View allAll Photos Tagged hauntedbridge
Yesterday, I finally stopped by and photo'd this "Bridge" over the Little Blue River in Nebraska.
I have photo'd some old bridges, and all were tossed away because I did not like what I see, but here I decided to keep ... even I still don't like it.
Here's the story I discovered a year ago, or two ... what fascinating about this bridge is that some people called it "Haunted Bridge" because in 1885 Spring Ranch residents Elizabeth Taylor and her brother Thomas Jones were accused of barn burning and murder a trespasser on her property. Before they could be tried, on March 15, they were beaten, dragged from their home, and hanged from the local bridge.
The bridge itself has been replaced since then, it stands in the same place as the original. Believers say that the spirits of Elizabeth and Tom can be heard in the night, screaming and begging for their lives.
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Emily's Bridge, also known as Gold Brook Covered Bridge and Stowe Hollow Bridge, is located in Stowe, Vermont. It is a 50 foot truss style covered bridge that was built in 1844, crossing Gold Brook. The bridge is included in the National Register of Historic Places. What sets Emily's Bridge apart from other covered bridges is that it supposedly is haunted 👻
There are several stories of how Emily died. One is that, as a teenager in the 1920's, Emily was supposed to get married to a man at the bridge. When the man didn't show, she hung herself from the rafters. Another story is that Emily's man never showed at the church where they were to be married and, in a fit of desperation, she sped away in a horse drawn carriage which failed to negotiate a turn at the bridge. Emily fell to her death in the rocky brook below. A third story is that Emily became pregnant by her boyfriend. When her father demanded marriage, the boyfriend hanged himself on the bridge. Later, after the birth of twins, Emily also hanged herself at the bridge.
Paranormal activity is often reported at the bridge, usually at night. According to Wikipedia: “Many people that have visited Emily's Bridge have experienced disturbing paranormal activity. People have reported scratch marks appearing on vehicles that were parked on the bridge, and being touched or scratched by Emily's ghost. Often strange noises are heard on the bridge, noises such as footsteps, ropes tightening, and a girl screaming. Many also have reported seeing a white apparition around the area of Emily's Bridge. People that have parked their vehicle on the haunted bridge say they tend to hear banging noises from Emily hitting the vehicle on the outside, or the sound of something dragging across the top of the car.”
I did have to drive across the bridge to take the photo, but noticed no such paranormal activity. However, I drove across it much faster than the 10 mile per hour speed limit, and made sure I was out of the area well before dark :)
Haunted Bridge Peckforton Sandstone bridge carrying the former carriageway road to Peckforton Castle over Hill Lane which depending on which version you believe is haunted by either a ghostly horse and carriage set or a lady with her head under her arm who allegedly appears from the woodland, to the right of, and through, the bridge.
This railroad bridge was built in 1906 between Danville and Avon, Indiana, and is said to be haunted. We have lived in the area for 33 years, and I have been hearing stories about it since my children were in grade school.
"The ghost of a Irish worker who was killed many years ago is said to haunt the remains of this old railroad trestle in Central Indiana. He was one of many Irish workers who were hired cheap to help build a bridge across White Lick Creek back in the 1850's.
The workers were building pylons that would support the bridge and doing this by framing up the sides of a base and pouring concrete inside. One afternoon, a wooden platform collapsed and dumped one of the workers into the wet cement. He slowly sank into the pylon and the other workers could hear his fists hammering against the wooden sides as he slowly drowned. There had been nothing that could have been done to save him.... one minute he was there and the next he had vanished!
Construction was delayed for several hours while the company tried to decide what to do. Finally, they declined to tear the pylon apart to find the body of a man who was obviously dead and work continued, despite the protests of some of the more superstitious workers.
For some years after that, local residents reported the sounds of the man's final screams as he pitched into the concrete could still be heard in the night. They also claimed, along
with a number of railroad men, that the sounds of hammering could be heard coming from inside of the concrete pylon.
After the trestle was torn down many years later, people started to report the apparition of the man could be seen wandering the area, trying to flag down oncoming trains.
