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Blood in the Soil: The Chilling Tale of the New England Vampire Panic

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Centuries after the witch panic in Salem, New England was gripped by another entity – vampires! Thought to crawl out from their graves at night and back to their remaining family to feed and consume the life of them. This has later been known as the New England Vampire Panic The only way to stop them was to dig them up and set them on fire. 

In the quiet, frostbitten corners of 19th-century New England—amid snow-capped fields and rickety clapboard farmhouses—a curious darkness was spreading. But it wasn’t witches this time. It wasn’t demons, or ghosts, or devils hiding in the woods. No, what haunted the good, God-fearing folk of Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Vermont was something far stranger.

Vampires.

Not the aristocratic, silk-robed kind with Eastern European accents. Not the seductive, night-stalking vampires of Hollywood imagination. These were homegrown, farm-dwelling, dirt-under-their-nails revenants. According to local belief, they didn’t sip fine blood from crystal goblets. They clawed their way out of graves and siphoned the life from their living kin—not with fangs, but with supernatural persistence.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from USA

This wasn’t just a gothic fever dream. It was real. It had a body count, graves empty after their families dug them up and burnt their remains to cure themselves of the curse of the undead. After it swept across the east coast, it was later called the New England Vampire Panic.

Old Graveyards: A serene graveyard in New Hampshire reflects the eerie history of vampire folklore in early New England that was gripped by fear during the New England Vampire Panic.

A Disease by Any Other Name

To understand how New England came to believe in vampires, we need to talk about tuberculosis—known in the 1800s as consumption.

Before it had a scientific explanation, TB was a horrifying, slow-moving plague. It wasted the body and if you first got infected, there was a two in ten chance of surviving it as there was no cure. Victims grew pale and thin, their cheeks sunken, eyes glassy. They coughed blood. They wheezed and gasped and sometimes appeared to grow stronger just before they died, as if something unnatural were prolonging their suffering.

The White Death: The plague of tuberculosis is a disease that has killed more people than any other microbial pathogen and mummies dating back to the 8000 BCE. Over the years, many attempts to cure it through curious means show desperation. Fresh air, bloodletting, elephant urine, eating wolf livers and human breast milk has from ancient times been tried.

It was contagious, of course, though no one knew why or how. When one family member died, others often followed. Households dropped like dominos. And so the imagination of rural folk—grounded in a stew of folklore, fear, and grim necessity—did what it does best: It reached for reasons.

They began to believe that the dead were not staying dead. 

Vampire Lore: In addition to consumption being rooted in a vampiric infliction, you also had rabies that gave strange symptoms and rare genetic disorders like porphyria that gave a sensitivity to sunlight and reddish teeth. Although in the New England Vampire Panic, it was mainly tuberculosis.

The New England Outback

Exactly why New England? After all, tuberculosis was a worldwide problem, why did the vampiric panic happen here, 200 years after the witch craze in Salem not too far from where they would begin to exhume their loved one from their graves?

There are several factors of how this particular lore and New England Vampire Panic started. One has to do with numbers. After years of civil war, the number of people living in Exeter, Rhode Island for instance, had dwindled to a few thousand, scattered across small rural communities. By some, this was later known as Vampire Capital of America and had a high count of exhumations like the case of Mercy Brown. 

Contrary to popular belief about being puritanical, the rural New Englanders in the 1800s were not overly religious and 10 percent belonged to church in these parts. Missionaries were sent to these parts to get them back to God’s words as they saw these rural communities living in cultural isolation from the rest of the world.. 

The belief of the uneducated farmers have taken hold for many in later years. But was it really so? It seems like many places like Manchester, Vermont where Rachel Burton was exhumed and burned on the town square was founded by educated and not really the most superstitious and religious men. This seems to have changed after the Revolutionary War when it was then described as a place of drinking gambling, and superstitions like vampirism. 

Read More: The Vampire of Rachel Burton: Vermont’s Gruesome 18th Century Exhumation

They were however superstitious and let their beliefs fester side by side with the industrial revolution and modernisation of the society in the cities not far from their farming communities. Also as a small community, there were a lot of relations between the exhumations. Like the case of the exhumation of Nancy Young having relation through marriage to Sarah Tillinghast who was also exhumed the same way. They were neighbors, although the farms were few and far between, family and friends, and like the sickness of consumption, so did the fear of the undead spread and infect through generations and places.

The Curious Case of Mercy Brown

The most infamous case of the New England Vampire Panic took place in 1892, in the icy hills of Exeter, Rhode Island. The Brown family had been ravaged by tuberculosis. First, mother Mary Eliza died. Then daughter Mary Olive. Then son Edwin became ill and left for Colorado in a desperate bid for recovery.

And then Mercy Lena Brown, a 19-year-old girl with dark hair and a shy smile, fell sick and died on January 17, 1892.

Mercy Brown: A historical portrait of Mercy Brown, the young woman at the center of the New England Vampire Panic.

The townsfolk were suspicious. Too many Browns were dying. Someone, or something, must be behind it. They began to murmur. Maybe one of the dead was still feeding. Edwin, now barely hanging on, had to be saved.

So in March—when the ground thawed enough to dig—they exhumed the bodies.

