the effort of resistance would generate force that he absorbed and not the other. He never gave out. Some instinct taught him how to protect himself from that. To human beings, I mean, he never gave out. This time it was a very different matter. He had no more chance than a fly before the wheels of a huge—what Jamie used to call—’attraction’ engine.
So this was how I saw him—a great human sponge, crammed and soaked with the life, or proceeds of life, absorbed from others—stolen. My idea of a human vampire was satisfied. He went about carrying these accumulations of the life of others. In this sense his ‘life’ was not really his own. For the same reason, I think, it was not so fully under his control as he imagined.
And in another hour this man would be here. I went to the window. My eye wandered to the empty patch, dull black there amid the rich luxuriance of the garden flowers. It struck me as a hideous bit of emptiness yawning to be filled and nourished. The idea of Jamie playing round its bare edge was loathsome. I watched the big summer clouds above, the stillness of the afternoon, the haze. The silence of the overheated garden was oppressive. I had never felt a day so stifling, motionless. It lay there waiting. The household, too, was waiting—waiting for the coming of Mr. Frene from London in his big motorcar.
And I shall never forget the sensation of icy shrinking and distress with which I heard the rumble of the car. He had arrived. Tea was all ready on the lawn beneath the lime trees, and Mrs. Frene and Gladys, back from their drive, were sitting in wicker chairs. Mr. Frene, junior, was in the hall to meet his brother, but Jamie, as I learned afterwards, had shown such hysterical alarm, offered such bold resistance, that it had been deemed wiser to keep him in his room. Perhaps, after all, his presence might not be necessary. The visit clearly had to do with something on the uglier side of life—money, settlements, or whatnot; I never knew exactly; only that his parents were anxious, and that Uncle Frank had to be propitiated. It does not matter. That has nothing to do with the affair. What has to do with it—or I should not be telling the story—is that Mrs. Frene sent for me to come down ‘in my nice white dress, if I didn’t mind,’ and that I was terrified, yet pleased, because it meant that a pretty face would be considered a welcome addition to the visitor’s landscape. Also, most odd it was, I felt my presence was somehow inevitable, that in some way it was intended that I should witness what I did witness. And the instant I came upon the lawn—I hesitate to set it down, it sounds so foolish, disconnected—I could have sworn, as my eyes met his, that a kind of sudden darkness came, taking the summer brilliance out of everything, and that it was caused by troops of small black horses that raced about us from his person—to attack.
After a first momentary approving glance he took no further notice of me. The tea and talk went smoothly; I helped to pass the plates and cups, filling in pauses with little under-talk to Gladys. Jamie was never mentioned. Outwardly all seemed well, but inwardly everything was awful—skirting the edge of things unspeakable, and so charged with danger that I could not keep my voice from trembling when I spoke.
I watched his hard, bleak face; I noticed how thin he was, and the curious, oily brightness of his steady eyes. They did not glitter, but they drew you with a sort of soft, creamy shine like Eastern eyes. And everything he said or did announced what I may dare to call the suction of his presence. His nature achieved this result automatically. He dominated us all, yet so gently that until it was accomplished no one noticed it.
Before five minutes had passed, however, I was aware of one thing only. My mind focused exclusively upon it, and so vividly that I marvelled the others did not scream, or run, or do something violent to prevent it. And it was this; that, separated merely by some dozen yards or so, this man, vibrating with the acquired vitality of others, stood within easy reach of that spot of yawning emptiness, waiting and eager to be filled. Earth scented her prey.
These two active ‘centres’ were within fighting distance; he so thin, so hard, so keen, yet really spreading large with the loose ‘surround’ of others’ life he had appropriated, so practised and triumphant; that other so patient, deep, with so mighty a draw of the whole earth behind it, and—ugh!—so obviously aware that its opportunity at last had come.
I saw it all as plainly as though I watched two great animals prepare for battle, both unconsciously; yet in some inexplicable way I saw it, of course, within me, and not externally. The conflict would be hideously unequal. Each side had already sent out emissaries, how long before I could not tell, for the first evidence he gave that something was going wrong with him was when his voice grew suddenly confused, he missed his words, and his lips trembled a moment and turned flabby. The next second his face betrayed that singular and horrid change, growing somehow loose about the bones of the cheek, and larger, so that I remembered Jamie’s miserable phrase. The emissaries of the two kingdoms, the human and the vegetable, had met, I make it out, in that very second. For the first time in his long career of battening on others, Mr. Frene found himself pitted against a vaster kingdom than he knew and, so finding, shook inwardly in that little part that was his definite actual self. He felt the huge disaster coming.
