[OT] Local or Urban Legends

Andrew D. Gable said:
Hey...not in Springfield, but De*something*...DeQuincy? There was that mysterious roadkill thing that looked for all the world like a baboon in like '96. Ever hear anything about that?

No, I'd never heard of that. Cool, something else for the supernatual files! :)

Here's something I just dug up off a google search

THE DEQUINCY NEWS Sept. 25, 1996
WHAT IS IT? Mrs. Barbara Mullins took this photograph of an animal that apparently had been killed by a car on the Pearce road east of Temple-inland. It was the size of a very large dog and was covered with thick wooly hair. It had the general appearance of a dog, except for the face, which looked somewhat like that of a baboon. Was it a dog or some unidentified animal?
<link to story + picture>

Apparantly, some people think it is a chupacubra. To tell the truth, those (fictional?) things scare me! There have been several nights that I've stayed up for an extra hour or two, just staring at my window, while visions of one jumping through the glass to eat me plays in my head.

Well, I'm wierd like that!
 

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Bran Blackbyrd said:
Also of Possible Interest:
The Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization You can check for sightings by location (I'm in Stark County for the curious among you ;)).

One interesting thing that seems to be peculiar to Ohio Bigfoot sightings is deer mutilations. Bigfoot sightings & mutilated deer carcasses seem to have some association in SE Ohio.

Bjorn Doneerson said:
I believe one of the first alien abduction stories is from my area. Betty something-or-other in 1967, I think.

Betty Hill & her husband Barney. They are notable not only for being among the first abductees. but also for being the first to use hypnosis to help them "remember" their experiences.
 
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Awesome

These are awesome. The house for canal workers thing just SCREAMS vampire, doesn't it? I wouldn't have even needed the 'Salem's Lot (great book, btw) reference in order to conjure that image in my head.

A Washington, DC "legend"....

Since most of you are D&D players, I imagine that you've probably at least heard of "ley" lines. Pierre L'enfant (the architect/designer who created the wheel-and-spoke design for DC) was supposed to have been mildly interested in that kind of thing. Anyway, the supreme court building, the capitol, the Washington Monument, and the lincoln memorial all form a straight line, you couldd raw it right through their center axis. But, that's not the interesting point. That same line, when extended westward, supposedly cuts right through several of the prehistoric burial mounds (some people think that they're temple mounds) in states like Ohio, and *I think* wherever the weird native american snake mound is. Kind of interesting, eh?
 

The_Universe said:
That same line, when extended westward, supposedly cuts right through several of the prehistoric burial mounds (some people think that they're temple mounds) in states like Ohio, and *I think* wherever the weird native american snake mound is. Kind of interesting, eh?

Serpent Mound is indeed in southern Ohio. One of these days I'll get down there to actually have a look at it.

I'll add the Mansfield Reformatory to the list of Ohio's creepy sites.
 
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Kesh said:
2) Dayton, OH is home to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. On this base is the famous Hangar 18. Supposedly, after the Roswell crash, all the confiscated UFOs/parts were put on trucks and taken to Hangar 18 for study and storage. Years later, Area 51 was established and the ships were moved to that location, though some of the less interesting parts were kept in Hangar 18 for storage purposes.

FWIW Wright Pat has never had a "Hangar 18". There was a bldg 18 before they changed the numbering system in the 60's-70's, but it is just a strip of offices. The hangar that the UFO was supposedly stored in is one of several large hangars sitting behind the AF museum. The museum annex (which is used to store larger aircraft that won't fit into the main museum) sits directly next to it.

On a related note....my grandfather was a career AF intel officer & served the majority of his career at Wright Pat. When he died in '86 he told my grandmother that there were in fact aliens at Wright Pat.

However, he was suffering from a massive stroke at the time so the credibility is certainly questionable.


Bran Blackbyrd said:
Serpent Mound is indeed in southern Ohio. One of these days I'll get down there to actually have a look at it.

Be sure to visit the Seven Caves/Zaleski State Forest area while you're down there. It is a beautiful area.

I'll add the Mansfield Reformatory to the list of Ohio's creepy sites.

Speaking of prisons, Eatern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia is a definite "must see" on the haunted prison list.

19thC_print.gif
 
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One that hasn't been mentioned yet is the "Mothman" that had multiple spottings in NW West Virginia in the mid to late 60's...

The quote below was taken from the Prairie Ghosts website...

