Tag Archives: shipwreck

Ghostly Sailors of Sandwood Bay: Scotland’s Haunted Shoreline

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Coming from the dark waters in what has been called the shipwreck grave of Scotland, ghosts are said to linger on the beach of Sandwood Bay, far away from any civilization. 

Tucked away along the rugged, windswept northwest coast of Scotland, far from the reach of city lights and modern noise, lies Sandwood Bay in Sutherland, a stretch of sand and sea so hauntingly beautiful it feels untouched by time. The beach is considered to be one of the cleanest and most unspoilt beaches in the whole of mainland Britain.

Isolated by towering cliffs and miles of moorland far away from any roads, this remote paradise in Sutherland has long lured travelers, artists, and adventurers with its lonely splendor. But those who linger past sundown whisper of more than waves and starlight — for at Sandwood Bay, the spirits of the drowned are said to walk.

Sandwood Bay: On the rocky beach in Scotland it is said ghosts from the wrecked ships over the years are haunting the shore. // source: Peter Bond / Beach at Sandwood Bay / CC BY-SA 2.0

A Shoreline Stained with Shipwrecks

For centuries, the treacherous waters off Sandwood Bay claimed the lives of countless sailors around the dangerous Cape Wrath. The name likely derived from the norse Sandvatn, meaning sand water. Legends speak of galleons lost to storms, fishing boats swallowed by hungry waves, Viking boats wrecked, and merchant vessels dashed against hidden rocks before the lighthouse was built in 1828.

The most enduring tale involves a Spanish galleon from the Armada, said to have been wrecked along the bay’s sandy embrace in the shadowy days of empire. Local folklore claims its cursed treasure still lies beneath the silt and surf, forever guarded by the spirits of those who perished alongside it.

Ghostly Fishermen and Wandering Sailors

The earliest documented ghost sightings at Sandwood Bay date back to the 1940s, when solitary visitors and locals reported seeing two fishermen collecting driftwood along the shore. These figures, pale and weathered, would cry out to any who approached:

“All on this beach is mine — begone!”

Eyewitnesses said the men vanished if challenged, dissolving into the mist as though they’d never been there. Some insist they are the remnants of wrecked sailors still staking claim to the land their bodies washed upon, calling out if you try to take the driftwood or other things from the beach. There have also been reports about a group of people, crying into their hands as they wander the beach, but vanishing if spoken to. 

Water Horses Haunting the Beach: Another story told about the beach is the sounds of hooves running over the beach when no one is there. Could it be something from more ancient times? Water horse is a mythical creature, such as the Ceffyl Dŵr, Capaill Uisce, and kelpie? The water horse has often become a basic description of other lake monsters such as the Nessie. Loch Morar is reputedly home to “Morag”, a lake monster that has been portrayed as a water horse. Or perhaps it is an each-uisge, a supernatural water horse found in the Scottish Highlands, has been described as “perhaps the fiercest and most dangerous of all the water-horses”.

The Knock at Sandwood Bay Cottage

A short distance from the sands, nestled amid rolling dunes, stands Sandwood Bay Cottage, an old crofter’s home steeped in ghost stories of its own close to Loch Sandwood. Today it’s abandoned and roofless. On stormy nights, when the wind howls like a chorus of lost voices, it’s said a phantom sailor knocks at the door. Legend suggests this may be a lone survivor of the fabled Spanish galleon, cursed to wander the earth in search of shelter and the treasure he swore to guard.

Residents and travelers who’ve stayed at the cottage have reported strange rapping at windows, wet footprints appearing on dry floors, and the unmistakable scent of saltwater and seaweed drifting through tightly shuttered rooms. 

Sandwood Bay Cottage: The abandoned Sandwood Bay Cottage, a remnant of the region’s ghostly tales and maritime history. // Source

Some accounts even claim to have glimpsed a sodden figure standing at the edge of the bay, watching the cottage with hollow, mournful eyes. Perhaps the worst are the stories about the crouching sound of heavy boots outside before the bearded face of a sailor is looking at you through the window. 

Was it a ghost, or was it simply the local hermit James MacRory-Smith who lived close to the beach for 32 years until he died in 1999? He retreated to the bay after his wife died in a horrible car accident.