‘Yes, John,’ he was saying, in his drawling, self-congratulating voice, ‘Sir George gave me that car—gave it to me as a present. Wasn’t it char—?’ and then broke off abruptly, stammered, drew breath, stood up, and looked uneasily about him. For a second there was a gaping pause. It was like the click which starts some huge machinery moving—that instant’s pause before it actually starts. The whole thing, indeed, then went with the rapidity of machinery running down and beyond control. I thought of a giant dynamo working silently and invisible.
‘What’s that?’ he cried, in a soft voice charged with alarm. ‘What’s that horrid place? And someone’s crying there—who is it?’
He pointed to the empty patch. Then, before anyone could answer, he started across the lawn towards it, going every minute faster. Before anyone could move he stood upon the edge. He leaned over—peering down into it.
It seemed a few hours passed, but really they were seconds, for time is measured by the quality and not the quantity of sensations it contains. I saw it all with merciless, photographic detail, sharply etched amid the general confusion. Each side was intensely active, but only one side, the human, exerted all its force—in resistance. The other merely stretched out a feeler, as it were, from its vast, potential strength; no more was necessary. It was such a soft and easy victory. Oh, it was rather pitiful! There was no bluster or great effort, on one side at least. Close by his side I witnessed it, for I, it seemed, alone had moved and followed him. No one else stirred, though Mrs. Frene clattered noisily with the cups, making some sudden impulsive gesture with her hands, and Gladys, I remember, gave a cry—it was like a little scream—’Oh, mother, it’s the heat, isn’t it?’ Mr. Frene, her father, was speechless, pale as ashes.
But the instant I reached his side, it became clear what had drawn me there thus instinctively. Upon the other side, among the silver birches, stood little Jamie. He was watching. I experienced—for him—one of those moments that shake the heart; a liquid fear ran all over me, the more effective because unintelligible really. Yet I felt that if I could know all, and what lay actually behind, my fear would be more than justified; that the thing was awful, full of awe.
And then it happened—a truly wicked sight—like watching a universe in action, yet all contained within a small square foot of space. I think he understood vaguely that if someone could only take his place he might be saved, and that was why, discerning instinctively the easiest substitute within reach, he saw the child and called aloud to him across the empty patch, ‘James, my boy, come here!’
His voice was like a thin report, but somehow flat and lifeless, as when a rifle misses fire, sharp, yet weak; it had no ‘crack’ in it. It was really supplication. And, with amazement, I heard my own ring out imperious and strong, though I was not conscious of saying it, ‘Jamie, don’t move. Stay where you are!’ But Jamie, the little child, obeyed neither of us. Moving up nearer to the edge, he stood there—laughing! I heard that laughter, but could have sworn it did not come from him. The empty, yawning patch gave out that sound.
Mr. Frene turned sideways, throwing up his arms. I saw his hard, bleak face grow somehow wider, spread through the air, and downwards. A similar thing, I saw, was happening at the same time to his entire person, for it drew out into the atmosphere in a stream of movement. The face for a second made me think of those toys of green india-rubber that children pull. It grew enormous. But this was an external impression only. What actually happened, I clearly understood, was that all this vitality and life he had transferred from others to himself for years was now in turn being taken from him and transferred—elsewhere.
One moment on the edge he wobbled horribly, then with that queer sideways motion, rapid yet ungainly, he stepped forward into the middle of the patch and fell heavily upon his face. His eyes, as he dropped, faded shockingly, and across the countenance was written plainly what I can only call an expression of destruction. He looked utterly destroyed. I caught a sound—from Jamie?—but this time not of laughter. It was like a gulp; it was deep and muffled and it dipped away into the earth. Again I thought of a troop of small black horses galloping away down a subterranean passage beneath my feet—plunging into the depths—their tramping growing fainter and fainter into buried distance. In my nostrils was a pungent smell of earth.
And then—all passed. I came back into myself. Mr. Frene, junior, was lifting his brother’s head from the lawn where he had fallen from the heat, close beside the tea-table. He had never really moved from there. And Jamie, I learned afterwards, had been the whole time asleep upon his bed upstairs, worn out with his crying and unreasoning alarm. Gladys came running out with cold water, sponge and towel, brandy too—all kinds of things. ‘Mother, it was the heat, wasn’t it?’ I heard her whisper, but I did not catch Mrs. Frene’s reply. From her face it struck me that she was bordering on collapse herself. Then the butler followed, and they just picked him up and carried him into the house. He recovered even before the doctor came.
But the queer thing to me is that I was convinced the others all had seen what I saw, only that no one said a word about it; and to this day no one has said a word. And that was, perhaps, the most horrid part of all.
