Tag Archives: haunted forest

The Queen of Wildegg Castle and the Grave of Marie Louise St. Simon-Montleart in the Forest

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A true story morphed into a fairytale, the life and death of the French Countess Marie Louise St. Simon-Montleart has become the stuff of legends. Buried in the forest close to Wildegg Castle in Switzerland, it is said she is haunting the castle and the forest, her sanctuary.

High above the Aare River, perched on the Chäschtebärg hill near Möriken-Wildegg in the Swiss canton of Aargau, stands Wildegg Castle. With origins dating back to around 1200, built by the powerful Habsburgs, this proud fortress has witnessed centuries of wars, dynasties, and secrets. 

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Yet among its long and tangled history, one ghostly tale still lingers in the mists of local legend of an outsider who took sanctuary within the castle walls from the French Revolution. This is the story of the sorrowful queen, Marie Louise St. Simon-Montleart (1763-1804).

A Tale of Loneliness and Loss

They call her a queen of Wildegg Castle in the legends, but she was actually a French Countess. Long ago, Marie Louise lived at Wildegg Castle with her husband, according to legend, a king known more for his indulgence in hunting, carousing, and feasting than for any affection toward his wife. 

She was however married to Louis Marie de Montléart. Originally from Paris, she had fled to Switzerland after the French Revolution. It is however true that she was unhappy in their marriage. 

Marie Louise St. Simon-Montléart (1763-1804)

In Versailles at the French court, she became close friends with Baroness Sophie von Effinger, who was herself unhappily married and whose ancestral seat was at Wildegg Castle. As the French Revolution ravaged the French Court and Paris, she fled to her friend who took her in as the battle went on. She was accompanied by another Duchess, but it’s unsure if her husband even followed her. 

As the legend goes however, her husband neglected the countess, leaving her to wander the vast and shadowed forests surrounding the castle, seeking solace among the ancient trees. Around the Wildegg Castle as her own country went up in flames in the bloody revolution. 

The forest, wild and eternal, became her only refuge. It’s said that within its depths, she found peace from her sorrows, the trees whispering comfort to her heavy heart. There, far from the noise of courtly revels, she is believed to have breathed her final breath. 

During a later visit to Wildegg in 1804, Marie Louise St. Simon-Montléar died of tuberculosis. As her spirit left her body, a mournful rustling wind swept through the forest, carrying away the last traces of her grief.

The King’s Guilt and a Haunting Memorial

According to the legend of her being the queen of the castle, her husband was overcome with guilt for his neglect, and is said to have built a grand tomb for his lost queen deep within the castle grounds, near her beloved woods. This part is not true, but her grave does really sit in the nearby forest.

The simple rectangular gravestone bears the inscription written by Count von Redern of Bernsdorf : 

“Here rests, after the storm of life, a noble woman. Marie Louise St. Simon-Montléart, born in Paris on October 12, 1763, died in Wildegg on June 21, 1804. She was born a violet among thorns and thistles. She fought courageously against bitter misfortune from early childhood to her grave. She died peacefully among friends, happily sensing a higher destiny, for her actions were just and her words true.” 

Count von Redern was the business partner of her brother Henri Claude and had accompanied her from Montpellier to Wildegg Castle.

The Forest Grave: The forest grave of Countess Marie Louise St. Simon-Montléar near Wildegg Castle. // Source: Michael Frey & Sundance Raphael / Wikimedia.

To this day, visitors claim to feel a strange, uneasy presence when approaching the grave. On still nights, when the wind stirs the branches and the leaves sigh like whispered words, many say it’s the queen’s restless spirit, forever roaming the forest she loved.

In time, nature reclaimed the resting place, dense trees and creeping vines entwining it as though fulfilling Marie Louise’s unspoken wish to forever be part of the forest. The grave inspired Walter Fähndrich when he wrote “Music for a Forest Grave” in 2001 and The 15-minute piece begins at the time of local sunset from loudspeakers in the vicinity of the grave.

The Girl and the Ghosts

There is another ghostly legend retold by El Rochholz: Swiss Legends from Aargau from 1856 about a girl seeing a ghost around Wildegg Castle. It is said that all those born around midnight on Lent are capable of seeing spirits. But if they keep silent about what they last saw for 24 hours, no ghosts can harm them. There was such a child in the village of Holderbank.

Once upon a time a girl and her colleagues were walking home from work at Wildegg Castle to Holderbank village. It was between 10 or 11 o’clock. As she was crossing, over the mountain to their village, a man dressed in green and armed with a rifle suddenly stepped into her path. She immediately changed her route and after a long detour, she reached her house by 1 o’clock. 

The other girls that had been walking with her, didn’t know where she had gone and had already spread the word that she had been shot by a huntsman. She didn’t say a word about it. 

Later, as she was on her way from Holderbank to Saffenwil as a bride, a small black dog ran between them. She immediately crossed to the other side of the road, evading once more the spirits she could see. And despite all her fiancés’ questions as to why she was leaving him, she failed to answer him for a full 24 hours, believing the legend about not saying a word after seeing ghosts. 

A Castle of Secrets

Wildegg Castle, with its commanding view of the Aare and its centuries of layered history, remains one of Switzerland’s most atmospheric historic sites. Though the Effinger family, the castle’s last noble residents, passed away in 1912 and the property now belongs to the Canton of Aargau, echoes of its haunted past still cling to its stones.

And on certain misty evenings, as the wind stirs the trees on the Chäschtebärg, one might sense a faint rustle — and wonder if it is merely the wind… or Marie Louise St. Simon-Montleart still walking among her trees.

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References:

Hier spukt es: Unheimliche Orte in der Schweiz | WEB.DE

Schloss Wildegg – Alemannische Wikipedia

Das Fraufastenkind und die Hasenpfoten – Schloss Wildegg

Marie Louise St. Simon-Montléart – Wikipedia 

https://www.fairyhills.com/waldtreu.htm

Ghosts of Uetliberg Hill and The Three Beeches by the Manegg Castle Ruins

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A woman scorned by the Manesse family from the ruins of the old Manegg Castle on the hills of Uetliberg in Zurich, she is said to haunt the place she was seduced and ended her life, appearing to passersby on stormy nights. 

