Visitors go to Ohio’s Kings Island amusement park to eat funnel cake and enjoy the exciting rides.
Kings Island is located in
Mason just outside Cincinnati. It opened in 1972 and has been this state’s
favorite amusement park since.
The Beast |
The most popular ride is
called “The Beast.” When this wooden rollercoaster first opened in 1979, it was
the tallest, fastest and longest coaster in the world.
Even today, forty years
later, The Beast is still Kings Island's most popular ride.
But some visitors, while at
the park, have gotten “ a thrill” of a very different kind.
Kings Island was built on
land that was used for an ammunition factory (King’s Powder) from the late
1880s until the 1940s. During this time, there was a massive explosion that
killed over one hundred people.
Dog Street Cemetery with The Beast in background. |
All that remains of this
company is a small cemetery (Dog Street Cemetery)—that sits near the park’s
exit, next to the parking lot.
This cemetery is one reason
some feel the park is haunted.
One active spirit at Kings
Island is a little girl. She is seen wearing a blue dress. Her ghost is spotted
mostly in the park’s parking lot, skipping or playing “hide-and-seek” among the
cars.
Park employees call her “Tram
Girl” because of a game she likes to play with them.
As these drivers deliver
their passengers at various points throughout the parking lot, this ghost likes
to jump out in front of their vehicles—daring them to run over her.
One driver, in 2017, had just
finished dropping off the last few passengers for the night and was headed for
the main parking lot.
He was tired after a long
day. So when his tram headlights illuminated a young girl, wearing a blue
dress, run right in front of his vehicle, he was slow to react.
This driver did slam on his
brakes, but he was sure he had hit her. But oddly he didn’t feel an impact or
hear any screams.
He climbed out, but the
parking lot was empty, and nothing was under the tram. After inspecting the
front for damage, he was surprised there was none.
The little girl had disappeared
as quickly, as she had appeared.
White Water Canyon at Kings Island. |
This mischievous spirit is
also seen at White Water Canyon in the park.
She is believed to be Jane
Galeener, who lived with her mother, father, and younger brother on a section
of the property that is now Kings Island.
Jane Galeener's gravestone in Dog Street Cemetery. |
She drowned in 1846, at the
age of 5 in a lake, where White Water Canyon is located in the park today.
She is buried in Dog Street
Cemetery.
Here is a video that shows how much fun The Beast is to ride.
1 comment:
God bless little Jane.
The Beast looks like a lot of fun! Thanks for sharing the video, Virginia. 😎
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