The Restless Ghosts Roaming Higbee Beach at Cape May
Who is haunting Higbee Beach in Jersey Shore? Is it because of the disturbed Higbee Grave, perhaps the drowned victims of a shipwreck?
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Who is haunting Higbee Beach in Jersey Shore? Is it because of the disturbed Higbee Grave, perhaps the drowned victims of a shipwreck?
Who is haunting Higbee Beach in Jersey Shore? Is it because of the disturbed Higbee Grave, perhaps the drowned victims of a shipwreck?
The Jersey Shore, with its cheerful boardwalks, sun-drenched beaches, and echoing call of seagulls, hides its darker side well. Beneath the bright veneer of seaside towns and saltwater taffy, ancient whispers cling to the sands, refusing to be silenced by time or tide. Nowhere is this more evident than at Higbee Beach in Cape May, New Jersey—a wild stretch of shore where ghost stories gather like mist on the water. And among these, one figure stands out: the Man in Tatters.
Long before Higbee Beach became a sanctuary for birdwatchers and intrepid hikers, it was the home of Joseph and Thomas Higbee, two brothers who operated a hotel known as The Hermitage in the 1800s. This secluded, untamed beach at the southern tip of New Jersey was a world unto itself—remote, windswept, and shrouded in mystery. Following the death of the Higbee brothers in the 1870s, the property and surrounding land passed to their niece, Etta Gregory. But it was Thomas Higbee’s final wish that cemented his name to the land in a way no one expected.
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In accordance with his will, Thomas was buried on the very island he so loved in a grave lined with brick and flagstone. The grave was sealed with a large marble slab.
But already in 1937, his remains were unearthed and moved to Cold Spring Cemetery by Etta to be next to her, in an act many locals quietly believed to be a grave mistake. The hotel was demolished in 1940. As the legend goes, disturbing the dead rarely ends well, and Higbee Beach soon gained a new, unwelcome reputation.
As daylight fades and the sun sinks beneath the Atlantic, a peculiar chill is said to settle over Higbee Beach. Visitors recount fleeting glimpses of a gaunt, pale man wandering the shoreline. Descriptions are remarkably consistent with an almost luminous gray light. This description was first found in a woman’s recounter of her experiences in the book: Cape May Ghost Stories from 1988.
His pants were too short and frayed at the cuffs, a sash tied at his waist instead of a belt, and a filthy, tattered T-shirt clinging to his spectral form. Sometimes he’s described with a long coat. His presence is often accompanied by a large, black dog, its eyes glinting unnaturally in the twilight, padding silently at his side.
Some say this ghost is Thomas Higbee himself, forever condemned to search for the grave he was cruelly torn from. Some say it’s his slave who is watching over his master’s grave in his afterlife. The connection between restless spirits and disturbed burial grounds runs deep in folklore, and this story is no exception. Locals claim that the man in tatters appears most often around dusk, when the boundary between worlds softens and the veil grows thin.
There is not only the man in the tattered clothes that people claim is haunting the beach. There are also those who say that the ghosts haunting this place could be of a ship carrying immigrants to shore from Europe. Many died during the accident.
Some claim to have heard screaming coming from the water as they stroll along the beach. Could it be that the ghosts of the drowned are still lingering? Some also speculate that there could be soldiers that lost their lives during test bombing during world war two that are haunting the beach.
Adding to the ghostly tableau is the figure of the black dog—an omen of death and misfortune in countless cultures. In Cape May, the creature is sometimes called a hellhound, said to guard the beach’s hidden secrets: lost shipwreck victims, ancient pirate treasure, or the tormented soul of Higbee himself. The dog is always near the Man in Tatters, never leaving his side.
Eyewitnesses have reported watching the man and his hound dissolve into the mist as they approach, leaving no footprints in the damp sand.
Even today, long after The Hermitage crumbled and the Higbee family passed into obscurity, the ghost of the Man in Tatters persists. Higbee Beach Wildlife Management Area may draw birders and nature lovers by day, but as the sun dips low and the air turns heavy, seasoned locals quietly warn visitors not to linger too long after dusk.












The Ghosts of Higbee Beach – High Tide
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