From a Swizz perspective, the Uetliberg Hill is perhaps not much of a peak, but it  is Zurich’s very own “mountain”. From the top, visitors can enjoy beautiful views of the city and lake – and perhaps even a glimpse of the Alps. The Uetliberg is particularly popular in November, as its summit is often above the blanket of fog that can cover the city at this time of year. In the winter, the hiking trails to the summit are converted into sledding runs.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Switzerland

It is also the location of a ghost story that has haunted these hills for centuries. The story of the ghost of a peasant girl who hanged herself on the Uetliberg hill after being betrayed by the cruel and lustful Duke of Manegg

Manegg Castle and The Manesse Family

Today, the Manegg Castle is just ruins, and even the ruins are starting to disappear. Not much is known about who built the castle, but the first documentation we have of it is from 1303. The Manegg castle square used to be a much visited place with a great view over the town, lake and mountain. 

Manegg Castle: The ancestral seat of the now extinct Manesse Family was Manegg Castle in the middle of the Albisberg, on the foothills towards Lake Zurich: It was burned by some mischievous noblemen. According to legend, this happened on Ash Wednesday, when a carnival party staged a playful siege. After the fire, large remnants of the walls survived until the 17th century. Today, only a few foundations are visible.

It was the ancestral seat for the Manesse knightley dynasty. The Manesse family is known primarily through the Manesse Manuscript, a collection of Middle High German songs. Their coat of arms depicts two fighting white knights on a red background, one of whom is victorious. It is a telling coat of arms ; the name comes from Manesser , meaning “man-killer.”

The Manesse family coat of arms: The Manesse Song Manuscript contains poetic works in Middle High German . Its core was produced around 1300 in Zurich , probably in connection with the collecting activities of the Zurich patrician Manesse family . Several additions were made up to around 1340. The text was written by 10–12 different writers, perhaps from the circle of the Grossmünster in Zurich.

The Manesse family were originally merchants and rose to knighthood through their wealth and reached their peak of power between 1250 and 1310. As vassals of the Fraumünster Abbey , the Einsiedeln Monastery , and the German Empire, they were an important family in the city of Zurich before becoming “extinct” around 1415..

In 1393, the castle was sold by Ital Maness to the “Jew Visli or Vifli” at a public auction, but already before this, it seems the castle didn’t have anyone living there anymore. 

Have a look at the panorama of the old castle ruins

The Three Beeches on Uetliberg

The girl was a beautiful and young girl from a nearby farmhouse, this more reclaimed by nature than the castle ruins. She often encountered the castle lord when he was out hunting, or walking into town. They started talking and he would soon seduce her by three beech trees on the hills. He told her he would marry her and she finally gave in. 

After this, he cast her away and treated her coldly with her losing her honor and innocence. To make him change his mind, she sat outside the castle gate, hoping he would take notice and pity her. Instead, he just laughed and sent the dogs after her, who ran out into the forest on the hill, and back to the three beeches. 

There she cursed his name before taking her own life. It is said she was buried close to three beeches on the hill as well as she wouldn’t be able to be buried as a consecrated ground. The trees were supposedly standing up to a few decades ago. 

The Manesse Family: The Manesse family was continuously represented in the Zurich City Council from the 13th to the 15th century. They twice provided the mayor and actively promoted the city’s cultural life. They belonged to the city’s patriciate . Rüdiger von Manesse, son of Ulrich M. Manegg and Adelheid von Breitenlandenberg. Married to Clarita von Hertenberg. Engraving by Johannes Meyer from 1696

The Ghost of Uetliberg Haunting Stormy Nights

Tales started to be told that someone was haunting the area around the three beeches were she was buried. When storms were coming in over the city and thunder roared a fire sprung up from under the trees, even when it was raining. 

As the lightning flashed, illuminating the night, travellers passing by would see a white figure, her long hair loose, beating her chest and wringing her hands, always looking at the old Manegg Castle where the lord who betrayed her came from. 

Now his castle has burned down, crumbled and his name mostly forgotten. 

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References:

Die drei Buchen am Uetliberg | Märchenstiftung 

Manesse – Wikipedia

The Green Lady of Wahiawa: A Ghostly Guardian of Hawaii’s Rainforest

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Covered in leaf and seaweed, the Green Lady of Wahiawa is said to haunt the forest on O’ahu Island in Hawaii. Once a mother who lost her children, she is still searching for them. 

Visitors to the lush and enchanting rainforest of Wahiawa, Hawaii, should tread carefully, for the Green Lady of Wahiawa might be watching, though to especially in the gulch in Wahiawa, a town on the on the plateau or “central valley” between two volcanoes on O’ahu Island. Lakes and reservoirs are rare in Hawaii, and Wahiawā is unique in being surrounded on three sides by Lake Wilson (also known as Wahiawā Reservoir or Kaukonahua). This is the type of environment as well as in the greenery of the forest where the Green Lady is said to reside. 

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Cloaked in leaves, moss, and grass, with green skin and seaweed tangled in her hair, the Green Lady of Wahiawa is a spectral figure who has haunted these verdant landscapes for centuries. Her presence, while tied to the natural beauty of the region, brings an eerie and unsettling air to the forest.

The Green Lady of Wahiawa: The legend talks of a green lady, wandering through the lush forests in Wahiawa and through the waters. Here from Wahiawa Botanical Garden – shady park view. // Wikimedia

The Tragic Legend of a Mother’s Grief

The Green Lady of Wahiawa’s story is one of sorrow and loss, seemingly rooted in Indigenous Hawaiian folklore, however, with a modern twist as most legends mention her deep fear of cars and that she would often cross the gulch instead of crossing the bridge because of it. 

Source

According to legend, she was once a loving mother who ventured into the forest with her children. However, a tragic turn of events led to the loss of her children amidst the dense foliage, some claimed they disappeared in the gulch. Heartbroken and desperate, she spent countless years wandering the woods in search of them. 

Over time, her grief transformed her into a creature of the forest, forever intertwined with the greenery around her. In some variations she was mad about no one helping her find her child, so she went deeper into the forest and was never heard from again.