From that day to this I have scarcely heard a mention of Mr. Frene, senior. It seemed as if he dropped suddenly out of life. The papers never mentioned him. His activities ceased, as it were. His afterlife, at any rate, became singularly ineffective. Certainly he achieved nothing worth public mention. But it may be only that, having left the employ of Mrs. Frene, there was no particular occasion for me to hear anything.
The afterlife of that empty patch of garden, however, was quite otherwise. Nothing, so far as I know, was done to it by gardeners, or in the way of draining it or bringing in new earth, but even before I left in the following summer it had changed. It lay untouched, full of great, luscious, driving weeds and creepers, very strong, full—fed, and bursting thick with life.
After a man died before atoning for his crimes, he came back from the dead as a vampiric Vrykolakas when his wife failed to follow his final wishes. What followed was a month full of terror and haunting.
After terrorizing his village, the Vrykolakas Vampire from Patmos in Santorini were taken to an inhabited island and set on fire. The question is, did it really work?
Fueled by anger and vengeance, the vampiric Churel of South Asian folklore, is said to haunt down men to drain their blood as a vengeful spirit brought back from the dead.
After a humble life as a shoemaker on Santorini in Greece, a man was said to have come back as a Vrykolakas, the vampire of Greek folklore. But for this Vrykolaka, it wasn’t to devour human life that kept him going.
Thought to be haunting the dark seas of the north, the Sea Draug is a ghost of the drowned fishermen’s and other unfortunate souls who perished on the waters.
After tragedy struck and the Titanic sank to the bottom of the Atlantic ocean, the surviving crew members were sent to The Jane Street Hotel in New York. According to stories, they are still haunting the rooms, where the trauma of their tragedy lingers.
Who can be haunting the old Hald Pensjonat in Mandal? Playing soft piano music in the afterlife, and rumours about the footsteps of a Norwegian pirate seems to linger.
Hidden among human society, the vampiric Mandurugo creature is slowly draining her unassuming husbands of their blood and life to sustain her eternal youth and beauty.
The MS Nordstjernen spent decades bringing passengers north across the arctic sea, and although the waters can be brought this far north, it always seemed to reach port unharmed. Some think that it could be Ernst, the ship’s ghosts.
The DNT Cabin Flisberget deep in the mystical forest of Finnskogen, bordering Norway and Sweden has a lot of strange tales coming from it. So much so, that it was voted the scariest cabin in the country.
Could one of the musicians on the Titanic be haunting the Devonshire Park Theatre in Eastbourne, England? Who is the person behind the ghost said to still be playing the violin?
Soria Moria: The Villa Fridheim is often called the Soria Moria castle, a name from Norwegian folktales about the hidden castle where the hero will find the princess. It has also now turned into an expression for expectations about a great place.
The ghost of the last Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Awadh is said to be haunting the Kolkata Dockyard. After being betrayed and left by the British he is waiting for the chance of retribution as he is waiting for his ship that never came.
The Kolkata Dock, also known as Kidderpore Dock, is a historic maritime facility located along the banks of the Hooghly River in Kolkata, India. This bustling dockyard has played a pivotal role in the city’s maritime trade and industrial history. The dock spans a significant stretch of the riverfront, characterized by its extensive network of piers, quays, and warehouses.
The Kolkata Dock is also home to a labyrinth of narrow alleyways, bustling marketplaces, and vibrant waterfront promenades. Here, sailors, traders, and dockworkers once mingled amidst the hustle and bustle of daily life, their voices blending with the sounds of creaking ships and lapping waves.
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Today, while much of the Kolkata Dock remains active, parts of it have fallen into disuse and decay, lending an air of nostalgia and melancholy to its surroundings. Abandoned warehouses and crumbling piers stand as reminders of a bygone era.
Kolkata Dockyard is also said to be haunted by a very particular ghost.
The Deposed King Haunting Kolkata Dockyard
The haunted rumors surrounding the dock have a surprisingly royal host. The Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Awadh was the 11th and last king there. The Kingdom had long been protected by the East Indian Company after the British took over India, before they turned and annexed the kingdom in 1856.
Wajid Ali Shah: The deposed King, Nawab Wajid Ali Shah of Awadh is thought to be the one haunting the Kolkata Dockyard.
Wajid Ali Shah (واجد علی شاه) came after relinquishing his throne and Kingdom and wanted to get to London. He was hoping the British would give him refuge and live in comfort for the rest of his days. Arriving at Bichali Ghat not far from Kiddipore by steamboat, little did he know, he would not get any further.
