Many of you will remember our original list of haunted places in which we visited some of the most famous haunted sites in the world. This list contains fewer famous, but equally spooky places. Not restricted to houses, we also look at graveyards and towns.
At the German Babenhausen Barracks (now a museum) the ghosts of German soldiers, some in World War II era uniforms, have been reported. Lights are said to turn off and on by themselves and voices are heard in the basement. Footsteps and commands are allegedly heard at night, supposedly without physical cause. Legend has it that if a soldier happens to visit the museum and pick up a telephone, a woman will at times be heard “talking backwards”, unintelligible, in neither German nor English. The town was the site of a witch burned at the stake in the 19th century, and her ghost is said to have seduced, and then killed, several German soldiers since then. Pictured above are two American Soldiers at the Barracks in 1974. [Wikipedia]
Maud Hughes Road is located in Liberty Township, Ohio. It has been the site of many terrible accidents and suicides. Railroad tracks lay 25 feet below the bridge, and at least 36 people have been reported dead on or around the Maud Hughes Road Bridge. Ghostly figures, mists, and lights have been seen, as well as black hooded figures and a phantom train. The legend says that a car carrying a man and a woman stalled on top of the bridge. The man got out to get help while the girl stayed. When the man returned, the girl was hanging on the bridge above the tracks. The man then perished with unexplained causes. To this day, many people have reported hearing the ghosts’ conversations, then a woman’s scream followed by a man’s scream. Another story says that a woman once threw her baby off the bridge and then hanged herself afterwards. [Wikipedia]
This house will be no stranger to people who love horror movies. It is the house on which the film The Amityville Horror is based. The house is a six-bedroom Dutch Colonial style house built in 1924. The best known feature of the house was, at one time, its pair of quarter circle shaped windows on the third floor attic level, which gave it an eerie, eye-like appearance. These windows have since been removed and the house renumbered to keep tourists away. On November 13, 1974, 23-year old Ronald DeFeo, Jr. fatally shot six members of his family at the house. During his murder trial in 1975, he claimed that voices in his head had urged him to carry out the killings. He was found guilty and is still in jail in New York. In December 1975, George Lutz and his wife, Kathy, purchased the house and moved in with their three children. After 28 days they left the house, claiming to have been tormented by paranormal phenomena while living there. The family experienced foul smells, faces at the windows, screams, moving objects, and all manner of bizarre phenomena. The image above is the house as it appears today. [Wikipedia]
The Pickens County Courthouse in Carrollton, Alabama is a courthouse in west Alabama famous for a ghostly image that can be seen in one of its windows. The image is said to be the face of Henry Wells, who, as legend has it, was falsely accused of burning down the town’s previous courthouse, and lynched on a stormy night in 1878. The image on the window is easily seen, although it is more face-like from some angles than from others. It is said that the image is only visible from outside the courthouse; from inside the pane appears to be a normal pane of glass. Since the photo above was taken, the city of Carrollton has installed, on the exterior of the courthouse, a reflective highway sign with an arrow pointing to the pane where the image appears. There are permanent binoculars installed across the street from the window for people who wish to get a closer look. [Wikipedia]
Balete Drive is a street located in New Manila, Quezon City, Philippines. It is known for apparitions of a white lady and haunted houses which were built during the Spanish Era (1800s). New Manila has an abundance of balete trees, which, according to legend, is a favorite spot of wandering spirits and other paranormal beings. Paranormal experts believe that the white lady was raped by Japanese soldiers during the Second World War. Witnesses of the white lady, advise motorists to avoid the street at night, especially if they are alone. If it is necessary to travel the route, they advise that the backseat of the car is fully occupied and that no one should look back or look in any mirrors. The apparition wears a night gown, has long hair but has no face or one covered with blood. [Wikipedia]

More well known as the Rosenheim Poltergeist, this infestation of bizarre activity is one of the most well known in Germany. In 1967, strange phenomena began occurring in the office of lawyer Sigmund Adam. Telephones would ring with no one at the other end, photocopiers spilt their ink, and desk drawers would open without being touched. A German paper installed equipment to monitor the phones and in 3 month they recorded over 600 calls to the speaking clock – despite the fact that all of the telephones were unplugged. In one 15 minute period, 46 calls were recorded – a rate that seemed impossible given the mechanical dialing system in place. In October 1967, all light bulbs in the building went out with a huge bang. After installing cameras and voice recorders, investigators were able to discover that the events only took place when 19-year-old Annemarie Schneider (a recently employed secretary) was present. It was claimed that a suspended light would swing violently when Ms Schneider walked beneath it, and the lights would flicker whenever she walked in to the office. When Schneider went on holiday the events stopped. Upon her return, the poltergeist activity returned. Schneider was fired and the problems stopped for good. Pictured above is Schneider beneath the lights that were seen to swing.