Mermaids and Myths of the Deep

Sandwood Bay’s eerie reputation isn’t reserved for restless sailors. The waters here also hum with older legends of selkies and mermaids — sea creatures said to lure men to their deaths with song and beauty. Fishermen have long spoken of beautiful, unearthly women seen sunning themselves on the rocks before vanishing into the surf. Could these beings have played a hand in the bay’s tragic maritime history, claiming sailors for their own beneath the waves?

Kelpie: Kelpies have the ability to transform themselves into non-equine forms, and can take on the outward appearance of human figures, in which guise they may betray themselves by the presence of water weeds in their hair.

A story from a local called Alexander (Sandy) Gunn told that he went on a walk around Sandwood Bay in January 1900 with his dog when he saw one. Apparently, the creature had long golden hair and piercing blue/green eyes. 

He was ridiculed by the others, but never changed a word about his story of the 7 feet long creature he had seen on the beach until he died in 1944. And more stories about these sea creatures kept popping up, both after and long before in old history.

A Place Where the Dead Walk

Today, Sandwood Bay remains one of Britain’s most remote and untamed beaches, accessible only by foot over miles of heather-clad moorland. Hikers and campers who brave the long journey often report an unnerving sense of being watched, especially as dusk settles over the beach. Cold spots, distant voices, and ghostly apparitions are said to linger, particularly around the old shipwreck sites still half-buried in the sand.

Magical Stones: Ancient stone circles scattered across the lush green landscape near Sandwood Bay, hinting at centuries of history and folklore. // Source: Brian MacLennan / Ancient Ruin above Sandwood Bay / CC BY-SA 2.0

Whether you believe in the vengeful spirits of drowned sailors or see these tales as a product of isolation and wind-whipped imagination, one thing is certain: Sandwood Bay’s haunted past lives on in every crashing wave and shifting shadow.

So, if you should ever find yourself on that lonely Scottish shore as darkness falls, listen closely to the wind. You might just hear the long-lost cries of shipwrecked souls — still laying claim to Sandwood Bay.

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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

The Underwater Secrets of The Ghost Fleet of Truk Lagoon

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After a Japanese fleet in Micronesia were sunk in a lagoon, the shipwreck as well as the soldiers that perished known as the Ghost Fleet of Truk Lagoon. A popular diving place, this underwater burial ground have also been rumored to be haunted by the once still remaining in their watery graves. 

Deep beneath the crystal-clear waters of Truk Lagoon lies a haunting secret that has captivated divers and history buffs for decades. The Ghost Fleet, a collection of Japanese naval vessels that were sunk during World War II, has been resting on the ocean floor for over 75 years in the Federated States of Micronesia. 

The eerie silence surrounding the rusted hulls of these once-mighty warships has given rise to a sense of mystery and intrigue that draws adventurers from around the world. For decades it was mostly forgotten in this isolated area and wasn’t really talked about until the 60s. It especially gained popularity as a diving place after the French oceanographer Jacques Cousteau released a film about the place in 1969.

Some divers have claimed that there is no difference between the dive down to the ghost ships and the soldiers watery grave and walking through a cemetery. The place has also been said to be haunted and is often featured on the most haunted places in the world lists. But what is really the story about these haunted rumors? 

Sunken Relics: You can find everything as it was when it first sunk. Whole ships, airplanes, gas masks and even human remains are still at the bottom of the lagoon. Here is a photograph of a gas mask found on the Fujikawa Maru in Chuuk Lagoon in 2011.

The History of Truk Lagoon and the Ghost Fleet

Haunted Lagoon: Now a popular place for diving, the Ghost Fleet in the lagoon is also thought to be haunted by the many souls left at the bottom of the sea during the battle. // Source

Truk Lagoon, also known as Chuuk Lagoon after the 1990s, is a large body of water located in the Pacific Ocean, about 1,000 miles east of the Philippines. During World War II, Truk Lagoon served as an important Japanese naval base, providing protection for their fleet and serving as a strategic location for launching attacks on Allied forces. 

However, on February 17, 1944, the US launched a surprise attack on the Truk Lagoon, code-named Operation Hailstone that lasted for days. This attack was one of the largest naval assaults of World War II, resulting in the destruction of many Japanese ships and planes, often called the Japan’s Pearl Harbor, and the attack was in partial retaliation for this. The Ghost Fleet, a collection of 32 Japanese naval vessels, as well as 275 aircraft, was sunk during this attack and has remained underwater ever since.

Read Also: Other sunken things thought to might be haunted: The Sunken House at the Bottom of Gardner Lake 

In addition to the many planes and ships that went under, it is thought that more than 3 000 people went down with them as well. Some of the bodies are still there. 