Danville, Indiana is located just west of Indianapolis on Highway 36. The haunted area is marked by a bridge that was built in 1906 that crosses White Lick Creek and a road. The concrete foundations of the original trestle can be found a short distance away."
www.prairieghosts.com/dan.html
There is a second story about a woman and her baby. "The story goes that she was walking to the doctor’s house late one night with her sick baby when she had the bad luck to get her foot caught among the railroad ties on the bridge. Then, disaster struck in the form of a huge locomotive barreling down on them. She struggled mightily, finally getting free of the railroad ties, but had no time to run across the bridge to escape the train. So, clutching her sick child, she jumped off the bridge. She survived, but the baby, falling from her arms, did not. Within a few weeks, the mother died of grief and a broken heart. The story concludes that if you drive under the bridge at night, you might very well hear her screaming for her baby." There have also been reports connected with this of a woman dressed in white walking the bridge at night.
avon-indiana.funcityfinder.com/the-haunted-bridge-of-avon...
The original bridge was torn down, and this bridge was built in 1906 to replace it. A picture of the original 1850's foundation is in the comments. I have driven under this bridge many times and have never seen anything. I'm not afraid of ghosts (I would love to actually see one!) and I have driven under it at night. There are a lot of woods around it, and it is quite spooky, especially at night!
If you would like to know more, just search haunted bridge Danville or Avon Indiana. This area is know as the Twin Bridges.
More pictures can be seen in my photostream, and here is a link to a picture from my archives. www.flickr.com/photos/39611512@N02/9416953681
This railroad bridge was built in 1906 between Danville and Avon, Indiana, and is said to be haunted. We have lived in the area for 33 years, and I have been hearing stories about it since my children were in grade school.
"The ghost of a Irish worker who was killed many years ago is said to haunt the remains of this old railroad trestle in Central Indiana. He was one of many Irish workers who were hired cheap to help build a bridge across White Lick Creek back in the 1850's.
The workers were building pylons that would support the bridge and doing this by framing up the sides of a base and pouring concrete inside. One afternoon, a wooden platform collapsed and dumped one of the workers into the wet cement. He slowly sank into the pylon and the other workers could hear his fists hammering against the wooden sides as he slowly drowned. There had been nothing that could have been done to save him.... one minute he was there and the next he had vanished!
Construction was delayed for several hours while the company tried to decide what to do. Finally, they declined to tear the pylon apart to find the body of a man who was obviously dead and work continued, despite the protests of some of the more superstitious workers.
For some years after that, local residents reported the sounds of the man's final screams as he pitched into the concrete could still be heard in the night. They also claimed, along
with a number of railroad men, that the sounds of hammering could be heard coming from inside of the concrete pylon.
After the trestle was torn down many years later, people started to report the apparition of the man could be seen wandering the area, trying to flag down oncoming trains.
Danville, Indiana is located just west of Indianapolis on Highway 36. The haunted area is marked by a bridge that was built in 1906 that crosses White Lick Creek and a road. The concrete foundations of the original trestle can be found a short distance away."
www.prairieghosts.com/dan.html
There is a second story about a woman and her baby. "The story goes that she was walking to the doctor’s house late one night with her sick baby when she had the bad luck to get her foot caught among the railroad ties on the bridge. Then, disaster struck in the form of a huge locomotive barreling down on them. She struggled mightily, finally getting free of the railroad ties, but had no time to run across the bridge to escape the train. So, clutching her sick child, she jumped off the bridge. She survived, but the baby, falling from her arms, did not. Within a few weeks, the mother died of grief and a broken heart. The story concludes that if you drive under the bridge at night, you might very well hear her screaming for her baby." There have also been reports connected with this of a woman dressed in white walking the bridge at night.
avon-indiana.funcityfinder.com/the-haunted-bridge-of-avon...
The original bridge was torn down, and this bridge was built in 1906 to replace it. A picture of the original 1850's foundation is in the comments. I have driven under this bridge many times and have never seen anything. I'm not afraid of ghosts (I would love to actually see one!) and I have driven under it at night. There are a lot of woods around it, and it is quite spooky, especially at night!
If you would like to know more, just search haunted bridge Danville or Avon Indiana. This area is know as the Twin Bridges.