Mary Eliza and Mary Olive had decomposed as expected. But Mercy? Her body, kept in a crypt during the harsh winter, was remarkably intact. Her cheeks had color. There was blood in her heart, clear signs she was the vampire.

The heart and liver were removed and burned. The ashes were mixed into a tonic and given to Edwin to drink. (A sentence that should never be uttered casually, but here we are.)

Read More: Check out The Mercy Brown Vampire Incident in Rhode Island 

Did it work? Tragically, no. Edwin died two months later. But Mercy’s story endured, becoming the poster child of the New England Vampire Panic—a real-life tale so haunting that even Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, reportedly took notes.

Mercy wasn’t the only one. According to folklorist Michael Bell, there was around 80 of these types of exhumations. From Maine to Massachusetts to Rhode Island, similar rituals were performed. Perhaps as far west as Minnesota. Not always with a name. Not always with fire. But the goal was the same: stop the dead from killing the living.

The Vampire Next Door in the New England Vampire Panic

These were not “vampires” as we think of them today, but corpses with unfinished business, still feeding on their living relatives from beyond the grave. They drained vitality, not with teeth, but through a metaphysical link. The only cure? Dig up the body, examine it, and if necessary, destroy the vessel.

Some communities in Maine and Plymouth, Massachusetts, opted to simply flip the exhumed vampire facedown in the grave and leave it at that. But in places like Connecticut, Vermont and especially in Rhode Island, they took it one step further. 

If the corpse was found unusually fresh, with blood in the heart or organs (a not-uncommon occurrence in cold New England graves and those buried in the winter or put in freezing crypts waiting for the ground to thaw), it was declared the source of the curse. The heart would be removed and burned to ash, sometimes the liver, kidney or other organs were also taken. Often, the ritual was done in secret, other times it was done publicly, sometimes on a blacksmith’s anvil or just on a nearby rock in the cemetery. In many cultures it was believed that the fire in a blacksmith’s anvil was a divine gift and that they had the power to banish evil through their metal and flames.

There were also some cases where vines and sprouts growing from the coffins and bodies were seen as signs of vampiric activity, like we see with the exhumation of Annie Dennett. They believed that the vine or root growing at or by the grave reached the next coffin, another family member would be sick and die. This part of the legend is a bit more difficult to trace back to a particular superstition shared with other places.

Read More: The Curious Case of Annie Dennett and the Vampiric Vines 

As the ritual demanded, their heart and liver were burned on a nearby rock and the ashes were mixed with a tonic and given to the sick relatives to drink. Sometimes it was also said to be smoked or the fumes from the burning were inhaled by those attending. 

The Mystery of J.B: Connecticut State Archaeologist, Nick Bellantoni, was excavating the cemetery and found something no one could have expected. Among the graves, one burial in particular captured attention: a coffin marked only with brass tacks, spelling the initials “J.B. 55”. The remains inside had been subject to a post-mortem ritual that hinted unmistakably at vampire panic practices during the New England Vampire Panic. // Photo courtesy of Nicholas Bellantoni

After the ritual, it seems like the rest of the body was reburied. In Woodstock, Vermont, a father exhumed the bodies of his daughters and burned them to save his last surviving child. In Griswold, Connecticut, archaeologists discovered 29 burials in the 1990s—one with the skull and thigh bones rearranged in a skull-and-crossbones pattern. The jaw had been hacked apart. The coffin was inscribed with “JB55,” believed to stand for “John Barber,” a middle-aged man who likely died of TB. The mutilation? A post-mortem attempt to stop the spread of vampirism.

Read More: The Griswold Vampire Case and the True Identity of J.B. in the Coffin 

Where did the Vampire Lore come from?

Although it is today known as the New England Vampire Panic, the people at the time didn’t use this terminology as the term was not commonly used in the community. But when the newspapers and outsiders started to look at the phenomenon, they classified it as vampire lore because of the similarities about the lore in eastern Europe dating back to the tenth century. 

There are many versions about where the vampire lore that struck the New England coast around this time. According to residents of Exeter, Rhode Island, they claimed they got the exhumations tradition from the Native Americans that certainly had their own vampire lore. But what about the European connection? 

Vampire Lore in the World: Although New England cultivated its own vampire belief, it certainly wasn’t the first. Across the ocean in Europe, the fear of the vampires in eastern Europe took hold in the 1700 and worked its way west. In Europe the wooden stake was said to be the thing banishing the vampire. In America, they burned their organs showing signs of vampirism. This illustration comes from an 1851 book by Paul Feval titles “Les Tribunaux secrets” and was created by René de Moraine.

In this time, there was also a Vampire panic in Europe, especially eastern and central Europe. German and Slavic immigrants are said to have brought their lore and superstitions with them in the 18th century. There were Hessian mercenaries that served in the Revolutionary War and Palatine Germans colonized Pennsylvania. There were also Germans and different eastern Europeans traveling through the area as healers, bringing with them the ideas of the undead and exhumation as a cure for the terrible diseases the townsfolk didn’t yet understand. 

The Science Arrives too Late for Many

The New England Vampire Panic began to wane by the early 20th century, as germ theory and modern medicine began to explain disease in ways people could trust. TB was finally understood as a bacterial infection, not a curse.