One house in one street in Bélmez de la Moraleda, Spain has recently become very famous thanks to eerie faces that have been appearing in the floor. Street Real 5 has become a popular attraction for ghost tourists as the faces appear frequently and can be easily photographed. The appearances in Bélmez began on August 23, 1971 when María Gómez Cámara saw a face appear on her cement kitchen floor. Her husband took a pickaxe and destroyed the face. Soon after another one appeared. An excavation, conducted under the location of the house, revealed human remains, which were removed. The picture above is one of the faces.
Union Cemetery in Easton, Connecticut is not just the most haunted cemetery in Connecticut, it is considered by many to be the most haunted cemetery in the United States. The most famous ghost there is the White Lady. Numerous photographs have been taken of her and she has even been caught on film. She has long dark hair and wears a bonnet and nightgown. She frequently appears in the roadway along route 59 and sometimes route 111 where she is often “hit” by oncoming vehicles. On one occasion in 1993, a fireman was driving along the road when he hit the lady – he heard a thud and a dent was left in his vehicle. As the woman appeared in front of his car he also saw a farmer with a straw hat sitting beside him in the car. The cemetery is locked at night and regularly patrolled by the police. The image above is one of many that can be found on the Internet.
Pluckley is a small village in Kent, England that is believed to be the most haunted village in England. In addition to the 12 (some say 13 or 14) ghosts in Pluckley, the village is also famous for the television program The Darling Buds of May which was filmed there. Of the ghosts you can see here, the most spectacular are the ghostly highwayman and coach and horses seen near the town hall, the ghost of a gypsy woman burned to death in her sleep, two hanging bodies, a phantom monk, three upper class ladies and, perhaps spookiest of all, the Screaming Woods. The Screaming Woods is an area just outside the town haunted by the ghosts of many people who were lost there. Their screams can be heard coming from inside the forest at night.
This residential area of London best known for the song A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square, is also home to the most haunted house in London! Number 50 Berkeley Square is home to a large number of ghosts, the earliest of which is that of a young girl murdered in the 1700s by a sadistic servant. She is frequently seen on the top floor sobbing and wringing her hands in despair. Another woman trying to escape her uncle fell from a window – her ghost is often seen hanging from a windowsill. While the house was vacant in the 1870s, the neighbors heard numerous screams and moans coming from the house. They also heard furniture moving, bells ringing, and windows being slammed shut. Years later the house was occupied by a Mr. Dupre, who locked his insane brother in a room on the top floor. He fed the insane man through a special opening in the door. This is the room that is supposed to be central to the haunting. The house is currently home to a bookstore – strange occurrences have been noted by all of the staff of the shop. The top floor is kept locked at all times and no one is allowed to enter it.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from the Wikipedia articles cited above.





























Vera Lynn~
what makes BWP frightening is that it is intended for open interpretation by the viewer. there is no pre-fabricated plastic, CGI monster to provide a visual object of someone else’s creation…
there was a lot of Internet hype back in the day, what was that…1999?i was 23 then… and I had grown up on a 100 acre farm, complete with goats, chickens, and me getting lost during an Oklahoma snowfall one February back in 1986… I was lost, wandering in circles, for hours. I thought I would recognize a familiar landmark, but the heavy snow disguised aall landmarks, even filling in gopher whole in the fields, making great ankle-twisting natural gifts of pain.
as a child, I tried to remember things I had read in books… but the old adage of staying put made no sense when i was so cold, hungry, scared…
I eventually found the drain-off ravine from the fields and followed it down to the brook and then home.
so the fear the movie inspired in me was very much exacerbated by that childhood experience.
the scariest thing, I had realized later on in life, was not that I was lost for so many hours (from after school, 2:30, until dark, 7:00)it was that when I came home, all my mother had to say was for me to not dare come into the trailer with my wet boots…
Riya B. ~
you are as entitled to your comment as i am to mine… and i appreciate your reasoning. i disagree however. but, i’ll not argue such a topic here.