He wanted to plead his case to Queen Victoria, as he believed in the British justice system. Instead, he was imprisoned at Fort William by them during the Indian Rebellion of 1857 as they believed he could be a rallying figure for the sepoys.
The government had left him there on the banks of the Hooghly river with houses and he spent the rest of his life in Kolkata, building the dock. Heartbroken that he would never return to his beloved homestead in Lucknow.
Many sources claim that Wajid Ali Shah was the one building the dock and that is the reason why he is haunting it to this day. How much involvement the former king really had with the dock is uncertain, although we know he did spend a lot of money on building throughout his exile in Kolkata, although mostly lavish homes for himself in Garden Reach close to the river banks of the Hooghly River west of Kidderpore.
In fact, Kolkata Dockyard has existed in some form of capacity since the early 16th century when the Portuguese came to Bengal. It was a rather small port until the British East India Company made it to a major center of maritime trade. The wet dock in Kidderpore was put up in 1892 after the merchants in Kolkata demanded it.
The Ghost of the Nawab Wajid Ali Shah
Now, centuries later, whispers of the Nawab’s restless spirit haunt the Kolkata Dockyard, his spectral form said to wander the shadows in search of vengeance over the British who betrayed him.
It is said that the Nawab’s ghostly apparition roams Kolkata Dockyard, still bitter of how the British treated him. Witnesses report seeing shadows darting among the abandoned warehouses and decaying piers. The Nawab was fond of Hindustani classical music and dock workers believe haunting notes of music can be heard in the area.
According to the stories, there are also the ghosts of soldiers and sailors who died at the Kolkata Dockyard as well, waiting with him in the afterlife.
The Mammoth Cave National Park is said to be haunted, by both the spirit of the first tour guide, the slave Stephen Bishop as well as the tuberculosis patients that were put in the caves and died in an experiment.
Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, US stands as a colossal testament to the wonders that lie beneath the Earth’s surface. Designated as a National Park in 1941, Mammoth Cave National Park beckons adventurers to explore its intricate labyrinth of tunnels, a subterranean world that stretches over 400 miles and remains the largest cave structure ever discovered.
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Yet, amid the awe-inspiring beauty of this geological marvel, a spectral tale lingers—one that reaches back to a time when Mammoth Cave was more than a park; it was a stage for the haunting legacy of Stephen Bishop, the slave tour guide that are said to haunt it.
Mammoth Cave: The entrance to Mammoth Cave at Mammoth Cave National Park. It doesn’t hold any mammoth remains, but according to stories, it is haunted by the past guides and patients who died.
The Mammoth Cave
But what really is the Mammoth Cave, and what can you find within? No fossils of the woolly mammoth have ever been found in Mammoth Cave, and the name of the cave has nothing to do with this extinct mammal and refer more to the sheer size of it.
Mammoth Cave National Park, located in central Kentucky, is a subterranean wonderland and the longest cave system in the world, boasting over 400 miles of explored passages. This UNESCO World Heritage Site and International Biosphere Reserve is renowned for its stunning underground labyrinth, featuring vast chambers, intricate formations, and unique geological features.
Above ground, the park encompasses diverse ecosystems, including lush forests and rolling hills, providing habitats for a variety of wildlife. Visitors can embark on guided tours to explore the cave’s depths, learn about its rich history and the ancient Native American artifacts found within, and enjoy outdoor activities such as hiking, camping, and canoeing.
The Cave Explorer Stephen Bishop
Long before Mammoth Cave received its National Park status, it captivated the curiosity of tourists as a privately owned attraction driven by a grim history of slave labor, the cave tours were led by individuals like Stephen Bishop, a man who transcended the shackles of slavery to become a pioneering explorer within the depths of Mammoth Cave.
Stephen Bishop: A slave who worked at the Mammoth Cave as its guide and explorer who made the basis of what we know of it today. Some people claim he is haunting the cave to this day.
Stephen Bishop (1821-1857) was brought to the caves to work when he was 17 years old by Franklin Gorin, a lawyer who wanted to turn the site into a tourist attraction. Gorin owned Mammoth Cave for just a year before selling it to John Croghan for $10,000, a price that included Bishop. He stayed on for another 19 years, exploring the cave, mapping it out and became a well known explorer and self thought geologist guiding people around the caves. He called the caves a: “A grand, gloomy, and peculiar place.”
He had initially intended to free his wife and son and move to Liberia, but never did. Stephen Bishop was freed the year before his death and was buried close to the cave. What he died of is uncertain, and is said to be of mysterious causes only 37 years old.