In the meantime, there were as many as 80 exhumed graves we know of, but there were probably many more. For example, in 1862, reports of vampirism swept the community of Saco, Maine so strongly that almost every deceased resident was dug up and reburied, allegedly. Every corpse was, apparently, a suspect.

But the New England Vampire Panic hadn’t been entirely irrational. These were desperate people watching their families die horribly. They didn’t have the benefit of science. They had folk remedies, tradition, and fear—and so they reached for the most ancient tool humans possess: storytelling.

And in the dark corners of New England, those stories had fangs.

List of Vampire Cases of the New England Vampire Panic

1793 – The Vampire of Rachel Burton: Vermont’s Gruesome 18th Century Exhumation

1799 – The Rhode Island Vampire and the Legend of Sarah Tillinghast 

1810 – The Curious Case of Annie Dennett and the Vampiric Vines 

1816-1817 – A Vampire in Ohio: The Strange and Grim Superstition of the Salladay Family 

1817 – The Case of Frederick Ransom: The Woodstock Vampire

1827 – The Legend of the Vampire Nancy Young Rising from her Grave 

1843 – The Griswold Vampire Case and the True Identity of J.B. in the Coffin

1854 – The Jewett City Vampires and the Ray Family in Connecticut

1874 – The Restless Dead of Rhode Island: The Vampiric Legend of Ruth Ellen Rose

1892 – The Mercy Brown Vampire Incident in Rhode Island 

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References:

Food For The Dead The Vampires

Bioarcheological and biocultural evidence for the New England vampire folk belief 

The Great New England Vampire Panic

New England vampire panic – Wikipedia 

The Founding Father Ghost of Acadia National Park

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The Acadia National Park is said to be one of the more haunted places in Maine and one of the places said where people see ghost is by the Compass Harbor Nature Trail where the founding father, George Dorr is said to linger. 

Acadia National Park is a stunning natural reserve located primarily on Mount Desert Island, the largest offshore island outside of Maine, United States. Established in 1916, it encompasses over 49,000 acres of rugged coastline, lush forests, granite peaks, and pristine lakes. 

The park offers a diverse range of outdoor activities, including hiking, biking, bird-watching, wildlife viewing, and scenic drives along the historic Park Loop Road. Acadia is renowned for its iconic landmarks such as Cadillac Mountain, the highest peak in the U.S. Atlantic coast, and Thunder Hole, a natural rock formation where waves crash against the shore with thunderous force. Additionally, the park is home to a rich array of flora and fauna, including moose, black bears, bald eagles, and peregrine falcons. 

Read More: Check out all of our ghost stories from USA

Acadia National Park is not only a haven for outdoor enthusiasts but also a place of profound natural beauty and ecological significance. What it also is known for is being one of the most haunted places and one of the ghost stories from the park starts with the man known as the Founding Father of the park.

Acadia National Park: This huge national park in Maine is thought to be haunted by the man that spent his life to make this place a park people could enjoy nature in.

Georg Dorr and His Life in Acadia National Park

One of the ghosts said to wander the trails in Acadia National Park is George Dorr, also known as the Father of Acadia. It is said that he can be seen hiking alongside of you if you take the Compass Harbor Nature Trail. 

Not only is George Dorr remembered as one of the ghosts haunting the Acadia National Park he spent his life building, but is also one of the characters known from Bar Harbor ghost stories.

George Bucknam Dorr was born in 1853 in Massachusetts to his parents that had become rich on the textile business that he inherited. They moved to Mount Desert Island when they built the 58 acre house that became known as Old Farm in 1878. This is not to be confused with Storm Beach Cottage, originally a guest cottage from 1879, that was on the estate that he moved into in the later years.

Founding Father of Acadia National Park: George Dorr on the Beachcroft Path at Huguenot Head in Acadia National Park, Maine, United States.

When he was alive he used to work with John D. Rockefeller in the early 1900s Gilded Age and worked tirelessly to make the Acadia National Park into what it is today. He loved the idea of preservation and gave away money and land, and it is said that his trustees had to hide away money so there would be enough for a funeral when he died. For a time he only accepted a salary of a dollar a day as the park custodian.

Old Farm Estate Ruins on Compass Point Nature Trail

He lived on his family estate known as Old Farm on Compass Point outside Bar Harbor as a lifelong bachelor. You can reach this trail by taking Route 3, walk perhaps half a mile towards the water through the woods.

In his final years he started to go blind and worried about Old Farm and the future of Acadia National Park. He died on the Compass Harbor Nature Trail at the age of 91 in 1944. His ashes scattered over Bar Harbor.

His estate was destroyed soon after his death as it was no heir to take over it. He never married or had children as the park was his life and he donated his 30 room mansion to the park. But the world war still roared and the government expenses for parks were thin, leaving the old farm to ruin. 

Old Farm Trail: Long stone steps leading to the top of the hill at Compass Harbor, Acadia National Park, Mount Desert Island, Maine. What remains of George Dorr’s Old Farm Estate lies at the top of the steps. // Source: Wikimedia

In 1951 the once grand home was demolished. It is said you can walk through the remains of the estate today, although there is nothing but ruins left that are now reclaimed by the park. 