A Mother’s Eternal Search

In her eternal quest to find her lost children, the Green Lady of Wahiawa has become a part of the forest. Her appearance, now as green as the leaves she is draped in, mirrors the foliage of her surroundings. She is also sometimes described with green and fish-like scales and her hair covered in seaweed. Her smell of rot comes from the rotted plant covering her body.

Yet, her transformation has rendered her a desperate and sorrowful figure. Legend has it that in her unending search, she will grab any child she comes across, hoping to find her own lost offspring. This tale has instilled a sense of caution and fear among those who venture into the Wahiawa forest, particularly those with young children. The legend of the Green Lady has also spread to Wahiawa’s elementary school not too far from the gulch.

Background for the Legend of the Green Lady of Wahiawa

Where does this legend come from? Is it simply a legend told to help children away from the gulch? It is seemingly a pretty new legend as the mention of cars are a big part of the lore. It is pretty different from the Green Lady of Europe, where she most often is a noble woman in Scotland. But is it really a Hawaiian creature? 

It looks more like the Japanese mythological creature called the Kappa, and some sources even call the Green Lady of Wahiawa the Hawaiian Kappa. This water creature is a child snatching a turtle-like humanoid. Japanese folklore and mythology has influenced a lot of the modern Hawaiian ghost stories because of immigration and there are plenty of quintessential Japanese ghost stories found in Hawaii, or merged with Hawaiian culture like the story of the Green Lady.

Kappa: In traditional Japanese folklore a kappa (河童, “river-child”) s a reptiloid kami with similarities to yōkai. Kappa can become harmful when not respected as gods. Accounts typically depict them as green, human-like beings with webbed hands and feet and turtle-like carapaces on their backs. A depression on the head, called a “dish” (Japanese: sara), retains water, and if this is damaged or its liquid is lost (either through spilling or drying up), a kappa becomes severely weakened.

The sighting of the Green Lady of Wahiawa goes at least as far back as 1957, when some children were questioned by the police after claiming to have seen her in the gulch behind the school gymnasium. 

Is the legend of the Green Lady of Wahiawa a dying legend though? The last reported sighting is sad to have happened in the mid or perhaps late 1980s. But still, children and teens keep challenging each other to run across the bridge that runs over the gulch where she is said to roam. 

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References:

The Green Lady Of Wahiawa – Information

The Green Lady – The Mask of Reason  

Folklore in Hawaii – Wikipedia 

https://njahs.blogspot.com/2011/01/kappa-and-haunted-ponds-of-hawaii.html

The Ghost of the Farmer of Norton Creek Trail

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In the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, a ghostly lantern is said to haunt the Norton Creek Trail. It is said that the helpful light, guiding lost hikers to safety is the ghost of a farmer who died years ago when looking for his lost daughter. 

The eerie beauty of the Fontana area you will find the Norton Creek Trail that holds a chilling legend that has both fascinated and frightened locals and visitors for generations. Not only does the area hold over 200 known cemeteries along the trail, it is also said that the area is haunted. As you tread along this path, you might witness a ghostly light floating in the woods, an ethereal glow that has become the cornerstone of a haunting tale.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from the USA

Norton Creek Trail, nestled within the stunning expanse of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, offers hikers a serene yet eerie journey through lush forests and along the rippling Norton Creek. While the trail is known for its natural beauty, it is also shrouded in local folklore

The Legend of the Ghost Farmer

The story begins with a dedicated farmer, a man of the land whose life was irrevocably shattered when his beloved daughter disappeared into the dense, shadowy forests surrounding Norton Creek. 

What happened when the daughter went missing, no one ever found out. Perhaps she just wandered into the woods and got lost, perhaps she had an accident on her way og encountered an animal. Perhaps it was something worse, rooted in deep folklore from the natives. 

According to the stories, he was one of the European settlers and didn’t know about the stories about the notorious Spearfinger lurking in the woods according to the Cherokee tribes and most likely took his daughter. 

Desperate to find her, the farmer ventured into the night, carrying only a lantern to light his way. He never returned, and most likely died, perhaps finally being reunited with his daughter in the afterlife. 

Although, there are those claiming that his spirit remains in the same woods he disappeared, endlessly searching for his lost child.

The Legend of Spearfinger

But what took his daughter? Was she only lost in the woods, or something more ominous. Some stories claim that it was Spearfinger, a fearsome figure in Cherokee legend who took her. She is a monstrous being known for her stone-like skin and a long, razor-sharp finger made of obsidian, which she uses to cut out and consume the livers of her victims. 

Disguising herself as an old woman, Spearfinger would prey on unsuspecting children, luring them with her seemingly benign appearance before revealing her true, terrifying form. Then she would kill them and eat their liver. 

Read the whole story about The Cherokee Legend of Spearfinger in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

The Haunting of the Farmer on Norton Creek Trail

Those who have encountered the spectral light on Norton Creek Trail describe it as a beacon of hope in an otherwise foreboding landscape and the ghost of the farmer is said to lead people back on their path. 

If you find yourself lost or in need of guidance, the farmer’s ghostly lantern is said to lead you back to safety, guiding you to the trailhead where you can return to the world of the living. The light flickers and moves with an uncanny intelligence, as if driven by the farmer’s undying hope and paternal love.

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The Scariest Trail in the Great Smoky Mountains 

The Black Doctor of the Pines: A Haunting Tale from the New Jersey Pine Barrens

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In the shadowy depths of the New Jersey Pine Barrens, a spectral figure roams the dense woods, forever etched into the folklore of the region. This is the tale of the Black Doctor of the Pines, a ghostly healer whose presence still stirs the hearts and minds of those who traverse these eerie lands.

The New Jersey Pine Barrens, a vast expanse of dense forests and mysterious wetlands, is a place steeped in eerie folklore and haunted legends. Covering over a million acres, this wilderness is not only known for its natural beauty but also for the chilling tales that have emerged from its shadowy depths. 

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Among the most famous of these is the legend of the Jersey Devil, a fearsome creature said to inhabit the Barrens, terrorizing locals with its unearthly screeches and terrifying appearance. Ghost towns, remnants of once-thriving communities, now stand silent, their abandoned buildings whispering secrets of the past. These tales, woven together with the haunting stillness of the landscape, create an atmosphere of mystery and unease, making the Pine Barrens a place where the past and the supernatural seem to coexist.