The Ghost of Stephen Bishop Haunting the Caves
In the modern era, those who venture into the quiet depths of Mammoth Cave claim to witness the ethereal presence of something strange, often believed to be the spirit of Stephen Bishop. Alone in the inky blackness, explorers report glimpses of his ghostly figure, a spectral guide traversing the same paths he once trod in life.
A thing the guide does is turn the electric lights off and only speaks to the tour by a light of an oil lantern as they used to do. They call this a blackout and this is when most reports about strange things happening.
Guides claim to have been shoved by a strange and invisible force, grabbed or touched when no one is around. They have also heard footsteps, but when turning around, there is no one there.
One time when staying in the room called the Methodist Church because the miners used to hold services there, a guide claimed to have seen an entire black family in their group, a strange thing as there were no black people joining their tour when they entered the caves. When he looked away for a second, they were gone.
The Tuberculosis Patients
Another thing that Dr. Croghan did was to establish Dr. Croghan’s Infirmary after he purchased the caves in 1839. He thought that the cold and subterranean place would be good for the lungs, but it was actually the opposite. Several of his patients’ conditions got worse and three patients died before the experiment shut down a few months after.
Bishop, the Bransfords , and possibly other enslaved workers built huts in the cave, two of which can still be seen today and the sick lived side by side by the tour guides, becoming a spectacle themselves.
Tuberculosis Patients: Ten young women and a man posed at a small stone building inside Mammoth Cave where they built huts to accommodate tuberculosis patients. None of them got any better, some of them died and allegedly still haunts the caves.
Croghan died in 1849 from tuberculosis himself. The bodies were taken outside and buried on a stone slab now called Corpse Rock.
After the infirmary closed down, visitors spoke of hearing the sound of coughing echoing through the cave in the section where the patients once were placed.
Mammoth Cave, with its grandeur and secrets, holds within its depths the lingering spirits of those who shaped its past. The ghostly legacy of Stephen Bishop, an explorer who dared to unveil the mysteries of the abyss, continues to resonate through the cavernous chambers, where echoes of the past reverberate alongside the drip of stalactites, creating an otherworldly symphony in the subterranean darkness.
Can a modern office building like the Wipro Office Buildingin Salt Lake City, Kolkata be haunted? According to frightened employees it can, and many believe it is because of the haunted ground it was built on.
On the streets of Salt Lake City, a satellite city and IT hub in Kolkata lies an office building shrouded in whispers and eerie tales—the Wipro Office Building. While it may seem like just another workplace for the tech-savvy denizens of the IT world, beneath its modern façade lurks a dark and haunted history that sends shivers down the spines of those who dare to venture within.
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Legend has it that Salt Lake City, or Bidhannagar (বিধাননগর), as it is officially known, was constructed upon a wetland—a land steeped in ancient mystique and rumored to be an ancient burial ground.
Before the IT Boom the city is known as now, the area Salt Lake City is built upon, used to be a jungle, and according to local lore, a place of murders and crimes took place in the dark. One speculation is that the reported haunting that is said to go on in the building comes from this.
Wipro Limited is an Indian multinational corporation that provides information technology, consultant and business process services. It is one of the leading Big Tech companies within cloud computing, computer security, digital transformation, artificial intelligence, robotics, data analytics, and other technology consulting services to customers in 167 countries with many hundreds of thousands of employees.
The Haunted Wipro Office Building
As dusk descends upon the cityscape and the hum of activity fades into the stillness of the night, strange figures are said to emerge from the shadows, haunting the corridors and cubicles of the Wipro Office Building. It is especially said that the 3rd floor of the building is the most haunted floor.
Employees working the midnight shift speak in hushed tones of eerie encounters and inexplicable phenomena that defy rational explanation. Many recount tales of encountering spectral apparitions and unsettling presences lurking in the dimly lit hallways.
But it is not just the apparitions that instill fear in the hearts of those who frequent the Wipro Office Building. Employees working late into the night speak of an overwhelming sense of dread that washes over them as they navigate the labyrinthine corridors, afraid to venture too far from the safety of their desks.
According to the stories, the employees working at night are sometimes even afraid to go to the washrooms or use the lifts alone, in case they experience something more paranormal or at least, unexplained.
Details about the haunting going on in the building is sparse, and not easily verified. Much of the stories come from people claiming to know someone working there. A video that was being passed around claimed to have gotten the haunting on tape. Have a look for yourself. Is this truly a haunting and not a hoax going on, is it even inside of the Wipro Office Building?
An online magazine about the paranormal, haunted and macabre. We collect the ghost stories from all around the world as well as review horror and gothic media.