The National Park Service decided to tear it down rather than conserve it. No one was speaking up for the park after George was gone. 

The Ghost on the Trail

But how is this man connected to the haunted rumors going on along this trail? The details are vague, and the debate about if it is is just his essence and spirit left in the park or if he actually is haunting it is up for debate. 

In life he was a strong believer in Transcendentalism and the connection between nature and humanity and a very spiritual man. To this day visitors claim to have seen the ghost of George Dorr going through the trail together with his caretaker. 

According to Marcus Libbizi, the author documenting most rumors about the ghost stories from the island as well as the rest of the Acadia National Park describes the sightings like this: 

A dark man wearing blue appears for a moment before vanishing. The ghost looks like it is stalking hikers on the trail.

But is it really George Dorr haunting the trail going as a loop through Compass Harbor? According to some, it is in fact the caretaker that walked with him on the day he died, watching from the woods. 

The Ghosts of Oldfarm

But who was this caregiver? According to the texts, it was John Rich who stayed by Dorr’s side when he died. But according to rumors, the duo is not the only one haunting the premise. 

It is also said that a female spirit is haunting them when she appears on the overgrown avenue and passes through the forest and the ruins of the old estate. She walks all the way to the shore to the tip of Dorr Point before disappearing into the sea. 

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References:

The Possible Haunting of Compass Harbor 

Hauntings and Mysteries in Acadia National Park 

George Dorr – Wikipedia

STORM BEACH COTTAGE – Acadia National Park

Watch Your Step! These Haunted Maine Hikes Make for Spooky Adventures

COMPASS HARBOR AND OLD FARM 

Ship Harbor Trail and the Shipwrecked Ghosts

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It has long been said that there are ghosts haunting the Ship Harbor Trail on the Mount Desert Island in Maine from the victims from a shipwreck in the winter months that left few survivors. We will have a closer look as to why this is most likely wrong. 

There are not only ghost roaming the Southwest side of the Mount Desert Island in Acadia National Park, but there is also a part of the park that are thought to be possible cursed after a shipwreck in 1739 with over 200 people, costing the life of most of the crew.

Ship Harbor Trail is today seen as a family friendly hike forming a figure-8 loop through thick spruce woods and rocky headland in the Maine park, but once it was a death sentence, especially during the winter months. 

Read More: Check out all of our ghost stories from USA

Along the Main coastline the unruly waters caused many lives and wrecked a lot of ships, and although we don’t really know why it is called Ship Harbor as it is a very misleading name in this story, it could be that it used to be place for small ships to seek shelter in the cove. Or it could be in reference to the very shipwreck the story is about. 

Ship Harbor Trail: The trail in Acadia National Park is said to be haunted by the ghosts of the passengers that got shipwrecked on the island. But how true is the story? // Source: Flickr

The Shipwrecked Grand Design

The most circulated story about the Ship Harbor Trail goes like this:

In 1739 there was a ship that wrecked and the surviving sailors sought refuge in the area now called Ship Harbor. The ship was an English vessel called Grand Design that was carrying Irish Immigrants to Pennsylvania that October month everything went wrong. 

They reached the mainland swimming through the frigid water, but saw the area was uninhabited. Their supplies ran low and food was scarce and sickness spread among the crew. Half of the original group perished because of this before finally a ship from the English settlement in Thomaston in Maine came and rescued the few survivors. 

The bodies of those that perished were buried in unmarked graves around the area, although exactly where? Who knows, although the hiking trails probably goes right over them. What happened to the ones seeking help remains a mystery, perhaps even a haunted one. 

Historical Inaccuracies of the Shipwreck

How much of this story is true though? It happened so far ago in such a remote area, and there is not much that we really know about it except from hearsay. Despite of this, the legend is retold in many haunted legends from the area. 

In 2008 a maritime study even put forth a theory and a debate among historians about whether or not the Grand Design disaster even happened in this area. This legend is based on the research of historian Cyrus Eaton. 

The Grand Design was actually the program of relocating Scots-Irish people prosecuted by the Church of England, luring them away from their land in hopes of a new place with religious freedom. 

One of the reasons there is not much written record about it is the war between England and France at the time, and to go discreetly, they sailed off record under the corrupt Captain Rowen. A man despite being the direct cause of so many deaths became the governor of North Carolina in 1758.

The Real Story of the Shipwrecked

Turns out though this story is mostly connected to the ship Martha & Eliza that wrecked at Grand Manan in the Bay of Fundy, today a part of New Brunswick in Canada. It was a 90 foot, two misted bark, often used to transport passengers and goods from Ireland to the colonies. It set out from Londonderry in Northern Ireland July in 1741, going to Newcastle in Pennsylvania. 

The ship had perhaps 200 paying passengers, a heavy overload for the ship, and four weeks into the journey, the ship caught caught up in a hurricane and drifted in the North Atlantic for weeks overcome with starvation, fever and death. 28th of October they drifted ashore on one of the islands around Grand Manan that has over 250 shipwrecks there according to local lore. 

Read More: There are plenty of stories of haunted ships. Have a look at our archive of tales of them around the world.

The captain and his crew left the passengers there and left to drink at Fort Frederick at Pemaquid. 35 of the men tried to get to the mainland in search of help, but never returned. 

