History is peppered with intriguing tales of people who, for all intents and purposes, inexplicably vanish from the face of the earth without a trace. These stories – some of the most fascinating in the annals of the unexplained – vary from being well-documented to having the flavor of mere legend and folklore. This is the top 10 bizarre disappearances.
10. The disappearance of Oliver Larch
The story of Oliver Larch (Sometime known as Lerch or Thomas) follows a similar narrative to that of David Lang (item 3). According to his narrative, Larch was on his way to collect water from a well one winter when he vanished; leaving nothing behind but trail of footprints in the snow which terminated abruptly, and a series of cries for help that appeared to come from above. In some tellings, Larch’s story is set in late nineteenth-century Indiana, in others, it is set in North Wales. One particular recurring citation of this variant was as Oliver Thomas of Rhayader, Radnorshire, mid-Wales and the date is given specifically as 1909.
9. The Flannan Isles lighthouse keepers
In December 1900, three lighthouse keepers vanished from their duty stations, leaving behind equipment important to surviving the hostile conditions at that location and time of year. Despite exhaustive searches, the keepers were never found. The official explanation for the disappearances is that the men were swept out to sea by a freak wave.
8. The Bennington Triangle
Between 1920 and 1950, Bennington, Vermont was the site of several completely unexplained disappearances:
7. The Vanished Cripple
Owen Parfitt had been paralyzed by a massive stroke. In June, 1763 in Shepton Mallet, England, Parfitt sat outside his sister’s home, as was often his habit on warm evenings. Virtually unable to move, the 60-year-old man sat quietly is his nightshirt upon his folded greatcoat. Across the road was a farm where workers were finishing their workday by pooking the hay. At about 7 p.m., Parfitt’s sister, Susannah, went outside with a neighbor to help Parfitt move back into the house, as a storm was approaching. But he was gone. Only his folded greatcoat upon which he sat remained. Investigations of this mysterious disappearance were carried out as late as 1933, but no trace or clues to Parfitt’s fate were ever uncovered.
6. The Disappearing Diplomat
British diplomat Benjamin Bathurst vanished into thin air in 1809. Bathurst was returning to Hamburg with a companion after a mission to the Austrian court. Along the way, they had stopped for dinner at an inn in the town of Perelberg. Upon finishing the meal, they returned to their waiting horse-drawn coach. Bathurst’s companion watched as the diplomat stepped over to the front of the coach to examine to horses – and simply vanished without a trace.
5. Time Tunnel
In 1975, a man named Jackson Wright was driving with his wife from New Jersey to New York City. This required them to travel through the Lincoln Tunnel. According to Wright, who was driving, once through the tunnel he pulled the car over to wipe the windshield of condensation. His wife Martha volunteered to clean off the back window so they could more readily resume their trip. When Wright turned around, his wife was gone. He neither heard nor saw anything unusual take place, and a subsequent investigation could find no evidence of foul play. Martha Wright had just disappeared.
4. The Norfolk Regiment
Three soldiers claimed to be witnesses to the bizarre disappearance of an entire battalion in 1915. They finally came forward with the strange story 50 years after the infamous Gallipoli campaign of WWI. The three members of a New Zealand field company said they watched from a clear vantage point as a battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment marched up a hillside in Suvla Bay, Turkey. The hill was shrouded in a low-lying cloud that the English soldiers marched straight into without hesitation. They never came out. After the last of the battalion had entered the cloud, it slowly lifted off the hillside to join other clouds in the sky. When the war was over, figuring the battalion had been captured and held prisoner, the British government demanded that Turkey return them. The Turks insisted, however, that it had neither captured not made contact with these English soldiers.
3. The Legend of David Lang
This famous case allegedly took place in September, 1880 on a farm near Gallatin, Tennessee in full view of several witnesses. The two Lang children, George and Sarah, were playing in the front yard of the family home. Their parents, David and Emma, came out the front door, and David headed off across a pasture toward his horses. At this time, a buggy carrying family friend Judge August Peck was approaching. David turned to walk back to the house, saw the buggy and waved to the judge as he strode across the field. A few seconds later, David Lang – in clear view of his wife, his children and the judge – disappeared in mid-step. Emma screamed and all of the witnesses rushed to the spot where David once was, thinking perhaps he had fallen into a hole of some kind. There was no hole. A thorough search by the family, friends and neighbors turned up nothing. A few months after the unexplained disappearance, the Lang children noticed that the grass on the spot where their father vanished had turned yellow and wilted in a circle measuring about 15 feet in diameter.