mothman_image.jpg


The weird events connected to the Mothman began on November 12, 1966 near Clendenin, West Virginia. Five men were in the local cemetery that day, preparing a grave for a burial, when something that looked like a “brown human being” lifted off from some nearby trees and flew over their heads. The men were baffled. It did not appear to be a bird, but more like a man with wings. A few days later, more sightings would take place, electrifying the entire region.
Late in the evening of November 15, two young married couples had a very strange encounter as they drove past an abandoned TNT plant near Point Pleasant, West Virginia. The couples spotted two large eyes that were attached to something that was "shaped like a man, but bigger, maybe six or seven feet tall. And it had big wings folded against its back". When the creature moved toward the plant door, the couples panicked and sped away. Moments later, they saw the same creature on a hillside near the road. It spread its wings and rose into the air, following with their car, which by now was traveling at over 100 miles per hour. "That bird kept right up with us," said one of the group. They told Deputy Sheriff Millard Halstead that it followed them down Highway 62 and right to the Point Pleasant city limits. And they would not be the only ones to report the creature that night. Another group of four witnesses claimed to see the “bird” three different times!
Another sighting had more bizarre results. At about 10:30 on that same evening, Newell Partridge, a local building contractor who lived in Salem (about 90 miles from Point Pleasant), was watching television when the screen suddenly went dark. He stated that a weird pattern filled the screen and then he heard a loud, whining sounds from outside that raised in pitch and then ceased. “It sounded like a generator winding up” he later stated. Partridge’s dog, Bandit, began to howl out on the front porch and Newell went out to see what was going on.
When he walked outside, he saw Bandit facing the hay barn, about 150 yards from the house. Puzzled, Partridge turned a flashlight in that direction and spotted two red circles that looked like eyes or “bicycle reflectors”. They moving red orbs were certainly not animal’s eyes, he believed, and the sight of them frightened him. Bandit, an experienced hunting dog and protective of his territory, shot off across the yard in pursuit of the glowing eyes. Partridge called for him to stop, but the animal paid no attention. His owner turned and went back into the house for his gun, but then was too scared to go back outside again. He slept that night with his gun propped up next to the bed. The next morning, he realized that Bandit had disappeared. The dog had still not shown up two days later when Partridge read in the newspaper about the sightings in Point Pleasant that night.
One statement that he read in the newspaper chilled him to the bone. Roger Scarberry, one member of the group who spotted the strange “bird” at the TNT plant, said that as they entered the city limits of Point Pleasant, they saw the body of a large dog lying on the side of the road. A few minutes later, on the way back out of town, the dog was gone. They even stopped to look for the body, knowing they had passed it just a few minutes before. Newell Partridge immediately thought of Bandit, who was never seen again.

On November 16, a press conference was held in the county courthouse and the couples from the TNT plant sighting repeated their story. Deputy Halstead, who had known the couples all of their lives, took them very seriously. “They’ve never been in any trouble,” he told investigators and had no reason to doubt their stories. Many of the reporters who were present for the weird recounting felt the same way. The news of the strange sightings spread around the world. The press dubbed the odd flying creature “Mothman" after the popular TV show Batman.

mothman3.jpg


The sightings seemed to end after the "Silver Bridge" in Point Pleasant collapsed into the Ohio River, killing 46 people. This led some to speculate that the Mothman was somehow connected to the collapse, and that both were a manifestation of "Chief Cornstalk's Curse" (Which I'll go into further later).

As an aside...when divers were going down to inspect the wreckage of the bridge, several did not want to return to the cold, dark waters of the Ohio River as they claimed to have seen Catfish the size of Volkswagons down among the silt at the base of the bridge's pillings!!

My mother's family is originally from Clendenin WV & I have a great-uncle who told me stories about the Mothman back in the late 70's. He claimed to have seen it himself. He's a bit of a "tale teller" so I'm skeptical of his claim to have seen it personally, but it is kinda neat that I was hearing stories about the Mothman years before it became well known.
 
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Here in Finland, we don't get a great deal of ghost stories... There used to be a small cabin in the woods about a kilometer from my house that was reputed to be haunted, but it was torn down about a decade back. I did once see a weird figure in the woods there with a couple of friends, but it was very dark and the thing was far away, so it was probably nothing...

However, there are a couple of more well-known tales. In Espoo, there's Alberga Manor, built in 1874 by the Russian consul Feodor Kiseleff. There are known to be two ghosts, Vita Frun and Svarta Frun (Swedish names, meaning the White Lady and the Black Lady, respectively.). I don't know who they were supposed to be in life, but they don't really do much. Even now there are regular reports from people claiming they've seen the ghosts, but they're not bent on mischief, just walking about and keeping the myth alive.

Then there is an old wooden villa in another part of the city, called Jupperi. It's reputed to also be haunted, though the tales consistently neglect to tell what exactly haunts it.
 

Ghost stories?

I've got some- they're all from the old castle in Oslo (called Akershus).

It's been built around the 12th century and most of the various kings and rulers of Norway have stayed there. Ever since its been added to. Today its tall, dark and very strange, as a mix of different styles and time periods of sorts.

Unfortunately, through the ages the various tragic deaths or great injustices performed on the grounds has led to yet another haunting. Today the castle is full of old ghosts and the stories that surround them, not that I believe it but...

Also, even more unfortunately, in the army, I was doing guard duty there during the winter, which is possibly the scariest place to be in Oslo during the nights.

Our officers learned us several stories and smiled sadistically before they sent us off on patrol. Most I've tried to forget because they were pretty damned creepy. Some stille stick to my mind though, one was the white lady. She was the wife or mistress off some officer who took her own life jumping from the inner wall. Since soldiers have seen a woman in a white dress walking at the edge of the walls during the midnight watch. I never had the pleasure of encountering her, but some of my fellow guards did. They were pretty shaky after the experience.

The second is the hell-hound, which is supposed to haunt the dark gateways inside the castle. In the 17th century the soldiers on the castle heard a howling downstairs and went to investigate. Their officer went into the gateway to open the door, his torch was extinguished. He was then attacked by something that almost ripped him to pieces before the soldiers could come to his assistance. Since many people have seen a black dog walking around the castle halls, with intense red eyes.

There were other ghost stories that freaked me out. I'm also quite relieved I didn't meet the ghost of Quisling, as he was shot here after the war.

-Dispater
 

Bjorn Doneerson said:
I believe one of the first alien abduction stories is from my area. Betty something-or-other in 1967, I think.

And my friend swears there's a crashed alien spacecraft in a nearby resevoir, but he has a tendency of getting stories wrong and I've never heard the claim made by anyone else.


Betty and Barney Hill. The best account of what happened can be found in Phillip Klass' book _UFO abductions: A Dangerous Game_. The damage done to people by thse specialist therapist who "help" people realize that they were abducted would make a properly sadistic villain.

There is also a good telling of the Travis Walton fraud in the same book.

Harry
 


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