The alleged ghost we are looking closer at here though is Dr. James Still, the real man that would be remembered at the Black Doctor of the Pines:

The Pines: the Jersey Pine Barrens are filled with ghost towns, mills no longer in use like this within its thick canopy of pine trees. It is also here the Black Doctor of the Pines are said to be haunting.

Dr. James Still the Man and the Legend

James Still (1812-1882), the man who would become known as the Black Doctor, was a determined individual with a passion for healing. In the mid-19th century, however, his aspirations were stymied by the pervasive racial prejudices of the time. 

The Black Doctor of the Pines was born at Indian Mills and lived in Burlington County most of his life. One out of 18 children from the former slaves, Levin and Charity Still, his family was heavily involved in the abolitionist movement, and his brother was William Still, a founder of the Underground Railroad as well as Peter Still, a man who rescued himself from slavery. 

Forbidden from practicing medicine due to his race, Still sought solace and purpose in the isolation of the Pine Barrens. Here, amidst the thick canopy of pines and the whispering winds, he pursued his medical studies through textbooks and, as some legends recount, learned the secrets of herbal medicine from the Native Americans who had long called these woods home.

Still studied the healing powers of herbs and plants, and developed medical practices based on his own observations. He began earning a modest income by regularly selling his homemade oils, tinctures, and essences to Philadelphia druggists Charles and William Ellis.

Read More: Check out more of the haunted tales of the Pines like the Jersey Devil here

The Black Doctor of the Pines didn’t hide away in the pines forever though as he ended up becoming one of the wealthiest men in Burlington County and built a wonderful house and hospital, married and had eight children. Although he became rich, he remembered the poverty he came from, living a frugal life.

The Ghost of The Black Doctor of the Pines

Some chilling accounts tell of a tragic end, where local residents, upon discovering his clandestine practice, lynched The Black Doctor of the Pines in a fit of racial hatred. These stories speak of dark nights and ghostly figures swinging from the branches, their spirits forever restless.

What really happened though is that he died of a stroke in 1882. He is buried in Colemantown Cemetery in Mount Laurel, New Jersey with his family around him.

The legend of James Still has endured, and his spirit is said to linger in the Pine Barrens. When the rumor of him haunting the pines started to spread it was uncertain, but it is said to happen when people need it.

Those who venture deep into the woods at night may encounter a mysterious figure, holding a flickering lantern, gently guiding them to safety. Lost or injured wanderers have described feeling a sense of peace and protection, as if an unseen force were guiding them away from harm as well as fixing their ailments.

The Black Doctor of the Pines, whether a victim of violence or a benevolent healer, remains an enduring symbol of resilience and compassion. His ghostly presence serves as a reminder of both the darkness and the light that can exist within the human spirit. So, if you ever find yourself lost in the vast, silent woods of the Pine Barrens, keep an eye out for a flickering lantern light. It just might be James Still, the Black Doctor, continuing his eternal vigil, ready to guide you home.

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References:

NJDEP | Dr. James Still Office Historic Site | New Jersey State Park Service 

James Still (doctor) – Wikipedia 

Legends and tales of the New Jersey Pine Barrens – Wikipedia 

Inside the New Jersey Pine Barren’s Legends and Abandoned Ghost Towns 

The Haunting Legend of Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal in Karol Bagh

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At the Central Ridge in Delhi, you’ll find Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal, a haunted old hunting lodge said to be haunted. But who of the many people that have been connected to this Mahal is still lingering?

In the bustling neighborhood of Karol Bagh in Delhi lies a monument that carries with it a legend away from the busy market. Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal (भूली भटियारी का महल), a ruined fort palace in the dense forest with a haunting past. 

The Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal has mostly been left on its own devices inside of the thick forest, falling into disrepair over time. Although some restorations have been done to it, it seems like it will never be able to shake its haunted past off it. 

History and Legend of Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal

Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal, also known as Bhuli Bhatiyara Palace, was built during the Tughlaq dynasty in the 14th century by Emperor Firoz Shah Tughlaq. It is said this fort was built as a hunting lodge, most likely in 1354. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

After the Tughlaq dynasty The Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal was abandoned and became the place for a Sufi saint named Bu Ali Bakhtiyari. The name of the building is said to be a distorted version of the Sufi’s name, or even one of the female caretakers called Bu-Ali Bhatti. It is also said she was a tribal woman from Rajasthan that got lost and ended up here. 

The Forgotten Castle: Today The Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal is overgrown and mostly forgotten about by the world outside. No one is allowed near it after nightfall as it is said that is when the ghosts comes out to haunt the place. //Source: Mohammedqqasim/Wikimedia

The Queen Haunting the Grounds

Perhaps it is the woman called Bu Ali Bakhtiyari or the hermit Sufi that are today haunting the grounds. Perhaps it is something to the legend about the ancient queen haunting the place according to one of the legends that has grown from the place.  

One of the enduring legends told about The Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Maha is about a queen that lived in the hunting lodge and died there around 600 years ago. She apparently liked the palace so much she made it her residence. 

The Ghost of the Queen: According to legend, there is a queen haunting the ruins of the Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal and the surrounding forest at night. Who could she be, and is there any truths to the legends?

Another version of the legend tells a more sinister story. Once the king saw the queen in love with someone else and imprisoned the queen in the forest and palace where she ended her days. Some local residents say that the queen had committed suicide in this fort out of a desire to take revenge from the king and if you happen to meet her in the forest,you might become another victim for the queens revenge as well. 

No name has been given to this particular legend though, and we have no proof that a queen set foot in this place at all. 

According to this enduring haunted story though it is said that after her death, she has been seen haunting the place at night. But perhaps she isn’t alone in haunting the Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal?

Ghostly Encounters and Haunting Stories

Over the years, there have been several reports of ghostly encounters and haunting stories associated with Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal. Visitors have reported feeling a sense of unease as soon as they enter the palace.

Many have claimed to have heard strange noises, footsteps, and whispers coming from the corridors. Some visitors have even reported feeling a cold breeze or a sudden drop in temperature, despite the hot and humid weather outside.