2. The Stonehenge Disappearance
The mysterious standing stones of Stonehenge in England was the site of an amazing disappearance in August, 1971. At this time Stonehenge was not yet protected from the public, and on this particular night, a group of “hippies” decided to pitch tents in the center of the circle and spend the night. They built a campfire, lit several joints of pot and sat around smoking and signing. Their campout was abruptly interrupted at about 2 a.m. by a severe thunder storm that quickly blew in over Salisbury Plain. Bright bolts of lightning crashed down on the area, striking area trees and even the standing stones themselves. Two witnesses, a farmer and a policeman, said that the stones of the ancient monument lit up with an eerie blue light that was so intense that they had to avert their eyes. They heard screams from the campers and the two witnesses rushed to the scene expecting to find injured – or even dead – campers. To their surprise, they found no one. All that remained within the circle of stones were several smoldering tent pegs and the drowned remains of a campfire. The hippies themselves were gone without a trace.
1. The Village That Disappeared
An individual that vanishes is one thing, but how about an entire village of 2,000 men, women and children? In November, 1930, a fur trapper named Joe Labelle made his way on snow shoes to an Eskimo village on the shores of Lake Anjikuni in northern Canada. Labelle was familiar with the village, which he knew as a thriving fishing community of about 2,000 residents. When he arrived, however, the village was deserted. All of the huts and storehouses were vacant. He found one smoldering fire on which there was a pot of blackened stew. Labelle notified the authorities and an investigation was begun, and which turned up some bizarre findings: no footprints of any of the residents were found, if they had vacated the village; all of the Eskimos’ sled dogs were found buried under a 12-foot-high snow drift – they had all starved to death; all of the Eskimos’ food and provisions were found undisturbed in their huts. And there was one last unnerving discovery: the Eskimos’ ancestral graves had been emptied.
Sources: The Book of Lists, Wikipedia
Notable Omissions: The crew of the Mary Celeste
Technorati Tags: Bizarre, disappearances






























Ah I figured it was fake /sigh that would have been creepy as hell
Here’s an interesting article about the disappearance of Benjamin Bathurst. He did vanish, indeed, but the circumstances were not that mysterious. Anyway, it makes you wonder why the story became such a classic, published in countless books and articles about people vanishing into thin air.
http://www.mikedash.com/pdf/The%20Disappearance%20of%20Benjamin%20B.pdf
When you investigate “classic” disappearances like these, quite a number of them eventually turn out to be good stories, but with very little truth. But they are interesting anyway.
Speaking of truth – whaddya think about this article from Pravda? (That means “Truth” in Russian, as you maybe know!)
http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/377/12624_Holes.html
Another essay on people who are here one second, gone the next, can be read here.
http://www.20kweb.com/weird_stuff/in_the_wink_of_an_eye.html
The “French family” mentioned in the article was the Mechinauds. A young couple with their two children disappeared with their car on Christmas night in 1972. If you know French, here’s a collection of old newspaper articles on the topic.
http://pagesperso-orange.fr/philippe.dumas/actua.htm
And here’s a story about a guy who vanished in his pyjama.
http://www.illinoistimes.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A3445
Greetings from Finland!
What about the Bermuda Triangle?
The Devil’s Triangle?
The crew of the Marie-Celeste?
I’ve heard about the one of the eskimo village it’s quite disturbing.
read all those storeis before throughout the years and they sre all true.
Damn, all of those were really creepy.
The Beaumont Children…..?!
Saddest story ever told
I don’t know why, but I feel like my chair is slanting down as I read this list, as if I am getting sucked into some kind of hole but not really. Weird, right?
BTW, if David Lang’s story is real, how awesome can that be!?
I think the case that puzzles me most is probably the disappearance of Martha Wright – because it’s relatively recent and I have more faith in the ‘missing person finding skills’ of the police in 1975 than the coppers from the 1800 or 1900s.
So… I click the random list button and it takes me to the page I was looking at?!
Tempyra: that is TRUE randomness – if it excluded the one you were on it wouldn’t be a random selection of the entire site
Randomness doesn’t reduce odds – every time you click the link you have as much chance of getting the same page back as any other page.
jfrater: Yeah I know how ‘random’ works
. Just thought that there’d be something in the code or whatever to prevent you landing back up on the same page.
“View a Pseudo Random List” doesn’t look as good though
Tempyra: Nope – only the real deal around here
O.o they were spirited away~ off into the distant world…..the battalion brought into cloud 9 to party and forget about the world for all eternity.
Awesome, I hadn’t seen this list yet. I love stories of the unexplainable, they remind you life is full of mystery and intrigue, not just the mundane.
