After losing his head to the sea, the infamous pirate, Blackbeard is thought to be haunting the Ocracoke Island in the Outer Banks. His body is seen wandering on the beaches, calling out for anyone to help him find his head.
Tucked into the misty crook of North Carolina’s Outer Banks lies Ocracoke Island, a lonely, wind-swept strip of land long known for shipwrecks, pirates, and spectral legends. The history of piracy in the Outer Banks dates back to the time of the first colony in Roanoke. As early as 1585, men were sent here by the British crown to rob the ships of the Spanish Armada. Here, the past clings like a damp fog to the shoreline, and no figure casts a longer, more fearsome shadow over these haunted sands than Edward Teach — the pirate world remembers him as Blackbeard.
Read More: Check out all ghost stories from USA
More than 300 years have passed since the infamous buccaneer’s brutal demise, yet the restless spirit of Blackbeard is said to still roam the beaches and waters of Ocracoke, eternally seeking something he lost to the bloody surf: his head.
The Bloody End of a Pirate King
In November of 1718, the pirate scourge of the Atlantic met his end at Teach’s Hole, his favorite anchorage near Ocracoke’s sheltered coves. Back then it was called “The Point”.
He had actually given up his days as a pirate at this point and swore allegiance to the British Crown. However, the Governor of Virginia, Alexander Spotswood wanted him gone. In a violent clash against British naval forces led by Lieutenant Robert Maynard, Blackbeard fought with the ferocity of a man possessed, sustaining over twenty sword wounds and five gunshots before finally falling.
His lifeless body was unceremoniously tossed into the water while his severed head was lashed to the bowsprit of Maynard’s sloop as a grim trophy. His shackled pirate crew were forced to watch as the headless body swam three times around the ship before sinking, according to legend.
His head sailed to various ports in eastern North Carolina until it was impaled on a stake at the entrance to the harbor in Hampton, Virginia as a warning to other “Brethren of the Coast.”
The waters, locals whisper, turned dark as pitch that day — and the legends say they’ve never quite settled since.
The Phantom of Teach’s Hole
It’s along this stretch of water, now ominously known as Teach’s Hole at Springer’s Point covered with ancient live oaks and cedars, that eerie sightings persist. Strange lights bubble up from beneath the waves, swirling like will-o’-the-wisps before vanishing into the depths. On storm-thrashed nights, when the wind howls through the twisted live oaks and rain lashes the old gravestones, some say you can hear a guttural, ghostly cry echoing across the surf:
“Where’s my head?”
Fishermen, kayakers, and intrepid ghost hunters have all reported the chilling phenomenon — a voice born of salt and fury, forever cursing the fate that separated a pirate from his crown.
The Bearded Ghost of Springer’s Point
Ocracoke’s spectral lore doesn’t stop at the shoreline. At Springer’s Point, a dense maritime forest overlooking the inlet where Blackbeard made his final stand, tales abound of a large, bearded figure in tattered seafarer’s garb, appearing and vanishing like smoke in the early morning mist.
One particularly unsettling account comes from Roy Parsons, a former resident and musician of the island, who claimed that as a boy he was chased along the Point by a towering man whose boots left no mark in the sand and whose form dissolved into nothingness before his terrified eyes.
Springer’s Point, long considered cursed ground by Ocracoke’s older residents, was one of the pirate’s favorite haunts. The centuries-old live oaks still loom like sentinels over the site of his last debauched gathering, and visitors to this day report a suffocating, otherworldly heaviness that descends upon the path at dusk.
A Pirate’s Curse on the Graveyard of the Atlantic
Ocracoke is no stranger to death and the uncanny. Known as part of the Graveyard of the Atlantic, these treacherous waters have claimed over 5,000 ships since Europeans first braved its shifting sands and shoals. The locals, fiercely proud and intimately acquainted with tragedy, take their ghost stories seriously.
Read More: Check out all haunted islands
Today, Teach’s Hole and Springer’s Point remain must-visit spots for thrill-seekers and paranormal enthusiasts. Today Teach’s Hole is a shop where you can buy all things Pirate. The latter, a secluded nature preserve accessible only by foot, offers eerie solitude, where the veil between past and present seems paper-thin.
Whether you’re drawn by the legends, the restless spirits, or the whisper of pirate gold still hidden beneath the sands, one thing’s certain — on Ocracoke Island, the dead never truly sleep.
Newest Posts
- Krasue: The Floating Head of Southeast Asian NightmaresFloating in the air in rural parts of Thailand and the rest of Southeast Asia, the disembodied ghost of the Krasue is hunting for blood.
- A Vrykolakas Vampire in Sunny MykonosA vampiric Vrykolakas from Greek folklore was said to terrorize the inhabitants on Mykonos island. To stop the haunting, they exhumed, burned and buried the remains of the body on an inhabited island. But did it work?
- Manananggal: The Night Splitter of Filipino FolkloreAs part of the shapeshifting Aswang demons of the Phillipines, the Manananggal was soaring the sky in her bat-like appearance on her hunt for human blood.
- The Atoning Vrykolakas Vampire in SantoriniAfter a man died before atoning for his crimes, he came back from the dead as a vampiric Vrykolakas when his wife failed to follow his final wishes. What followed was a month full of terror and haunting.
- The Vrykolakas Vampire in PatmosAfter terrorizing his village, the Vrykolakas Vampire from Patmos in Santorini were taken to an inhabited island and set on fire. The question is, did it really work?
- The Churel: The Vengeful Vampire Woman of South Asian FolkloreFueled by anger and vengeance, the vampiric Churel of South Asian folklore, is said to haunt down men to drain their blood as a vengeful spirit brought back from the dead.
- The Shoemaking Vrykolakas Vampire from Pyrgos CastleAfter a humble life as a shoemaker on Santorini in Greece, a man was said to have come back as a Vrykolakas, the vampire of Greek folklore. But for this Vrykolaka, it wasn’t to devour human life that kept him going.
- The Sea Draug: The Ghostly Fisherman of the Norwegian CoastThought to be haunting the dark seas of the north, the Sea Draug is a ghost of the drowned fishermen’s and other unfortunate souls who perished on the waters.
- The Haunted Jane Street Hotel: Echoes of the Lost SailorsAfter tragedy struck and the Titanic sank to the bottom of the Atlantic ocean, the surviving crew members were sent to The Jane Street Hotel in New York. According to stories, they are still haunting the rooms, where the trauma of their tragedy lingers.
- The Silent Music Haunting Hald PensjonatWho can be haunting the old Hald Pensjonat in Mandal? Playing soft piano music in the afterlife, and rumours about the footsteps of a Norwegian pirate seems to linger.
- The Mandurugo Vampire Bride of Philippine FolkloreHidden among human society, the vampiric Mandurugo creature is slowly draining her unassuming husbands of their blood and life to sustain her eternal youth and beauty.
- The Ghostly Guardian of MS NordstjernenThe MS Nordstjernen spent decades bringing passengers north across the arctic sea, and although the waters can be brought this far north, it always seemed to reach port unharmed. Some think that it could be Ernst, the ship’s ghosts.
References:
A Circle, A Line, An Island: Ocracoke Ghosts | Our State
Hunting ghosts on Springer’s Point at Ocracoke | Island Free Press
Confessions of a Ghost Tour Guide and Skeptic