The captain together with his crew returned a month later to loot the ship, and when the survivors asked for rescue, they only took 48 of them to Cushing where they stripped them for whatever possession they had as payment for their rescue. 

The people of Cushing, many of them Irish themselves welcomed them though and rescued the almost the rest of remaining wrecked in late December after one group complained to the Governor in Boston. 

Grand Manan Island: The real ship actually wrecked on one of the islands around Grand Manan in Canada.

The Native American Rescue on Holy Land

The last few dropped off another place on the island were found in April by the Native Americans, Passamaquoddy and arranged their rescue as they risked their own life crossing 100 miles on open boats. 

Among the last survivors were nine women as well as a mother and her infant child that had survived on shellfish and dulce. 

The island was sacred to them as they worshiped Dawn, the daughter of sea and sky deities. She had been chased by a pack of wolves and ran into the sea before transforming to the island where the shipwrecked spent the cold winter on. 

Perhaps it was this that made them rescue them instead of selling them to the French, believing that Dawn herself had protected the women through the winter. 

The Haunted Rumors on Ship Harbor Trail

Today the place is not so remote and it is said that as many as 300 to 400 hike the Ship Harbor Trail every day. Historical accuracy or not, the legends about the ghosts are still alive and well. Some of them claim to have seen or heard something that they reckon must be the ghost of the shipwrecked people that didn’t make it out alive. 

Read More: Check out ghost stories like Haunted Trails and Tales of Ballyboley Forest, The Ghost of Bicycle Larry on Old Narrow Gauge Volunteer Trail in Randolph Forest and The Evil Spirit Po-ho-no of Bridal Veil Falls in Yosemite National Park for alleged haunted trails. 

The ghost left behind by the rest of the crew is said to haunt the park and people hiking the trail claim to have heard ghostly howling, desperate, cold and hungry still.

But the question remains. If there were no shipwrecked that ended up on the island, what is it that people claim to see haunting the Ship Harbor Trail?

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References:

The Grand Design, a Shipwreck, Betrayal and Rescue by Indians 

Castlebay – The Grand Design 

“Grand Design” lured 18th century immigrants to a tragic end – The Working Waterfront Archives 

Acadia’s Ship Harbor ideal for hiking Maine coast year-round 

Acadia National Park – Ship Harbor Trail – Maine Trail Finder 

Hike Ship Harbor Trail (U.S. National Park Service) 

The Ship Harbor Nature Trail In Maine Said To Be Haunted By The Ghosts Of Those Who Perished Here

Ledgelawn Summer Estate and the Bridal Ghost in the Attic

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In a former summer house for the rich and wealthy in Maine, the Ledgelawn Summer Estate has long been thought to be haunted by the ghost of Mary Margaret, the jilted bride haunting the house wearing her wedding dress.

Built in 1904 in the seaside town of Bar Harbor on Mount Desert Island in Maine, Ledgelawn Summer Estate was one of the original grand summer estates from the Gilded Age in the harbor for the elite that used to spend their summer here by the sea. 

Read More: Check out all of our ghost stories from USA

Ledgelawn Estate is a 21-room shingle-style cottage on Mount Desert Street, found close to the church. They used to call these estates for the cottages where the rich summered and it is said that this building is the most haunted one in Bar Harbor and a story all the locals know about.

Bar Harbor: On Mount Desert Island in Maine you will find Bar Harbor where the Ledgelawn Summer Estate is. There are many places in this picturesque said to be haunted.

The Haunted Ledgelawn Summer Estate

The red building built for the wealthy summer visitors in 1904 was built upon something older, equally a mystery as the supposed haunting. It is said to be haunted by the woman in white known as Mary Margaret. According to legend, she was jilted just about to get married. 

Most of the variations of the stories tell that Mary Margaret was a dark haired beauty from that time, a member of the rich and powerful Astor family, or at least related to them.

Her soon to be husband took off right before their wedding and left her alone. Mary Margaret took this so hard and went straight up to the third floor, dressed herself in her wedding dress before hanging herself from the rafters in the attic with her wedding veil.

It is said that when her family found her, her face was so bruised, they almost didn’t recognize her. Her lips curled up to a smile. She has ever since then lingered and haunted the Ledgelawn Summer Estate through the years. 

The Haunting of Mary Margaret

Although her death is said to have happened in the attic of Ledgelawn Summer Estate, she is most often seen on the third floor. Her ghost is said to be transparent and floating about, returning to the place she died again and again.

The former summer estate used to be an inn and there is a particular one story from this time that is retold. Back then, the place used to be called Ledgelawn Inn and it was said that room 326 was the place she most often appeared. 

Guests checking in or staff working there would often get an ominous and gloomy feeling before claiming to see the ghost of a woman floating at the foot at their bed or even a ghostly wedding veil was coming from the ceiling and swaying in the night. 

According to this guest, the ghost got into bed with him. Scared of what happened he tried to ignore her lying next to him and simply rolled over, petrified and didn’t dare to open his eyes. 

The Ghost of a Maid in Ledgelawn Summer Estate

Ledgelawn Summer Estate: Source

The dramatic ghost of Mary Margaret is supposedly not the only ghost said to haunt the Ledgelawn Summer Estate. Apparently there is also a former maid most often called Catherine said to be haunting the former summer house and former inn. 