#1 scares the poo out of me.
I’ve heard #1 was caused by alien abductions. That could explain why no footprints were found.
The last entry is very spooky, i even gasped in horror..wonder what happened to them?
what about the 9th legion that marched north from Eboracum.(York, England) to deal with the scottish tribes and was never seen again ?
This is a fun list to read. However, all of those “disapearances” are hoaxes, fables or have a logical explaination.
If you liked these stories, contact your local library and look up the writings of C.B.Colby. While his writing style is somewhat primitive, the short stories (like those above) are interesting and occasionally creepy. Good bathroom-time reading material.
Reason your so sure that these are hoaxes aren’t you. Has it ever occured to you that we live in a paradoxical and paranormal realm ourselves? Your short sightedness is very disappointing……I will however agree that not all phenomemon can be explained as Aliens, time warps, demensional rift and so forth but it would behoove you to look at the un-natural side of the natural side of our existence you will be surprised what you will find……I know………trust me…….
The Beaumont children? That’s easy, they were eaten by dingos.
I found this list today while trying to find more information about a truly odd case someone had mentioned to me that I had never heard of. The Sodder children of West Virginia. What a strange case that is! At first it seems a case of parents not accepting the truth but who’s to say after reading the full details. A beef liver in a trunk? No bones? If you can find a thorough story of the case it’s rather interesting. I’d post a link to what I’ve found thus far but I have only my trusty cell phone at the moment, not to mention you’d have to read far more than one report/account/newspaper to attempt to piece it together..so you’re on your own. Good luck figuring it out and if you ever hear something like a rubber ball hit your roof on Christmas Eve you’d be wise to vacate your home with family in tow.
I remember reading number 3 in a book when I was younger and true or not it always for some reason stuck with me I still sometimes find myself thinking about it from time to time. in the same book there was a story about 2 joggers jogging down a country road when one of them tripped, the other turned just in time to see this but supposedly before he hit the ground vanished never to be seen again.
i doubt aliens have anything to do with number 3, sounds more like someone falling into a black hole
The Martha Wright disappearence is the easiest to explain. Her lover was following close behind in his own car. When her husband pulled over to wipe the windows, she conveiently volunteered to do the back. As soon as hubby’s back was turned, she rushed to loverboy’s car and they drove away. They could have left the country and are happily living it up somewhere, laughing at everyone looking for them.
What about the mayans?
What about the former Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt who disappeared while going to the beach for a swim never to be found again.
number 3 and number 1 deffinitely gave me chills
those are just plain creepy no joke :/
Wow. Too bad that about half of this list–10, 7, 6, 3, 2, 1–has been demonstrably revealed to be hoaxes.
I believe it is Roanoke Virginia? It was some city in VA in the 1700s or so that was well occupied, and seems to have completely vanished. At least all of the residents vanished. I remember reading that the best thing they could come up with is a group of indians came and took everyone away, but there is no evidence of that, and it is highly speculative. Thats the biggest disappearance Ive heard of.
This whole article is just another lame photoshop job.Just look at the pixels and shadows!
Im Completely baffled that no one is mentioning the Springfield three?!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Springfield_Three
Wow! These stories are really interesting! I’m wondering where is Amelia Earhart on this list! Probably one of the most popular disappearances ever
My theory as to what happened to the boy who disappeared in 1950 (#8):
He was killed by the pigs.
The biggest clue is that he was playing near a pig-sty. There are several incidents of pigs eating whatever lands in their sty.
There are several incidents of pigs also crushing human bone. (they have super strong, super sharp teeth)
The boy was killed by pigs if not completely eaten by them.
I feel like a really bad person for saying it so matter-of-factly, we are still talking about a human life after all. Unfortunately it is still a fact that pigs have that kind of ability and it is not out of the realm of reality that they could have eaten the boy.
All fake
All of these have reasonable explanations. I don’t think they are that bizarre. Maybe I’m just an idiot.
Forgot to add-
All the disappearances involving kids have the same simple explanation.
Kidnapped, abused, killed, and buried in some remote location.
Bathurst did disappear, but not into thin air. It was after dark, he went in the direction of the horses\’ heads, and then nothing further was heard of them. He didn\’t dematerialize in front of everyone. More than likely, he was lured away (possibly by one of the employees of the inn) and then murdered.
David Lang\’s story is a hoax. It was written in the 19th century as fiction, then seized upon as fact.
The theory about the disappearance of Martha Wright could easily hold up, but if she did get into another car, why didn\’t her husband notice the other car, or hear the door slam as she got in? And how in the world could she have managed to evade detection for more than 30 years?
nice list, but its really creepy
i thought bennington triangle was bermula triangle at first for some reason, lol.