More pictures can be seen in my photostream, and here is a link to a picture from my archives. www.flickr.com/photos/39611512@N02/9416953681
115 Pictures in 2015 - Theme No. 46 - A Bridge
by alexc43 ift.tt/1mwSAnI Colorado Street Bridge and Richard H. Chambers U.S. Court of Appeals. Pasadena, CA. January 3, 2016 #ColoradoStreetBridge #SuicideBridge #Pasadena #CityOfPasadena #Architecture #Bridge #ArroyoSeco #ArroyoPark #Haunted #HauntedBridge #Ghosts #DarkPast #Infamous #Paranormal #RichardHChambersBuilding #NinthDistrictCourtOfAppeals #VistaDelArroyoHotel #Hotel #Haunting #Hefe #HefeFilter #Filter #Beautiful
The Haunted Bridge of Avon, Indiana has a story behind it, as all haunted bridges do. It is situated about a half mile south of U.S. Highway 36, on Avon’s County Road 625, just a few minute’s drive from Indianapolis. The best view of the Haunted Bridge is from the Avon-Washington Township Park, just below it.
The Big Four Railroad, lifeblood of the connecting arteries in Central Indiana and beyond, required a bridge spanning Country Road 625 and White Lick Creek, so the bridge was built in 1906-1907 and double-tracked in 1908. It is about 300 feet long and 70 feet high, an imposing structure whose image graces the Avon town seal today.
The legend of Avon’s Haunted Bridge has been around for generations. Different rumors abound, but in general, the people of Avon have agreed that if you go near the old bridge at night, you will hear a moaning, discontented ghost, or maybe two or three of them. And if you cross the bridge on a hot summer day, you may see the ghost’s tears on it.
There are various explanations for the hauntings. No one, of course, knows whether they are being carried out by a single ghost or many. Over the years, some theories have come to be popular regarding who the ghosts might be. A few of the most widely accepted versions are summarized below.
Henry Johnson, an alcoholic construction worker, slipped one night during the building of the bridge and fell into some wet cement, dying there in the lonely night. The following morning he was found, face frozen in the cement that killed him.
There is a similar report that an Irish or black construction worker fell to his death during the making of the bridge. He landed inside the framework of one of the bridge’s supports. The railroad decided that, since the unfortunate laborer was already dead, they would simply inter his body in the bridge when they sealed the support with cement. Some say that the poor man’s arm hung out, and they cut it off.
Perhaps, as some Avon residents aver, the ghosts on the Haunted Bridge belong to a young woman and her baby. The story goes that she was walking to the doctor’s house late one night with her sick baby when she had the bad luck to get her foot caught among the railroad ties on the bridge. Then, disaster struck in the form of a huge locomotive barreling down on them. She struggled mightily, finally getting free of the railroad ties, but had no time to run across the bridge to escape the train. So, clutching her sick child, she jumped off the bridge. She survived, but the baby, falling from her arms, did not. Within a few weeks, the mother died of grief and a broken heart. The story concludes that if you drive under the bridge at night, you might very well hear her screaming for her baby.
The haunted bridge in Avon is still a functional railroad crossing, servicing the CSX Railroad, and regularly visited by residents and guests to get spine-tingling adrenaline rush.
This railroad bridge was built in 1906 between Danville and Avon, Indiana, and is said to be haunted. We have lived in the area for 33 years, and I have been hearing stories about it since my children were in grade school.
"The ghost of a Irish worker who was killed many years ago is said to haunt the remains of this old railroad trestle in Central Indiana. He was one of many Irish workers who were hired cheap to help build a bridge across White Lick Creek back in the 1850's.
The workers were building pylons that would support the bridge and doing this by framing up the sides of a base and pouring concrete inside. One afternoon, a wooden platform collapsed and dumped one of the workers into the wet cement. He slowly sank into the pylon and the other workers could hear his fists hammering against the wooden sides as he slowly drowned. There had been nothing that could have been done to save him.... one minute he was there and the next he had vanished!
Construction was delayed for several hours while the company tried to decide what to do. Finally, they declined to tear the pylon apart to find the body of a man who was obviously dead and work continued, despite the protests of some of the more superstitious workers.
For some years after that, local residents reported the sounds of the man's final screams as he pitched into the concrete could still be heard in the night. They also claimed, along
with a number of railroad men, that the sounds of hammering could be heard coming from inside of the concrete pylon.
After the trestle was torn down many years later, people started to report the apparition of the man could be seen wandering the area, trying to flag down oncoming trains.