It is said that no one of the guards wants to stay at the the Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal or in the surrounding woods after dark and many are said to have quit after only a matter of days. There is supposedly a note written at the entrance warning people to come after dark. The Delhi Police is also said to patrol the area frequently and try to deter people from entering.

The Mystery of the White Wall

There is also a strange story about some people that claimed that they saw a huge white wall in the woods next to the building. This must have been many years ago since they didn’t use a digital camera. They took a picture of it with an analog though, but when they developed the picture, there was no wall there. 

When they went back to the place they claimed to have seen the wall, they found no trace of it, and what it could have been. 

The Mystery of Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal

Where the legends of it being haunted comes from is difficult to pinpoint. Some claim that there have always been stories about it. According to one of the guards that have been there for 34 years, people started talking about it being haunted first after people started posting about it on the internet. 

Read more: Check out all of the Haunted Castles around the world

As to why we can only speculate. Perhaps to attract tourists, perhaps to make an overgrown ruin a little bit more interesting? Or perhaps there is something lurking between the trees or just behind the gate of the old Mahal?

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References:

Featured Image: Abhishekhanna/Wikimedia

Bhuli Bhatiyari Mahal Delhi : द‍िल्‍ली के इस भूत‍िया क‍िले के बारे में जानते हैं क्‍या आप? आज भी नजर आता है रानी का साया! 

The hyped up Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal 

Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal, Delhi (2023) – Images, Timings | Holidify 

Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal Story – BikingMystery 

Bhuli Bhatiyari ka Mahal | Department of Archaeology 

bhuli bhatiyari ka mahalBhuli Bhatiyari ka Mahal | Our Heritage

The Haunted Morgan-Monroe State Forest and Stepp Cemetery

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There is not only one ghost story from Morgan-Monroe State forest and the Stepp Cemetery in the middle of it, there are many. Legends about creatures and ghosts keep the silent forest and burial ground alive. 

Morgan-Monroe State Forest stands as a silent witness to a myriad of chilling tales that have woven an enigmatic tapestry of supernatural lore. The forest in south-central Indiana is more than 25 000 acres and has steep ridges and deep valleys. 

Morgan-Monroe State Forest: Source: TrailSeeds/wikimedia

From inexplicable deaths to whispered rumors of satanic rituals and elusive encounters with mythical creatures like Yeti and Bigfoot, the Morgan-Monroe State Forest has earned its reputation as one of the most infamous haunted woodlands in the United States. It is in this forest most reported sightings of the Sasquatch in the state and there is a large and active group investigating these claims. 

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There are also said to be UFO sightings as well as more classical tales of something mysterious and ghostly lingering in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. 

The Draper Cabin in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest

In the midst of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest itself, there is a cabin where hikers can spend their night. Draper Cabin offers a night of spine-tingling encounters for those daring enough to spend it within its timeworn walls – all for the modest price of $25, throughout the year. 

It is said that many hikers have to give up on staying in Draper Cabin through the night though, as they hear loud footsteps and weird noises outside, coming closer and closer to the cabin. 

Read More: Check out more ghost stories from Haunted Forests around the world

What the source of these hauntings varies. One version includes a murder that occurred there quite a long time ago. Another story states that from the time of the cabin’s existence over 130 years ago, a murderer still stalks their premises and waits for the next guests to arrive and rent out the cabin.

Draper Cabin: This cabin deep inside of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest is thought to be haunted. // Source

However, the true heart of the forest’s haunting reputation lies in the ethereal realm of Stepp Cemetery where legends and urban legends of ghosts and mysterious religious sects never let the buried rest. 

Stepp Cemetery

In the middle of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest you will find Stepp Cemetery, the source of many of the haunted legends of the forest. The cemetery in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest dates back to the early 1800s and is found just north of Bloomington.

There are not many graves in the cemetery, perhaps only around 30, (other sources say 114) or so, but they surely have some stories connected to them.  

Stepp Cemetery: In the forest you will find a small cemetery with big legends. It is said to be haunted by more than one type of ghosts. //Source: Shelly/Flickr

The Crabbites and their Snake and Sex Rituals

According to historians, Stepp Cemetery might have been used by a religious sect to perform rituals that came in the early 20th century. The group’s leader, William Crab, had strange practices like getting people to be bitten by a snake. A snake handler himself, he held more circus-like sermons and claimed that a true believer would not be bitten or die from the venom. 

The sect known as Crabbites had strange beliefs, like that the earth was squared because of a part in revelations in the bible. They also had to be chased away from the cemetery because of performing a ”ritualized sexual license.” They were apparently participating in these orgies while handling the snakes as well as giving animal sacrifices. 

It is also said they believed in resurrection and that the reverend could wake people from the dead. Once they were even arrested after trying to stop a burial of a woman who was once one of them. 

It is worth noting though that the sect went largely undocumented and it is difficult to say today what was true and what was hearsay. But they said that there were roughly 600 of them in Brown and Morgan counties in 1912. 

The Crabbites didn’t stay in the area of Morgan-Monroe State Forest and Stepp Cemetery for long as they are said to have moved over to Brown county, but they undeniably left an enduring mark on the cemetery’s reputation. Some even say that their mocking of the cemetery and strange rituals evoked some spirits to come back and haunt the place as they left the cemetery with a dark energy. 

Teenage Parties on Stepp Cemetery and the Birth for Local Legends

Most of the stories from Stepp Cemetery are said to have been developed or happened from the 1950s to 1970s. Then the cemetery had become so remote and forgotten and was more as a gathering place for youth than for mourners. More people had access to cars in the following decades and used the place to party. 

Many stories that were told were about the ghost of someone that had died in a car crash in the surrounding area, but also the cemetery itself became a part of the stories. 

During the Great Depression the cemetery fell into the hands of the Civilian Conservation Corps and they carved a tree stump in the cemetery into a chair. This tree stump is today called the Warlock’s Chair, although it is gone now that it was burned down in 1974. 

In many stories the chair was cursed and whoever sat on it would be so as well. It also became a part of the haunted legends as well, even after it was gone. 

Some of the ghosts

It is also said that an old woman is haunting the Stepp Cemetery within the Morgan-Monroe State Forest after some fraternity boys hanged her beloved German Shepard from a tree. What they didn’t know though was that she apparently was a witch and cursed them as well as the cemetery. 