I think the last one maybe made up. Who buried the dogs? the couldn’t have buried themselves after starving to death. Great list!!!
Number 10, “Oliver Larch”, is actually Charles Ashmore.The story was published in a book in the 1900s. Read the story here: http://anomalyinfo.com/articles/sa00010d.shtml under “Charles Ashmore’s Trail”.
This is kinda creepy but cool. All them sound real exciting xcept #2 it’s lame. Thanks, makes for good reading!
I read this page and was interested because I had never heard of these stories. Then I found out they are all bull*****. Thanks for wasting my time. Fail.
What the hell is wrong with you?
Willie…I beleive your talking about the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island, NC. But yeah, Sir Walter Raleigh established a colony on Roanoke Island that was run by Thomas (i think that was his name) Dare. They were low on supplies, so Dare left for England to go get the supplies, however, he couldn’t go back for several years due to the war between Spain and England. When he did come back, every single colonist had vanished. All they found was the word Croatoan on a tree. Croatoan was an Inland up the coast of the outer banks where some friendly natives lived. Dare told them that if they left the colony, they should write where they are going on a post or a tree. It is beleived then that they went to live with the Croatoan Indians, however even to this day no one knows what happened to them. Also, the first English child born in the New World, Virginia Dare (granddaughter of Thomas), was born in the colony.
For moer info, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_Colony#Exploration
It is indeed quite interesting to study what might have happened to real people who vanished without a trace.
However cases that are based on legends or stories fail to impress since there is no proof of the characters or events actually ever being real.
And in many real disappearances scary stuff is added later to a mysterious disappearance to make it more interesting or scary.
Regarding #1:
How do they know the Inuits’ ancestral graves had been emptied? Did they actually dig up the graves to do a body count? Who would think to do this and for what purpose?
It also seems that almost this entire article has been copied word for word from about.com.
Most of these are fake. David Lang and Oliver Larch especially are well known hoaxes.
I agree with Dave #105–doing only limited research into these “disappearances” show’s them all to be hoaxes! Fail indeed!
these things are ***** lies
i see the The Flannan Isles from my house window every day
The The Flannan Isles story is 100 % true!
I take the stories like Martha Wright with a grain of salt. Not the fact that she disappeared but the story that she vanished in tunnel like that. In some cases like this where only one person can vouch for the circumstances surrounding the “disapppearance”, I think he probably killed her and concocted the entire story. I am a believer that some strange things happen but I also realize more often than not it’s a more simplier (and sad) explaination. The last person to see them is the first suspect.
Reading that made me think of the tv series, the 4400. >.>
Pretty much all balls really. And quote your sources!
Boo hiss!
The Beaumont Children disappearance is definitely intriguing. It isn’t fabricated, and has yet to be solved even after all the time that has passed.
I believe in alien abductions to explain disappearances. Back in 1969 when I was 14, my friend and I were crawling on the ground, catching fireflies. Suddenly, she looked up and screamed. There was a silent UFO hovering just a few feet above us. We could have vanished without a trace. We are lucky to still be here.
Some of these have been rumored to be hoaxes, but still make fascinating reading and encourages deep thinking. Other notable omissions include Richard Colvin Cox, the West Point cadet who vanished from the grounds in January 1950. No trace was ever found of him or his mysterious friend “George”. And, the Frederick Valentich case is a brain teaser. It could be argued he became disoriented and crashed his Cessna 182L into Bass Strait in Oct 1978, but, based on his communications with Melbourne FS and multiple sightings of strange “objects” in the sky at that time (some dating back two months prior if not decades) throw this incident into a cocked hat. I would ahve loved to have heard the actual radio transmissions and have seen the Roy Manifold photographs. Ah, the sweet mysteries of life…..
Kerry #85: the jogger you are referring to is James Burne Worson. Like David Lang and Oliver Larch, the credibility of this particular case is suspect. From what I have gathered about the Lang case, it was a reworking of the Orion Williamson story; Williamson was a Selma Alabama farmer who vanished into thin air in July 1854. Although there was no documented existence of a David Lang in Gallatin Tennessee in Sept 1880 (date of that legend), there were records of an Orion Williamson in Selma in 1854. Some journalist who was stranded in Gallatin in 1880 reworked the Williamson story, as it was common practice then to compete for cash prizes for the tallest tale told. I also have to agree with the poster who stated that a list of dead celebrities (who may still be alive) is an intriguing idea as Elvis and Jim Morrison come to mind. Another odd story worth checking into is the “near disappearance” of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Cumpston.