The Ghost Fleet is a unique piece of history, frozen in time on the ocean floor. The rusted hulls of these ships provide a glimpse into the past, serving as a reminder of the bravery and sacrifice of the men who served on them. The Ghost Fleet has become a popular destination for divers and history buffs alike, who come to explore the wrecks and learn more about the events that took place during World War II.

The Underwater World of Truk Lagoon

The underwater world of Truk Lagoon is a breathtaking sight to behold. Crystal-clear waters reveal a colorful array of marine life, ranging from small fish to larger species such as sharks and rays. The coral reefs that surround the lagoon are home to a variety of sea creatures, including clownfish, angelfish, and eels.

However, it is the Ghost Fleet that draws many divers to Truk Lagoon. The wrecks of these once-mighty warships have become a haven for marine life, providing a unique and fascinating diving experience. Divers can explore the rusted hulls of these ships, swimming through narrow passageways and peering into the dark corners of the vessels. The Ghost Fleet offers a glimpse into a bygone era, providing a unique opportunity to experience history firsthand.

But there is also the case of this being a literal burial ground, and there are still many bodies still in their watery graves here. Although Japan has done recovery efforts, there are still a few remaining. 

Diving Truk Lagoon and the Haunted Rumors

Diving in Truk Lagoon is a unique and unforgettable experience. The crystal-clear waters provide excellent visibility, allowing divers to see the wrecks of the Ghost Fleet in all their glory. The lagoon is relatively calm, with mild currents and warm temperatures year-round.

Diving in Truk Lagoon requires a certain level of skill and experience, as the wrecks are located at varying depths. Some of the wrecks are shallow, with depths of just 10-20 feet, while others are much deeper, with depths of up to 200 feet. Divers must be certified and have experience with deep diving and wreck diving to explore the Ghost Fleet.

So where do the haunted rumors come in? There are not a ton of reports and evidence supporting these claims, and most of them are by divers just mentioning it in passing. One diver even had a staff member quit his job because of the ghosts in the sea”. Several of the divers have claimed to have seen or heard stuff they couldn’t explain under the water close to the ghost fleet. Could the watery grave contain actual ghosts?

Have a look at some of the strange sounds the divers have claimed to have heard and thought had to be something paranormal.

As with this clip, it shows what many divers claim to have heard underwater. Like the sound of machine that is running from the shipwreck of Fiji Kawamaru in the engine room where there are still human remains in.  

Or even the sound of engines starting up on the sunken Hoki Maru ship that has a lot of trucks onboard. Some claim to have heard human voices that should not be heard so far under water. 

Haunted Vehicles: One of the many stories told about this place is how it sounds like the engines are going from the cars on the bottom of the sea. Here is a Toyota KB (designated Type 1 in military service) truck in the hold of the Hoki Maru wreck, Truk Lagoon, Micronesia. // Source: Image taken by Clark Anderson/Aquaimages

It is not only the ghost fleet said to be haunted though, as rumor has it, the whole island is. There is especially a cave close to the lagoon area that is said to emit a strange light and where people claim to have been touched on the shoulder, even though no one was there. 

According to some, there are not only tourists claiming to have seen these specters haunting the sea. When you talk to the local dive guides in Chuuk, there is an eerie certainty in their words. They speak of sea ghosts haunting the wrecks – souls of the departed. These spectral beings are even sometimes said to bring illness that the victims need an exorcism for purification. It is said that under the sea by the wreckage exists both malevolent and benevolent spirits, casting a chilling presence over these waters.

Truk Lagoon and the Ghost Fleet

Truk Lagoon and the Ghost Fleet offer a unique and unforgettable diving experience descending through shark infested waters by the reefs down to the underwater burial ground of shipwrecks. 

The wrecks of these once-mighty warships provide a haunting backdrop for underwater exploration, offering a glimpse into a bygone era. But look and listen closely, as it is said that the wrecks are more alive than they should be, as the popular tourist area is also someones final resting place, and for just how many is unknown.

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References:

The Ghost Fleet of Truk Lagoon – Littlegate Publishing 

The Ghost Ships of Truk Lagoon – Anthony Grzelka 

The Ghosts of Truk Lagoon, Indonesia — LESLIE LUTZ 

Ghost Fleet of Truk Lagoon 

Mike Gerken: Evolution Underwater Imaging | Ghost Wrecks of Truk Lagoon