Read More: Check out more ghost stories from Haunted Cemeteries around the world

One of the other legends speaks of a young girl who was murdered in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest close to Stepp Cemetery and that her body wanders through the trees in search of justice and her way home because her killer was never found. 

The Woman in Black

By far the most told story is about people seeing the ghost of The Woman in Black. The air thickens with an eerie stillness as the ghostly apparition of a grief-stricken mother dressed all in black is said to materialize on the haunted Stepp Cemetery at night, sitting on a hauntingly familiar tree stump crying over her dead child. 

There are many stories about what happened, and this is also a tale we can trace back to the 1950s. Some say she was a woman named Anne, and that her man died in a dynamite explosion in the quarry and her daughter died in a car crash. The mother is said to have rarely left the grave of her child, who was the only thing she had left in her life. After she died, she is still coming to the grave to grieve. 

There are also people saying that the child was a newborn and that she never recovered from the loss. The variations and details surrounding the legends are endless. Even in 1972, there were around 30 different versions of them.

There are some details that keep popping up though, like the tree stump. Sometimes the woman in black is only sitting on it, weeping close to her child’s grave. Sometimes she was a witch and murdered her husband after he murdered their child. Sometimes she has two white wolves by her feet mourning her child’s death after she was hanged for taking revenge.

The most horrendous tale though are the stories where people claim that she is sometimes trying to exhume her dead child from the grave to hold his bones, before burying him again and leaving.

The Story of Baby Lester

But what grave and who is she grieving? Sadly, there are plenty of graves belonging to children in Stepp Cemetery and the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. For some reason, the grave most associated with the legend of the Woman in Black at Stepp Cemetery is the grave of Baby Lester. His grave is in the back in a corner and has been there for many decades now. The faded letters on the grave say 1937. He was the child of O’Leatha Pryor Lester and Harley Lester for only a few hours before he passed. They named him Paul.  

Still to this day, some people place little toys on the grave. In respect perhaps, but the urban legend of Baby Lester really hurt the family of the stillborn child.  On several occasions the grave has been vandalized, broken or the headstone removed so they had to cement it down. On July 24 in 2021, the toys were set on fire by some vandals, or by accident after a candle set fire to them on accident.

Baby Lester’s Grave: This is how the grave looked after it caught fire as the negative consequences of being the source of a ghost story. Source: Photo by Jeremy Hogan/The Bloomingtonian

The mother was only 16 when she gave birth and went on to live a long life with more children after. When she heard about how her child’s grave was the center of this urban legend, she was distraught, horrified and disgusted. Although the family tried to shield her from the legend of Baby Lester and the Woman in Black, it had come in many forms until she died in 2007.

The Dangers of Ghost Stories

As night descends upon Morgan-Monroe State Forest, the line between the living and the otherworldly blurs, leaving those who dare to explore its depths to grapple with the unsettling mysteries that lurk in the shadows and the whispers that echo through the ancient trees.

Is it Bigfoot, the Woman in Black? Perhaps a remnant of the strange cult that used the cemetery all those years back. Perhaps there are just a couple of teenagers that can’t comprehend how stories about the dead can still hurt the living. 

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References:

Stepp: A Small Rural Cemetery That Looms Large In Hoosier Lore | news-2018 – Indiana Public Media 

Gallery: Baby Lester grave at allegedly haunted Stepp Cemetery set on fire – The Bloomingtonian 

Paul “Baby” Lester (1937-1937) – Find a Grave Memorial 

Stepp Cemetery 

Stepp Cemetery — Astonishing Legends 

Paul “Baby” Lester (1937-1937) – Find a Grave Memorial 

Let Baby Lester Rest in Peace | OrangeBean Indiana 

Division of Historic Preservation and Archaeology Site of the Month | WBIW

A Requiem For Baby Lester — The Hauntings of Stepp Cemetery – PARAHOLICS®  

https://www.bloomingpedia.org/wiki/Draper_Cabin

The Haunted Colors of the Hippie Tree Outside the Asylum

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Outside the old Traverse City State Hospital in Michigan, there is an old willow called The Hippie Tree. It is said to be haunted by the former patients from the asylum and possibly a gateway to hell. 

In the secluded woods outside an abandoned state-run asylum called Old State Hospital Grounds near Traverse City, Michigan, stands The Hippie Tree, a silent witness to the spectral tales that have enshrouded it in an air of mysterious allure. Little is known about the creation of the tree, but it is said that it fell over and died when it was struck by lightning. 

Read more: Check out all ghost stories from the USA

The rotted and broken willow trees are painted with colorful neon paintings over the generations where one painting covers the faded one underneath. Its moniker derives not only from its location but from the unsettling local legend that has swirled around it for decades of it being haunted.

The Hippie Tree: In Traverse City you will find the Hippie Tree along the Hippie Tree Trail thought to be haunted or at least possess some spiritual powers from the former patients at the Traverse City Hospital.//Photo: Jeremy Thompson/Flickr

Traverse City State Hospital

But what patients are said to be haunting this particular tree? Traverse City State Hospital around there was opened in 1881, and was also once called Northern Michigan Asylum. It is the last Kirkbride Building standing in Michigan, a specific style of architecture for asylums. 

Read More: Check out all Haunted Hospitals around the world

There are many stories about how people treated mental illnesses, and before the drug therapy in the 1950s, the Traverse City State Hospital used a “beauty is therapy” philosophy. This meant to meet patients with kindness, comfort and pleasure where straitjackets for instances were forbidden. 

The idea was also to let the patients be surrounded by beautiful things like flowers, and perhaps the idea of painting the tree comes from this philosophy as well? 

Traverse City State Hospital closed its doors in 1989. It reopened again in 2002, but as The Village at Grand Traverse Commons, a place for shops, restaurants and offices, but there is still said to be ghostly remains of its time as a hospital. 

Traverse City State Hospital: Northern Michigan Asylum with its striking Kirkbride architecture is next to the Hippie Tree and housed the patients thought to possess and haunt the tree. The former hospital itself is also believed to be haunted.// Source

Haunted Legends about the Hospital

Traverse City State Hospital itself is lush with ghost stories as well. People claim they hear voices and footsteps when no one is there, as well as flickering light or an unnatural cold presence. 