(i may just be too arrogant and simple-minded to have a conversation with someone such as yourself)
ringtailroxy
Love the list, yeah cant sleep now either. How about St Pancras or the old Edwardian/Victorian prison tunnels near Farringdon in London?
The tunnels were opened to the public for a few weeks when i was younger and my mother dragged me along with family friend. the only other person there was the lady on the door selling the tickets right on the cusp of the entrance to the main road and these steep stairs heading down into gloom with the acrid stench of ancient disinfectant wafting up them.
I personally don’t believe in ghosts as orbs or whiffs of smoke or even fully fledged visions but i do believe in an atmosphere being changed by events, you all must have walked in some where and had a shiver or felt something a little off putting about a room you may have slept in.
But the feeling from this place was that of claustrophobic dread and utter fear. Our family friend who has no belief in the paranormal and ghosts is normally a loud outgoing person (like a mad uncle lol) did not utter a word from the time we hit the first tunnel till we got back to the stairs, and he can’t remember why he couldn’t think of anything to say for a such a long time. I could not stand that place, not literally seeing things but feeling what had happened there, some how knowing the fear, hearing slight odd things in the dark distant tunnels that had collapsed years before when modern roads had been built over the tunnels. Also right at end of us walking around lost the two others for a min just as we were leaving and have never been as scared in my life, i lost all direction and logic, didn’t know where the exit was even tho a sign above me said exit with arrow to left.
I still cant explain it to this day and the three of us do not talk about it, just a knowing feeling that is to be left alone, but feeling like right place i can tell my odd story…
Right, coffee time as its 2:20 am and im not gong to get any sleep
ringtailroxy~ It’s why I said “no offense”.
Spooooooooooooooooooky! (Insert scary music)
I love these lists! And repeating the above, Sarah Winchester was haunted herself by either her own mind or the ghosts of men killed by the Winchester rifle. The house itself is not haunted, it’s just creepy and bizarre.
I too am a skeptic when it comes to the paranormal. However… as a nurse working the night shift in a hospital, i have seen things that defy all rational explanation. One instance was at 1:15 am one night shift, the elevator “call” button lit up, the elevator came up….doors opened…..doors closed and the elevator went to the ground floor. Now, heres the eerie part… elevators go up and down all the time, ppl push all the buttons then get off the elevator, leaving the empty car to stop on all the floors. The button to call the elevator only lights up when it is pushed! The clincher was, this was a secure elevator with myself and my coworker holding the keys…. and both of us looking at the elevator as if to say “WTF”. Later in the shift, while visiting with an ICU nurse down the hall from my unit, she informed us that one of her patients expired at 1:15 am. Hmmmmm coincidental malfunction of the elevator????? Who really knows…. just was very eerie.
I know I saw a ghost when I was going through boot camp at Parris Island. One night on duty I kept hearing the toilets flush so I went to check if anyone was there and when I stepped out of the bathroom and looked down the hallway I saw a figure of a man. It freaked me out but I found out later that it was the barracks that the recruits that died during the Ribbon Creek incident stayed at during training. I have met a lot of other Marines since then that had seen or heard things during their stay in the same barracks. That incident definitely made me a believer.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribbon_Creek_Incident
Following Up on #5 I found the following about Fraulein Schneider
http://www.trivia-library.com/b/biography-of-electric-psychokinetic-anne-marie-sch-part-1.htm
http://www.trivia-library.com/b/biography-of-electric-psychokinetic-anne-marie-sch-part-2.htm
http://www.trivia-library.com/b/biography-of-electric-psychokinetic-anne-marie-sch-part-3.htm
So not so much a haunting, but still Eerie
Cheers
Lee
Regarding number 8 on the list – I believe Mr DeFeo was quoted as saying during sentencing:
“…and I’d have gotten away with it too, if it wasn’t for those meddlin’ cops.”
What about the Monte Cristo house in Australia
http://www.gadling.com/2007/10/30/monte-cristo-australias-most-haunted-house/
Is that Jack Skellington in the courthouse window?
I live in Enfield CT and have been to Union Cemetery. That place is freaky but you need permission to go inside we’ve tried on many occasions and haven’t gotten permission.
