In June of 1938 in eastern
Kentucky a man by the name of Carl Pruitt discovered his wife in bed with
another man. Enraged he grabbed a chain and strangled her to death. Her lover
managed to escape.
Afterward feeling remorse, he
then took his own life. He was buried in a separate cemetery then his
wife.
A few months later several
residents noticed a chain growing in the shape of a cross on Pruitt’s
headstone.
Soon after, a series of
strange deaths occurred in connection to this gravestone.
A group of teenagers entered
the cemetery to check out the strange growing chain. One member of the group in
an effort to impress the others threw stones at the marker—as he and the rest
left the cemetery his bike went out of control and sped down a hill.
He slammed into a tree head
on. When his friends caught up they found him dead, not from the impact but
from a chain that was wrapped around his throat—he had been strangled.
It is said later the mother
of this boy went to the cemetery with an axe and proceeded to try and chop it
down in a rage. Later the same day as she hung at her wash to dry—the
clothesline snapped—she was found later dead with a chain encircling her neck.
Oddly, the Pruitt tombstone
was found not to have a scratch on it.
Another victim was a local
farmer who shot at the tombstone with his shotgun. Afterwards he bragged it now
had several holes in it. Within the week his wagon crashed and his body was
found with a chain wrapped around his throat.
Again, the tombstone had no
signs of damage.
A policeman sent from
Louisville to investigate the farmer’s death joked with a fellow cop that
he did not believe the chain stories and then he made fun of the grave.
As these two officers left
the cemetery they noticed a glowing light coming from the stone. As they drove
away this light followed them. The skeptical officer sped up and ended up
crashing their car along the narrow road.
His partner survived the
crash uninjured but the disrespectful officer was thrown from the car and
strangled to death by a chain that the other officer discovered wrapped tightly
around his neck.
Another local farmer named Arthur
Lewis told his wife that he was going to put an end “to all the nonsense.” He
took a sledgehammer to the cemetery and broke the Pruitt headstone into pieces.
People who lived nearby
stated they heard his swings and then a harrowing scream. When they went to
investigate they found Lewis lying near the cemetery gate—he had been strangled
to death by a chain.
Once more the headstone was
in place with no signs of damage.
Now frightened, the relatives
of the deceased buried near Pruitt’s grave had their loved ones exhumed and
moved to other graves.
The Pruitt grave then lay untouched until 1958 when a strip-mining company covered the grave--its location today is unknown.
The Pruitt grave then lay untouched until 1958 when a strip-mining company covered the grave--its location today is unknown.
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