This was especially talked about when they reopened the Traverse City State Hospital from the construction workers where some saw something that scared them so they refused to work on the building.

There is also a dark story about a doctor working at the hospital who killed patients as well as nurses, or about the hospital chaplain that went mad and hanged himself in the chapel they had. 

But although there are plenty of ghost stories inside the old asylum, the most well known story about this place is from the dead willow tree outside on the woodland trail. 

The Ghost of the Insane Asylum Patients

According to the lore, The Hippie Tree serves as a spectral meeting ground for the tormented souls of asylum patients coming from Traverse City State Hospital, their restless spirits lingering beneath its branches. 

The madness that once consumed them is said to echo through the rustling leaves, where they sometimes are mad, sometimes just sad.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Haunted Forests from around the world

Another ghost haunting the tree apart from the patients is a boy that allegedly was murdered around these parts, although not much information is found on this branch of the legend. 

The Hippie Tree is said to be haunted by many spirits and in the most extreme versions of the legends, it is even a portal to hell that opens up by the roots if you walk around the tree in a specific way. No one has been able to come back and tell me the right way to do it yet. 

The Hippe Rituals by the Hippie Tree

Jeremy Thompson/Flickr

Visionaries, mystics, and spiritual seekers, often dubbed “hippies” by the locals, would gather beneath the gnarled branches of The Hippie Tree, seeking solace and enlightenment in the heart of the haunted woods. Thereby the name The Hippie Tree stuck around.

A peculiar tradition emerged as these seekers meditated beneath the spectral canopy. It is said that the ghosts and the trees give out a particular energy that the hippies explore sitting on The Hippie Tree. 

In a ritualistic expression of their transcendental experiences, they would paint the revelations of their heightened consciousness onto the tree’s branches, creating a kaleidoscope of psychedelic visions amid the eerie silence of the asylum grounds.

How many people have painted on The Hippie Tree is unclear, at least thousand they say, creating another psychedelic picture on top of the other. 

Serving Colors and Ghosts

As night descends upon The Hippie Tree, the shadows cast by its haunted branches come alive, inviting those brave enough to delve into the mysteries that lurk within the heart of Traverse City’s most bewitched woodland sanctuary.

In daylight it serves as a colorful and fun thing to brighten up passersby and visitors alike in perhaps the most brightly looking haunted spot. 

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References:

Northern Michigan’s Hippie Tree | Kyle Schepperley | NewsBreak Original 

Traverse City State Hospital – Wikipedia

The Hippie Tree/Traverse City State Hospital  

Traverse City State Hospital & the Hippie Tree – Journey With Murphy 

The Darkness of Slaughter Falls in Mount Coot-tha Forest

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Although found in Sunny Brisbane, Australia, it is said to be a darkness surrounding Slaughter Falls in the Mount Coot-tha Forest. Many violent happenings occurred and many rumors of it being haunted follows. 

At the foot of Queensland’s Mount Coot-tha Mountain and forest, the very name “Slaughter Falls” sends shivers down the spine for a reason. Despite it’s ominous sounding name Slaughter Falls is a very cozy looking wooden picnic area perfect for hiking leading up to a cascading waterfall on the Ithaca Creek in Brisbane through the eucalyptus forest.

Beyond its scenic facade however lies a chilling history more appropriate to its name, marked by a series of macabre events that have etched an indelible mark on this once serene hiking trail.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia

Slaughter Falls, named after a town clerk JC Slaughter, and not what has happened here, conceals a dark past, a grim reputation that the name nonetheless pointed to its haunted legacy. The whispers of the forest tell tales of murders, suicides, and lingering spirits, prompting one to ponder why this particular spot has become a magnet for such malevolent occurrences.

Slaughter Falls: An area of Mount Coot-tha Mountain and forest in Brisbane in Australia. After a series of bizarre and macabre events, the place has been believed to be haunted.//Source

The forest area is said to be haunted, and many paranormal seekers try to find the answer close to Slaughter Falls. One legend that is very persistent is a report about people seeing the ghost of a woman close to Slaughter Falls wandering about. So let’s have a look at some of the dark history the forest brings with it. 

The Christmas Day Shooting

The ominous chronicles of Slaughter Falls date back to Christmas day in 1925, when the tranquil surroundings close to Slaughter Falls were shattered by a gunshot. A woman, walking innocently along the trail, fell victim to an assailant lurking in the bushes. 

Margaret Francis Sinclaire Donald was picking flowers with her friend when she was shot, and although her friend took her to the hospital and got treated.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Haunted Forests 

When apprehended wandering the streets of Toowong, the assailant, 23 year old Patrick Terrence O’Hara provided no motive, claiming an inexplicable force had seized control of him to do what he did. They had no previous relationship and according to the man, he had no plan of doing it until this feeling just came over him. 

What happened that day no one could explain, but it surely was the start of the forest’s more ominous history. 

The Double Suicide

A year later, in 1926, the falls bore witness to a haunting double suicide that left the reasons shrouded in mystery. Two men plunged into the abyss, leaving behind unanswered questions that continue to echo through time.

The two men were both working for the same company but were found separate and no one really knew if the two deaths were connected or more like a horrible coincidence. 

The Murder Suicide at Slaughter Falls

The following year, 1927, unfolded a chilling murder-suicide saga at the falls. A seemingly romantic walk took a ghastly turn when a man, seemingly possessed by a malevolent force, shot his girlfriend before attempting to end his own life with poison. Cecilia Josephine Miller was only 20 years old.

The boyfriend survived, but his subsequent survival offered no solace, as he professed a disturbing lack of recollection. He said it was like darkness just consumed him, a cloud that took over and the next thing he remembered was staring at the dead body of his girlfriend. The locals all thought highly of him, and couldn’t believe that he would do something like this. 

Cecilia’s sister however, claimed she had heard him threaten to kill her if she ever left him. The truth of the matter however was never uncovered as the boyfriend was sent to an asylum and kept claiming that he couldn’t remember it at all. 