It is said that she had an affair with the owner of the house at the time and became pregnant while working there. The story is often been told to have happened in the 1930s. She died after falling down the stairs in the back. If she fell or if she were pushed is up for debate and was hushed up at the time. 

In addition to the women said to haunt the Ledgelawn Summer Estate there is also a child said to haunt the cupboard he hides in. According to the stories, he drowned somewhere in Bar Harbor. 

The Truth Behind the Legends

So how true is this very specific story said to haunt the Ledgelawn Summer Estate? The historic inn was bought by a firm in 2010, ending its time as an inn. 

The story behind the house is that Ledge Lawn was built by Samuel Willard Bridgham and Fanny Shermerhorn in the beginnings of the 1900s. Fanny was related to the Astors, a family filled with money and scandals. Samuel and Fanny though were known to be kind people, didn’t have any children and other mysterious deaths happening inside of their home. 

So what about the ghost that people keep seeing? Could it just be a trick your mind plays you when staying in an old building, and a local story told for fun in a sleepy seaside town. Or could it be something that the history didn’t record or where the details and facts have become distorted over time?

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References:

American Ghost Walks – Bar Harbor | Culture & Tours | Family Friendly Activities 

The Haunting of Ledgelawn – by Carrie Jones 

Resort company buys historic Bar Harbor inn 

Bass Harbor Head Light’s Murder Mystery Ghost

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After a construction worker mysteriously disappeared when building the Bass Harbor Head Light in Maine, it is said he remained by the lighthouse, haunting the place and every keeper’s family that lived there. 

The lighthouse found on Prospect Harbor southwest on Mount Desert Island in Maine, is not the only lighthouse thought to be haunted in Acadia National Park, Bass Harbor Head Light is seen today as an iconic landmark. 

Read More: Check out all of our ghost stories from USA

On the rocky coastline of Mount Desert Island they built the Bass Harbor Head Light lighthouse in 1858 on the cliff side overlooking the shore guiding boats into Bass Harbor and Blue Hill Bay. 

The lighthouse is built in Tremont, considered to be one of the quieter parts of the islands, but still draws people to have a look at the view. And if we are to believe the rumors, the lighthouse have also attracted ghosts.

The Ghost of Bass Harbor Head Light

The ghost story said to haunt the Bass Harbor Head Light comes from the time of building the lighthouse back in 1858, even before the first keeper moved in.

During construction it is said that a builder vanished without a trace. What happened back then we don’t know. Did he just quit his job and left for something else? Was this actually a case of a missing person case, or worse, murder?

When he left, it was said that they found a bloody axe on the rocks but no body was found. Was he murdered and his body buried inside of the foundations of the lighthouse as the legends go? 

In any case, ever since then, he has haunted the lighthouse, even before the first keeper moved in. 

People have claimed to see his ghost around and heard noises and experienced things they can’t account for. Some of the reports claims to have seen a man sitting on a stump outside when it snows. 

Other Ghosts Haunting the Lighthouse

There is not only a potential murder mystery that is haunting the lighthouse. According to some there are also claims that a deer moving through the snow before vanishing into thin air. When inspecting the snow, there are no footprints to be found. 

A woman has also been haunting the lighthouse if we are to believe the stories. She has been seen sitting in a rocking chair inside of the keeper’s house.

The Curse of the Lighthouse

Not only are the lighthouses rumored to be haunted by a ghost, but it is also said to have a curse, or at least bad luck to the keepers that have lived in it. 

It is said that every light-keeper or some in his family has had tragedy following them in the lighthouse of illnesses and accidents. Truly the work of a haunting or curse, or simply how life worked in the remote and harsh climate of Maine?

In any case, more than 10 deaths have been attributed to this and are said to have ended just because the lighthouse became automated. 

A New Era for the Lighthouse in Bass Harbor

The keepers’ house used to be a private residence for a local Coast Guard member and his family, with most of the grounds being private up until 2012. Today new keepers have moved in to take care of the historic landmark

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Most of how they built the lighthouse has been preserved and it looks pretty much the same as it did when constructed and the missing construction worker vanished. Due to the extreme popularity of this iconic lighthouse, parking and crowds can be an issue during the height of tourist season.

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References:

Bass Harbor Head Light history – NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE 

Bass Harbor Head Lighthouse | monsterminions 

Acadia National Park navigates new era for iconic lighthouse 

Bass Harbor Head Light | Tremont, Maine’s Striking Landmark – New England 

New England Legends Extra: Haunted Bass Harbor Light – Maine 

Bass Harbor Head Light – Wikipedia 

The Haunted Prospect Harbor Lighthouse

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The Prospect Harbor Lighthouse with its Gull Cottage in Maine is said to be haunted by the ghost of the last caretaker with the scent of his tobacco still lingering. 

North in the Acadia National Park in Main you will find the Prospect Harbor Lighthouse south in Gouldsboro on the Schoodic Peninsula. The whole area is often covered in a thick fog coming in from the sea as one of the foggiest places on the Maine coast. 

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No longer seen as essential for the safety of passing ships along the coast anymore, the location has turned into a summer retreat for people in the U.S army. 