No, really, why are most ghosts from acouple hundred years ago or newer? Has anyone seen cro-magnon ghost or neanderthal ghost? It seems that the victorian era was prime for lost souls . . .
Too bad that cemetary is locked and monitored at night… I’d drive up to Connecticut from MA just to get a glimpse of that ghost.
Speaking of Salem, I’m surprised it wasn’t mentioned on either lists. Well, maybe it’s not technically “haunted,” but it’s definately more than meets the eye with all the stupid tourist attractions and witch museums.
well. here is my final argument concerning ‘hauntings’ i live just a few blocks away from a very large Jewish cemetery. i have walked my dogs in the cemetery (not on the graves or grounds! just the roadways & walking paths, i;m not that disrespectful!)and have never, not a once, seen anything suspicious or frightening. quite the contrary-it;s peaceful, dimly lit, and i can hear the owls and crickets, tree frogs & cicadas, raccoons and fox,toads and snails.
once again, i am astonished by man’s ability to continue to see himself as the highest developed, most astute, most perceptive being the universe has ever created. why would we be the only chosen beings visited by specters and ghosts? why don’t we see the ghosts of the millions upon millions of animals that have perished due to our expanding need for land to build homes on? out here, the Everglades shrink a little more each year, due to developers’ greed. what happens to all the animals/ aren’t they disgruntled souls as well?
hell, the worst poltergeist i could imagine would be one *****ed off raccoon!
ringtailroxy
Great List! I love that you put effort into it by adding all that history and activity information.
oh snap, if i heard a woman talking backwards i’d freak out
good list
ringtailroxy: you obviously have little or no imagination. I don’t believe in any of that stuff either. I still can creep myself out easily enough. It has nothing to do with my rational self, but my over-active and wonderfully vivid imagination. Wouldn’t trade it for a – “look how smart I am” pat on the back.
cossart road in southeastern pennsylvania may deserve a mention… M. Night Shyamalan’s the village was shot in the fields surrounding the road
78. Mom424… I don’t believe in any of that stuff either. I still can creep myself out easily enough. It has nothing to do with my rational self, but my over-active and wonderfully vivid imagination. Wouldn’t trade it for a – “look how smart I am” pat on the back.
****
Soooo right on. I don’t believe in it either, yet the incident at the house in the Hollywood Hills did happen…and I can scare the beejeegeezuzs out of myself just about any time I really want.
It’s fun!
Hey love the site and the lists.
Does anyone know about a farm in america that suffered paranormal activity going on with things like a big dog like creature killing animals, ufo’s and lights and crop circles?
It was all in the one place and there was a book about it, can’t think of the name though, it’s hurting my brain
Actually I found it called the Skinwalker Ranch, definately worth checking out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skinwalker_Ranch
Which is more freaky, a Ghost who knows they’re dead or a Death Echo (spirit energy replaying the last moments of life)?
Is anyone else sick of ringtails ramblings?? Just me?
i definitely don’t buy #4 and #7. matrixing, anyone? that can explain pretty much all accounts of “ghostly faces” seen in mirrors, windows, etc.
also, i’m surprised that the stanley hotel isn’t on here. it was the inspiration for stephen king’s the shining.
I live in Alabama and the Carrollton image I’ve heard about. They supposedly changed the glass a long time ago and the face returned after they replaced it from what I’ve heard. So, I kind of think that is a bit creepy, but I don’t really know that it happened, it could just be legend, who knows.
Thanks for featuring a place from the Philippines. Although I have never been to Balete Drive, I’m planning to go there for Halloween.
Anyway, you can also include my house in the next list. This really happened to me:
When I was playing my favorite computer game in a room, my dad was also there with me using the laptop. But, my computer shut down for no reason and my dad’s monitor darkened. The lights flickered on and off. Then, I checked outside. I know, I am very skeptic and cynic that I don’t believe in the supernatural. Everything is as is. Normal. Then I went back to the room. There is a radio also which doesn’t work anymore. It’s dead no matter how much dad sends it to the repairmen.
Now, the scariest part is that it played my deceased grandpa’s (died in 2002) favorite song from the Beatles, which my dad said is entitled “A Taste of Honey.”
I will find a way to enter the top floor of Berkeley Square.
There are a ton of places in Ohio that are haunted, but I haven’t heard of the Screaming Bridge.
As with the miracles list of about 6 weeks ago, I would like to have seen some sort of debunking in the text.