The Ghost from the Transmitting Towers

Another ghost said to be haunting Mount Coot-tha is a former workman that worked on the television transmitting towers west of the city. Apparently he fell to his death when the towers were being built. 

A technician that worked on Channel Seven claimed to have seen the workman in overalls walking on the tower in the 1970s, but not many stories about this ghost are reported about in the later years. 

Brisbane Transmitting Towers: Another haunted location on Mount Coot-tha.//Photo by: Angus Veitch/Flickr

Ghost Hole Mine

Also around the old mine that was closed in 1959, you will find ghost stories. The stories are not specific, but are as the rest of the legends, filled with darkness and paranormal experiences like hearing voices and seeing shadows. 

Satanic Rituals

Speculations abound that Slaughter Falls harbored the echoes of Satanic rituals, casting an even darker pall over its reputation. Although as with most whispers of satanism and witchcraft, unsubstantiated.

Whatever the true reason behind these meaningless acts of violence, the area is now thought to be haunted by its victims. Could it truly be a darkness that possesses people to do these things? Or is the fact that they are so close together in time a sign about how inspiring and contagious it can be to try and blame it on something like a vague darkness and memory loss?

Slaughter Falls has a dark and disturbing past, but in daylight it is a beautiful and popular place to hike and enjoy nature. But as daylight fades and shadows dance upon the trail, those who venture into the heart of Slaughter Falls may find themselves entangled in the enigma of its haunting secrets, where the past continues to cast a spectral veil over the present.

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References:

5 “Haunted” Campsites & Hiking Trails in Australia – Novapro Sports Camping Store

Mt Coot-Tha – The Darker Side of Brisbane 

Mount Coot-tha Forest – Wikipedia 

J C Slaughter Falls – Wikipedia 

https://www.chapelhill.homeip.net/FamilyHistory/Other/QueenslandHistory/TheGhostsofQueensland.htm

Haunted Trails and Tales of Ballyboley Forest

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When the Gaelic Celts first set their foot on the emerald isle, they brought with them their ancient rites and magic. And in Ballyboley Forest in Antrim in Northern Ireland, it is said that something from this time still lingers within the woods. 

By the Antrim Coast and Glens Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), Ballyboley Forest unveils a scenic trail that winds through meadows and woodlands to the serene Kilylane Reservoir. 

While the trail promises a breathtaking journey through Antrim’s beautiful landscape, it also carries with it spooky legends and ghostly tales that have woven themselves into the fabric of this Northern Irish landscape, and the story of the haunted Ballyboley Forest have topped various lists of Top Haunted Places.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Haunted Forests around the world

The current forest was planted in 1957, but the ghost stories and local legends go much further back than that, with a forest area like Ballyboley Forest going as far back to 300 BC, to ancient druid and celtic times. But just how many of these legends can we believe?

Source: Albert Bridge / Ballyboley forest near Larne (8) / CC BY-SA 2.0

Ancient Druid Meeting Place

The Ballyboley Forest, it is said, carries an ancient energy, having served as an ancient meeting place for druids. Artifacts discovered over the years hint at the rituals and gatherings that once transpired beneath its leafy canopy.

It is said that you can find circular trenches and stone formations in the north east part of the forest that are now grown over, but can still be seen. These megalithic structures are only claimed through rumors though and no archeological overview shows any particular monuments from Gaelic times inside of the forest.

If there really were druids in the area is unclear though the coastal area close to it like in Larne is thought to be one of the earliest inhabited areas of Ireland, when people came over from Scotland. But did they really venture over to what became Ballyboley Forest, or did these stories first come after the current forest was planted?

Haunted Histories from Ballyboley Forest

Let’s have a look at the haunted stories coming from the forest. It is said local legends speak of haunting occurrences within its depths—plumes of black smoke rising above the trees, and echoes of ghostly screams that linger in the twilight. 

Throughout the 15t, 16th as well as the 17th century, there have supposedly been many strange disappearances of the local people that went to the area. Some sources claim it is as many as thirty different cases of the missing people.

There are according to local lore, strange paths going through a gateway to The Otherworld of Celtic mythology.

The Stories Sources

These stories about smoke in the Ballyboley Forest and screams come from a couple of sources. First is a story supposedly relayed from a young couple that were hiking in the area and they were scared of the screams and the cloud-like black smoke that appeared. They quickly left the forest when this happened, and what really went down then, we don’t know. And who this couple was, there really isn’t a trail of either.

In a news report from 1997, in an unknown newspaper, there were two men in the Ballyboley Forest that heard the sound of something flapping. After a while they heard the sound of a woman like she was in pain and tried to find the source of the lady as she could be in need of help. 

Instead they left the tracks and stumbled upon a place where the trees were smeared with something that looked eerily like blood. They turned to get out of the place, but four human shaped figures were standing still behind them. All were dressed in brown rags and their heads were covered. 

Most of the accounts of the strange things people have experienced in the forest though, seems to be repostings from online forums from anonymous posters without any clear sources. Also the newspaper clippings that supposedly the stories were retold in, are missing. 

This is the case with the alleged experiences of a poster on Reddit as well from 2005 that also claimed to have seen the four rag clad figures holding torches and hearing the screeching sound of unknown animals. 

Although this was supposed to have happened in 2005 and the poster read the post made on The Shadowlands, seemingly the earliest posts about this hauntings online, the information has been out online since the late 90s on the page. 

Conclusion About the Haunting of the Forest

Ballyboley Forest, with its picturesque trails and hidden mysteries, invites adventurers to delve into a realm where beauty and the supernatural intertwine. But are the local legends really local, or are they merely a figment of the rapid copy paste culture of the internet?

As the wind rustles through the ancient trees, it carries with it the tales of plumes of black smoke, blood-stained trees, and the ethereal screams that have become part of the forest’s haunted legacy. The trail, though outwardly serene, unravels a tapestry of legends that adds a dark layer to the Northern Irish landscape. 

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References:

Ballyboley Forest and Kilylane Reservoir Circular, Antrim and Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland – 138 Reviews, Map | AllTrails

Shadowlands Haunted Places Index – Ireland 

https://emadion.it/en/mysteries/mysterious-places-2/ballyboley-dark-forest/