The Prospect Harbor Lighthouse

The fishing harbor around these parts has been there since the 1800s and in 1849 they built the granite lighthouse, rebuilt in wood in 1891. For years it guided the busy fishing harbor fishermen and schooners to safe haven. 

Albion Faulkingham, the light’s last keeper, served from 1930 until the light was automated in 1934. After this they had a caretaker more than a keeper. 

Read Also: The Paranormal Activity At The St. Augustine Lighthouse 

Eventually the Prospect Harbor Lighthouse was not used as much and fell into disrepair of water damage and rot before being restored in 2004 with the help of the U.S Coast Guard and Lighthouse foundations. 

It is not open to the public per se as it is an active military base and you can’t reach the lighthouse grounds. But many that have been passing have claimed to have snapped a photo of the ghosts residing there and still today the lighthouse continues to shine the way and the light remains an aid to navigation on the grounds of an active military installation. 

The Gull Cottage

This cottage by the Prospect Harbor Lighthouse is now used for Navy personnel and is another place in the park said to be haunted. The cottage used to be the light-keeper’s quarters and if we are to believe the rumors, it seems that a former keeper is the one haunting it. 

Guests that have stayed at the cottage claimed to have seen ghosts and there are some signs left by them like the smell of tobacco lingering in the air or seeing doors opening and closing. 

Prospect Harbor Lighthouse: The Lighthouse as well as Gull Cottage in Acadia National Park said to be haunted.

Over the years, those who have encountered the ghosts have given him the nickname Captain Salty. Who was he in real life? Many attribute the alleged ghost leaving a scent of tobacco in the cottage to “Grandfather Ira” Workman, the caretaker after the lighthouse got automated. 

He passed away from a heart attack as he was lighting his pipe on New Year’s Day in 1951 and if we are to believe the rumors, the pipe never really went out. 

The Haunted Statue in Gull Cottage

Another part of the haunted rumors is the story about the statue that seems to be moving by itself inside of Gull Cottage. 

Inside the cottage there is a small statue of a sea captain out of reach on a high ledge on top of the stairs. According to reports it is said that he moves to face the stairs or the sea, all by himself. Could thisi be the same ghost leaving the scent of tobacco? 

But could this have already been exposed as a hoax? According to Robert Kord’s writing in the Machias Valley News, he was the one moving the statue around when he visited the Gull Cottage in 1997. 

“I kept moving these wooden figurines around the place in an effort to scare anybody. “Our Prospect Harbor grandchildren visited, and my techniques worked pretty good on the granddaughter.”

True or not, the story took hold and were continued to be told even when the Prospect Harbor Lighthouse fell under the American Lighthouse Foundation not the Coast Guard in 2000 when it was leased out.  

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References:

Northern Acadia Park and Haunted Prospect Harbor Lighthouse 

Prospect Harbor Lighthouse, Maine at Lighthousefriends.com 

Prospect Harbor Point Light – Wikipedia 

Prospect Harbor Light history – NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE

Acadia’s Anemone Cave known as The Devil’s Oven and its legends

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Today the traces of Anemone Cave, otherwise known as the Devil Den or The Devil’s Oven, have almost been erased from the park. Dangerous because of the tide submerging the cave completely, stories about strange things happening around the cave have been told for centuries.

Hidden along the foggy shorelines of Mount Desert Island within Acadia National Park, a foreboding sea cave known as Anemone Cave, or otherwise called, The Devil’s Oven stands as a silent witness to centuries of mysteries and eerie legends. 

Acadia National Park is a stunning natural reserve located primarily on Mount Desert Island, the largest offshore island outside of Maine, United States. Established in 1916, it encompasses over 49,000 acres of rugged coastline, lush forests, granite peaks, and pristine lakes. 

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Acadia National Park is not only a haven for outdoor enthusiasts but also a place of profound natural beauty and ecological significance. 

Taken off the Maps of Acadia National Park

The Haunted Devil’s Oven is located near DeGregoire Park, in Bar Harbor, Maine and it is said you have to make sure to be there at low tide to not be completely submerged under water. 

Years ago the Anemone Cave was marked on the trail of the National Park’s maps. Today signs are removed and the name disappeared from the map and even the railings have been removed to deter people for seeking its slippery path, for a good reason, and only those with knowledge of its whereabouts or searching for it on the internet can find it. 

It is said to be to protect the tiny lives of the anemones as well as hikers were often injured or trapped by the tide in the caves. There have also been at least one death in modern time. But although it was removed from the map, it is still there as the legend surrounding it. 

Anemone Cave History

This hidden alcove has long been shrouded in tales of the supernatural, with whispers of a portal to the underworld echoing through the annals of Mount Desert Island history. 

Anemone Cave got its name from the anemones, but that is only in recent years as it has been known as both the Devil’s Den and Cave of the Sea among other things. The origin of the ominous name, The Devil’s Oven is uncertain, but it is said that the cave itself looks like a skull and the paranormal stuff are said to happen both at high and low tide. 

Read More: Check out The Mysterious Gouffre de Padirac Caves, The Haunting Santuario de la Virgen de Balma in the Mountain Rocks, The Ghost of Kathleen who Loved St. Kevin in Glendalough and The Haunted Mystique on the Cliffs of Wenlock Edge for more haunted caves with strange legends attached to them. 