Danville, Indiana is located just west of Indianapolis on Highway 36. The haunted area is marked by a bridge that was built in 1906 that crosses White Lick Creek and a road. The concrete foundations of the original trestle can be found a short distance away."
www.prairieghosts.com/dan.html
There is a second story about a woman and her baby. "The story goes that she was walking to the doctor’s house late one night with her sick baby when she had the bad luck to get her foot caught among the railroad ties on the bridge. Then, disaster struck in the form of a huge locomotive barreling down on them. She struggled mightily, finally getting free of the railroad ties, but had no time to run across the bridge to escape the train. So, clutching her sick child, she jumped off the bridge. She survived, but the baby, falling from her arms, did not. Within a few weeks, the mother died of grief and a broken heart. The story concludes that if you drive under the bridge at night, you might very well hear her screaming for her baby." There have also been reports connected with this of a woman dressed in white walking the bridge at night.
avon-indiana.funcityfinder.com/the-haunted-bridge-of-avon...
The original bridge was torn down, and this bridge was built in 1906 to replace it. A picture of the original 1850's foundation is in the comments. I have driven under this bridge many times and have never seen anything. I'm not afraid of ghosts (I would love to actually see one!) and I have driven under it at night. There are a lot of woods around it, and it is quite spooky, especially at night!
If you would like to know more, just search haunted bridge Danville or Avon Indiana. This area is know as the Twin Bridges.
ODC 207 Apparition
This railroad bridge was built in 1906 between Danville and Avon, Indiana, and is said to be haunted. We have lived in the area for 33 years, and I have been hearing stories about it since my children were in grade school.
"The ghost of a Irish worker who was killed many years ago is said to haunt the remains of this old railroad trestle in Central Indiana. He was one of many Irish workers who were hired cheap to help build a bridge across White Lick Creek back in the 1850's.
The workers were building pylons that would support the bridge and doing this by framing up the sides of a base and pouring concrete inside. One afternoon, a wooden platform collapsed and dumped one of the workers into the wet cement. He slowly sank into the pylon and the other workers could hear his fists hammering against the wooden sides as he slowly drowned. There had been nothing that could have been done to save him.... one minute he was there and the next he had vanished!
Construction was delayed for several hours while the company tried to decide what to do. Finally, they declined to tear the pylon apart to find the body of a man who was obviously dead and work continued, despite the protests of some of the more superstitious workers.
For some years after that, local residents reported the sounds of the man's final screams as he pitched into the concrete could still be heard in the night. They also claimed, along
with a number of railroad men, that the sounds of hammering could be heard coming from inside of the concrete pylon.
After the trestle was torn down many years later, people started to report the apparition of the man could be seen wandering the area, trying to flag down oncoming trains.
Danville, Indiana is located just west of Indianapolis on Highway 36. The haunted area is marked by a bridge that was built in 1906 that crosses White Lick Creek and a road. The concrete foundations of the original trestle can be found a short distance away."
www.prairieghosts.com/dan.html
There is a second story about a woman and her baby. "The story goes that she was walking to the doctor’s house late one night with her sick baby when she had the bad luck to get her foot caught among the railroad ties on the bridge. Then, disaster struck in the form of a huge locomotive barreling down on them. She struggled mightily, finally getting free of the railroad ties, but had no time to run across the bridge to escape the train. So, clutching her sick child, she jumped off the bridge. She survived, but the baby, falling from her arms, did not. Within a few weeks, the mother died of grief and a broken heart. The story concludes that if you drive under the bridge at night, you might very well hear her screaming for her baby." There have also been reports connected with this of a woman dressed in white walking the bridge at night.
avon-indiana.funcityfinder.com/the-haunted-bridge-of-avon...
The original bridge was torn down, and this bridge was built in 1906 to replace it. A picture of the original 1850's foundation is in the comments. I have driven under this bridge many times and have never seen anything. I'm not afraid of ghosts (I would love to actually see one!) and I have driven under it at night. There are a lot of woods around it, and it is quite spooky, especially at night!
If you would like to know more, just search haunted bridge Danville or Avon Indiana. This area is know as the Twin Bridges.
More pictures can be seen in my photostream, and here is a link to a picture from my archives. www.flickr.com/photos/39611512@N02/9416953681
by alexc43 ift.tt/1mwSAnM One more photo I am posting of the Colorado Street Bridge photo I took with the black and white Inkwell filter. Pasadena, CA. January 3, 2016 #ColoradoStreetBridge #SuicideBridge #Pasadena #CityOfPasadena #Architecture #Bridge #ArroyoSeco #ArroyoPark #Haunted #HauntedBridge #Ghosts #DarkPast #Infamous #Paranormal #Inkwell #InkwellFilter #BlackAndWhite #BWPhotography #Haunting #Beautiful
Book #15 in the Nancy Drew Mystery Stories series.