I have been in and out of church buildings by myself late at night for many years (part of my past was as a church organist and choir singer), and have never experienced anything remotely “other”. That’s not to suggest that if I haven’t, then it doesn’t exist. I have heard other people tell stories that are either true, or sincere.
fine..it is eeriely haunted….
Hazell2~
ramblings? well, i guess my free-thought can be classified as such… but is you are tired of them, then just pass over my comments… like i used to when S_R was posting all the time. see the name-wouldn’t even glance at the musings… and onto the next.
Mom424~
perhaps my imagination is just tempered and jaded… i used to completely embrace all ideas of the paranormal when i younger… i used to believe in miracles and from the time i was 18-26 i called my take on life “rainbows & unicorns”. i embraced the idea of fate and all that jazz.
but around the age of 27… well… reality slapped me around a bit. hard. i began to see the world around form a more animalistic, self-centered position. and you know what? i’m not so naive anymore. no one will ever take advantage of my kindness & good-nature. i don’t trust others as easily…
maybe it’s a lack of imagination that prevents me form being scared or afraid of anything in nature. people now? they are a different story. there are some real hardcore wackoes out there.
you should see some of my artwork and maybe you’ll see i do have an imagination… but it’s just as strong as it used to be!
http://ringtailroxy.deviantart.com/
rtr
p.s. love me or hate me, i enjoy all criticism! it can only help me become a better person!
I live near Pluckley and I can quite safely say it is reeeeeeeeeally creepy…. We wanted to spend the night in the woods but upon having a pre-camping pint in The Black Horse the locals scared the ***** out of us so we went home! (We were gonna B&B at the pub, but that is also haunted. Apparently.)
#88. Denzell
…There is a radio also which doesn’t work anymore. It’s dead no matter how much dad sends it to the repairmen.
Now, the scariest part is that it played my deceased grandpa’s (died in 2002) favorite song from the Beatles, which my dad said is entitled “A Taste of Honey.”
****
Radios are just plain strange.
I had a car, a 67 GTO, and sometime around 69 0r 70 the radio just quit working completely…unless Light My Fire by the Doors was playing (a song I didn’t even like, though I did like the Doors). Not only would it come on for just that song, it would come on at full volume! It didn’t happen every time, but randomly, when it was totally inconvenient.
You can imagine how popular I was in the neighborhood when the song came on at 3 in the morning.
There was no ghostly presence at work. I was the original owner. It was just plain weirdness.
93. ringtailroxy
around the age of 27… well… reality slapped me around a bit. hard…
****
rtr, I am more deeply sorry about that than I can possibly tell you, but I can also promise you that *whatever* life has done to you, it cannot come close to what it has done to me.
I know how that must sound. Hollow, and “How dare she presume to think…”
Trust me. I know your reaction to my statement down to the last cell in your body, because I know exactly what my reaction would be under the same circumstances.
I applaud the way you have taken control of your life. I believe I have said so before, and I will probably say so again. Don’t let the Hazell2s of the world quiet you.
I am not always in agreement with you, but so what? You present your case with intelligence and wit and you’re perfectly willing to laugh at yourself. These are the hallmarks I look for in my friends in real life. Why should this be any different?
Trust that those who know you are happy to read your ramblings on whatever the topic.
I grew tired of ringtail’s ramblings as well. Deep down inside she’s terrified! That will make it all the more worse when something “gets her”! HA!
Really nice art though roxy. I can tell you have a gentle spirit.
segue~
i have read of your hardships, accomplishments, and ability to overcome. i admire you and your strengths more than words can say!
yes, i have my health, for now. sadly, a history of familial abuses, physically, mentally, and *****ually, as well as my obsesive need for acceptance, placed me in a position to be taken advantage of by sooo many people… when i finally stood up for myself, and realised that i could say “No!” and i wasn’t a bad person for doing so, when i realised that in order to save others i must first save myself, well, my world-view changed polarity entirely.
(but i still love rainbows and falling stars & i’d be lying if i said i didn’t talk to the universe when i gaze upon the nightsky with a child’s wonder and an adult’s feeling of minuteness…)
Sammaji~ terrified? of what? success? failure? critisism? nope…
terrified on the unknown? nope…
terrified of the ignoant who choose to not educate themselves,even when presented with the opportunity, terrified of those who refuse treatment for mental illness, terrified of the judicial system in this country? maybe…
rtr
I live near London and will definitely go and have a look-see at Berkeley Sq one day. Have read about that place elsewhere and it sounds pretty cool.
