In August of 1943, an engineer
at the controls of a Lackawanna train out of Cleveland, Ohio was traveling along an upstate New York line. He was twenty minutes late as he hit a bend going 70
miles an hour--this is when he saw another locomotive pulling onto the track.
1943 Wayland Wreck |
The two trains collided.
An engineer and others in the
Wayland rail yard thought the Lackawanna train had already passed through when
they pulled out on the track.
More than 171 people died or
were injured when these two trains collided. Those who did not die from
the impact were killed when one passenger car connected to the Lackawanna locomotive
turned over--steam then spewed into this car taking more lives.
This passenger car in 2013 was at the old unused Baltimore and Ohio train roundhouse getting a fresh coat of paint. The Midwest Railway
Preservation Society uses this old roundhouse in Cleveland Flats to restore
old train cars to sell them.
A fresh coat of paint |
While this passenger car was at this yard being renovated, many people connected to
this society began to believe it was haunted. In fact, the volunteers at
this yard dubbed it--the ”Death Car.”
One volunteer, Charlie
Sedgley who works for the society restoring cars believes he
encountered at least seventeen separate ghosts in this wrecked passenger car.
The society gives tours of
the old train cars they restore. A trustee of the organization, Steve Karpos was
leading one of these tours when he led his group into the Death Car.
Inside Death Car |
As he spoke a female member of his tour group interrupted him to ask why he didn’t let the other man behind him talk. Confused, Karpos
didn’t know who she was referring to. She then asked about the “man dressed
in the funny suit.”
Karpos recalls that “Everyone
else was saying there was a ghost in the car.” When the tour exited the Death Car, several members saw, “a ghost sitting on the roof with his legs hanging over the side.”
The activity became so
pronounced that the society decided to let several professional paranormal
groups investigate. One group recorded some unusual sounds coming from the Death Car.
The volunteers at the old
train yard took this activity in stride. Most felt that if the passenger car
was indeed haunted by the victims of the 1943 wreck-- their ghosts were
more than welcome.
This society today no longer
owns the restored Death Car--they found an interested buyer.
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