Copyright 1937. Blue/white multi-scene endpages, along with dark top-edging.
Back of book lists Dana Girls Mysteries to The Haunted Lagoon. Front dust jacket flap lists Nancy Drew titles to The Clue in the Old Stagecoach. Back dust jacket flap lists Vicki Barr to Silver Ring Mystery. to The Secret of Mirror Bay. Ad in back of book for Dana Girls lists 12 titles.
Previous owner's name inside front cover. Dustjacket does show light scuffing at title, edge wear and corner wear with light tears.
The 'Haunted Bridge' on Hill Lane at Peckforton is a sandstone bridge built in the 1850's to connect Peckforton Castle to the gatehouse at Peckforton Gap.
It is said that those who pass underneath the bridge keep their eyes focused ahead in case they should catch sight of the headless servant woman that haunts these parts.
The Hairy Hands is a ghost story/legend that built up around a stretch of road in Dartmoor in the English county of Devon, which was purported to have seen an unusually high number of motor vehicle accidents during the early 20th century.
The legend of the Hairy Hands concerns a bridge over the Cherry Brook on the B3212 – the former Princetown to Moretonhamstead turnpike.
According to the story surrounding them, the Hairy Hands are a pair of disembodied hands that appear suddenly, grab at the steering wheel of a moving car or the handlebars of a motorcycle, and then force the victim off the road. In some cases the hands are described as being invisible.
Since around 1910, drivers and cyclists have reported suffering unusual accidents along the road between Postbridge and Two Bridges. In many cases, the victims reported that their vehicle had jolted or swerved violently and steered off the side of the road, as if something had taken hold of the wheels and wrenched it out of their control.
In most instances, the victims ran into a verge and survived. Their experiences remained a local curiosity, until June 1921, when Dr. E.H. Helby, the medical officer for Dartmoor Prison, was killed when he lost control of his motorcycle combination. Two young girls, children of the prison governor, who had been riding in the sidecar, survived. Several weeks after Dr Helby's death, there was another incident in which a coach driver lost control, injuring several passengers who were thrown out of their seats. Then, on 26 August 1921, an army Captain reported that a pair of invisible hands had taken hold of him and forced his motorcycle off the road. After which the story was picked up by newspapers in London and the story became known nationwide.
In Supernatural Dartmoor by Michael Williams, there is a story told by journalist and author Rufus Endle. He claimed that, while driving near Postbridge on an unstated date, "a pair of hands gripped the driving wheel and I had to fight for control." He managed to avoid a crash and the hands disappeared as inexplicably as they had come. He requested that Williams not publish the story until after his death, for fear of ridicule.
Not all reported incidents occurred in moving vehicles. In one incident, in 1924, a woman camping on the moor with her husband reported seeing a hairy hand attempting to gain access to her caravan during the night. She reported that the hand retreated after she made the sign of the Cross.
The Cherry Brook Bridge is also where the Lych Way – Way of the Dead, a Corpse Road, crosses the river. This is an ancient long distance footpath which crossed Dartmoor and enabled bodies to be taken to Lydford Church.
Having crossed this bridge countless times morning, noon and night over many years I can’t say I have seen anything odd. The walling on the on the western site of the bridge has been repaired a few times in that period but it is probably due to drivers driving too fast misjudging the slight bend on the western side of the bridge and hitting the parapet.
Camera: Contax 137 + Carl Zeiss 50mm f1.7 Planar lens
For more 35mm Archive Photographs of Devon please click here: www.jhluxton.com/The-35mm-Film-Archive/Devon
Stuckey's Bridge, near Meridian, MS. Stuckey's Bridge is over 150 years old. It is said to be haunted. Mr. Stuckey was hung from the bridge after it was discovered that he would rob and kill travelers who stayed at his boarding house/hotel and bury their bodies along the banks of the Chunky River.