Even in contemporary times, The Devil’s Oven continues to evoke a sense of unease and spectral energy. Nighttime visitors have reported witnessing inexplicable lights gleaming and flashing from the depths of the Anemone Cave, casting an eerie glow along the coastal expanse. 

Religious Sacrifices inside of the Cave

This is not only a modern phenomenon though, but all the way back to when European settlers came about and even further in Native American stories, something was amiss with the caves. Those who venture near during daylight hours speak of hearing haunting cries and strange chants carried by the ocean breeze.

There is a claim put forth in the book named Ghosts of Acadia, where the author Marcus Librizzi says that the cave was used by the Native Americans where they held terrible and grotesque rituals and sacrifices where they drowned people slowly by the tide according to legend. 

A Warning to Visitors Seeking the Anemone Cave

For the intrepid souls seeking to unravel the mysteries of The Devil’s Oven, a cautionary note lingers. The sea cave is accessible only during the ebb of low tide, a precarious journey fraught with maritime challenges. Owing to the surge in drownings and perilous sea rescues, the National Park Service has removed all railings and signs leading to the Anemone Cave, emphasizing the need for caution and even experienced climbers have died.

As you contemplate the allure of The Devil’s Oven, consider not only the haunting rumors that enshroud its existence but also the inherent risks that accompany the quest for the supernatural. In the shadowy realm between legend and reality, Acadia National Park harbors secrets that beckon the curious yet cautionary tales that echo through time.

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References:

THE DEVIL’S TRIANGLE 

History of Visitor Use and Management of Anemone Cave, Acadia National Park, Maine 

This Ancient Sea Cave Isn’t On Any Map Of Acadia National Park For Good Reasons 

Hauntings and Mysteries in Acadia National Park 

ABANDONED TRAILS OF ACADIA NATIONAL PARK: ANEMONE CAVE – THE DEVIL’S OVEN

REAL HAUNTED PLACES IN ACADIA NATIONAL PARK

The Ghost of Bicycle Larry on Old Narrow Gauge Volunteer Trail in Randolph Forest

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On a bike path inside of Randolph Forest in Maine, it is said that strange things are heard and seen. The Old Narrow Gauge Volunteer Trail is said to be haunted by strange orbs, sounds and screams as well as the ghost of the local Bicycle Larry after he went missing. 

In Randolph, Maine, lies a seemingly tranquil forest that conceals a tapestry of haunted legends and ghostly mysteries. The Randolph Forest, just a stone’s throw from Augusta, harbors tales of spectral occurrences and unexplained phenomena that have left visitors both intrigued and spooked. 

Tracing the 1.25 mile long path of a long-defunct railroad that once transported Union soldiers to and from a veterans’ home in Togus, the hiking trail through Randolph Forest is steeped in history. 

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Along the path of shallow streams and silent trees it is said that former soldiers’ spirits may linger, and the remnants of the bygone era add an eerie ambiance to the woods. As visitors venture deeper, they might encounter unexplained orbs of light and hear ethereal voices echoing like a mysterious chant.

Bicycle Larry’s Ghost

Over the Old Narrow Gauge Volunteer Trail there is now a bike path that transported the injured veterans up to Togus hospital in the late 1800s and early 1900s. 

Among the spirits said to roam Randolph Forest is the ghost of “Bicycle Larry,” a local legend known for pedaling around town. He is also sometimes known as bicycle Eddie and was often seen riding on a red Huffy or a gray mountain bike. The legend goes that, in 2004, Bicycle Larry mysteriously disappeared without a trace, leaving behind an air of uncertainty and they never found his body, or his bike. 

Because of this people think that his dead body is still in the forest, perhaps buried in a shallow grave, still waiting to be found as police think there were suspicious circumstances around his disappearance. Some even claim he was murdered by a man called Norris Perry, a man he was staying with after a series of arguments between them the month he went missing. 

Perry committed suicide before the entire story came into light. Before he died after an overdose of pills and alcohol he left a voice message, telling them that they would find Lawrence “Bicycle Larry” Farrell in a brook behind his trailer home. However, the police had to wait until spring, many months after his disappearance to investigate further.

Some daring visitors claim to have witnessed his spectral figure cycling through the woods, perpetually lost in the ethereal twilight.

The Strange Haunting in Randolph Forest

While the Randolph Forest may appear harmless during the day, a transformation occurs as the sun sets, and nightfall shrouds the landscape. As darkness descends, the whispers become more pronounced, and the shadows seem to dance with unseen entities. Daredevils who venture into the heart of Randolph Forest after nightfall may find themselves entwined in the ghostly embrace of the unknown.

People that have ventured to the deep parts of the forest claim to have seen orbs, or strange flashes of lights. There are also those that claim to have heard someone screaming, sometimes the words, Get Out can be heard, although they can never find a single living soul in the forest. 

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References:

A Small Maine Town is Surrounded by One of the Most Haunted Forests in the World 

Is This Wilderness Trail Really The Most Haunted Place In Maine? 

Maine’s Most Haunted Hikes To Do This Summer 

Police suspend search for missing man until spring