Remember reading everything I could on the paranormal when I was a kid and loved it.
One story I remember was by, I think, an American who travelled around Africa. He was out camping near a lake in the wild one bright sunny day when without any warning all the animals went completely quiet. The next moment there was an eerie stillness and the temperature dropped by several degrees. This lasted a few moments as ‘something’ seemingly passed by, unseen. Not long later it became warm again and the birds and animals started up their noise. He turned to his guide to ask what the hell just happened, to which the guide calmly told him it was some sort of bad spirit moving through.
Not edge of the seat stuff but one paranormal tale that somehow has stuck in my mind all these years.
BTW aliens exist somewhere. If they don’t then science is wrong and that scares me more than anything else.
I’m surprised that the famed Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, CO hasn’t appeared. It is the hotel that inspired Stephen King’s The Shining. I’ve been there for 2 weddings, and although I didn’t experience anything creepy, at both wedding’s I did end up seeing a white lady! HA.
Sorry mb20xtc, I didn’t read the comments before posting my non -original echo.
WoW WOW, first of all i want to say a great list. Second of all i live about 5 minutes from Maud Hughes RD(#8). Gave me chills just reading the title. Whats so ironic and creepy about it is that me and my dad we were going somewhere and had to travel using Maud Hughes Rd. early this morning. I was telling him all the myth about the road and how when i was younger 16 or 17 me and a couple of my friends would try and “find” these ghost stories. So many legends around this particalur road. When we would go on these ghost hunts we wanted to see if any were true. When we went there some things happened to this day that can not be explained
In New Jersey theres this road off of rt. 287 called Ewing ave. When you drive on it the slope goes downhill. When you get to the end of the street and put your car in neutral you get pulled up the slight incline. I’ve done it, and its pretty freaky.
Its funny you should mention Halifax, sky as i am from there.
i might not be able to sleep tonight!!!
Oh, come on! The so-called Amityville Horror has long since been debunked as a fraud. The Lutzes and Lawyer William Webber worked together inventing the creepy happenings to “prove” that every inhabitant of the house became possessed and had to kill his family, as Ronald DeFeo had done. This way they tried to connive a new trial for him and get him into a mental institution where he would be “healed” in a jiffy. They werent very clever at it: The Lutzes story was full of holes and kept changing constantly, it was debunked very early by Dr. Stephen Kaplan.
Melina 104
Ever been to an amusement park and throug the “crazy house” where you cannot walk straigt because the rooms produce an optical illusion? Its the same with your freaky hill.
LadyPit,
If people came up to you wherever you went and made fun of you for reporting a haunting, you’d say it was a lie to. These things happen, watch “A Haunting” on the Discovery Channel.
LadyPit- So wait, you’re saying that me getting physically pulled backwards up hill is and optical illusion?
those are freaky i live in one of those places really close to one of those places there are all kinds of storys about the place floating around wow crazy
WOW. i LIVE in Liberty Township and i NEVER knew that the bridge was haunted. creepy. next time i go im gonna be scared to death!!!!!
I’ve heard of several roads, (some are called “Gravity Hill”) that seem to be ascending up a hill when they are actually slightly descending. It is because the terrain is shaped in such a way that it causes an optical illusion, it gives an impression that it is slanting up when you are actually slanting down. When your car is drifting it only seems as if it is going uphill. (like LadyPit at #107 said)
P.S. The view of the terrain also affects your sense of balance, which adds to the illusion.
I went to Pluckley a few weeks ago with some friends and we were in and out of the churchyard and graveyard all night. We also walked through the orchard at the back of the church. It’s a very nice place and did not feel any different to the village in which I live! I was a bit put off by the gangs of chav’s coming up to us and saying ” ere mate, are ya on a ghost’unt, can we folla ya”……….
People who believe in ghosts are funny
Yeah I live in Alabama and I’ve seen the face in the window. I’m tellin u it’s very creepy. I’ve heard several stories about it though. I still dont understand how it git there but oh well some things are better off left unknown.
I’d love to visit these places, love the adrenaline rush you get from the fear of stuff like that!
the first person who opens this email a member of your family will surely DIE in on week.
I cant believe balete drive is here.. hahah! it here in the Philippines.. Anyway, its true that it is really freaky there.. I had it experienced by myself.. haha!