by alexc43 ift.tt/1PaCbMf View of the beautiful Colorado Street Bridge from Arroyo Boulevard next to Arroyo Park. Pasadena, CA. January 3, 2016 #ColoradoStreetBridge #SuicideBridge #Pasadena #CityOfPasadena #Architecture #Bridge #ArroyoSeco #ArroyoPark #Haunted #HauntedBridge #Ghosts #DarkPast #Infamous #Paranormal
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
by alexc43 ift.tt/1kEwI89 View of the Colorado Street Bridge from Arroyo Park also infamously known as the Suicide Bridge for many people jumped to their deaths on this bridge, most of them came during the Great Depression during the 1930's, it is also believed to be haunted of the souls who tragically ended their lives too soon. Pasadena, CA. January 3, 2016 #ColoradoStreetBridge #SuicideBridge #Pasadena #CityOfPasadena #Architecture #Bridge #ArroyoSeco #ArroyoPark #Haunted #HauntedBridge #Ghosts #DarkPast #Infamous #Paranormal
Haunted Bridge Peckforton Sandstone bridge carrying the former carriageway road to Peckforton Castle over Hill Lane which depending on which version you believe is haunted by either a ghostly horse and carriage set or a lady with her head under her arm who allegedly appears from the woodland, to the right of, and through, the bridge.
Built circa 1854, Sachs Covered Bridge is a Town truss bridge using a design developed by architect and civil engineer Ithiel Town. During the Battle of Gettysburg from July 1 – 3, 1863, Union forces crossed the bridge on their way to the battle, and Confederate forces crossed it as they retreated on July 4, 1863, following their defeat. The bridge is reputed to be one of the many haunted places around Gettysburg. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. (Nathanael Miller, 30 November 2021)
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
Haunted Bridge Peckforton Sandstone bridge carrying the former carriageway road to Peckforton Castle over Hill Lane which depending on which version you believe is haunted by either a ghostly horse and carriage set or a lady with her head under her arm who allegedly appears from the woodland, to the right of, and through, the bridge.
This is a photograph of the Haunted Bridge on Clinton Road, West Milford, New Jersey. The top is unretouched. The bottom has been processed by Photomatix for detail enhancement.
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
Haunted Bridge Peckforton Sandstone bridge carrying the former carriageway road to Peckforton Castle over Hill Lane which depending on which version you believe is haunted by either a ghostly horse and carriage set or a lady with her head under her arm who allegedly appears from the woodland, to the right of, and through, the bridge.
Haunted Bridge Peckforton Sandstone bridge carrying the former carriageway road to Peckforton Castle over Hill Lane which depending on which version you believe is haunted by either a ghostly horse and carriage set or a lady with her head under her arm who allegedly appears from the woodland, to the right of, and through, the bridge.
The Concord Covered Bridge in Smyrna, Georgia, was built in 1872. It is a one-lane bridge that is about 132 feet long and only 16 feet wide. Supposedly, if you park on the bridge, turn off your lights, and place a Snicker's bar on the roof, you will hear ghostly pattering and then the Snicker's bar will be gone. The ghostly pattering is of children who drowned in the creek below. It is recommended due to a decent amount of traffic on this road, that you don't try this. Still, the legend is interesting as I've never before heard of the dead enjoying Snicker's bars!
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
The Concord Covered Bridge in Smyrna, Georgia, was built in 1872. It is a one-lane bridge that is about 132 feet long and only 16 feet wide. Supposedly, if you park on the bridge, turn off your lights, and place a Snicker's bar on the roof, you will hear ghostly pattering and then the Snicker's bar will be gone. The ghostly pattering is of children who drowned in the creek below. It is recommended due to a decent amount of traffic on this road, that you don't try this. Still, the legend is interesting as I've never before heard of the dead enjoying Snicker's bars!
This cemetery is located in San Antonio, Texas. The direction to the cemetery are start at the intersection of Jett Road and Loop 1604 south of San Antonio. Go 1.9 miles north on Jett Road. The bridge is on the left (north) side of the road. It used to be the intersection of the Old Applewhite and Jett Roads. It is now the Old Applewhite Bridge Trailhead. 29 14.820' N98 33.121' W
The stories vary, but the Donkey Lady was either burned to death or thrown into the Medina River and drowned and she now haunts the area in the shape of a donkey. If you go the area at night (which I have not done), you will hear the clip-clop of donkey hooves on the road.
To see more cemetery photograph portraits in the Texas Hill Country, go to our website, Donkey Lady Bridge
Nobody was behind me so I slowed to take this shot. This area is supposedly haunted.
See this link for the story. www.prairieghosts.com/dan.html