Showing posts with label mining boom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mining boom. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2019

Lake Bomoseen’s Phantom Rowboat



Even the simplest unexplained activity can cause terror *, especially when the same sight is seen for over a century and a half.


Abandoned industrial site.
In the mid-1800s Castleton, Vermont was a booming mining town with several mills and a quarry.

By the early 1900s, the town had slid into a financial decline. Castleton by the early 1920s was abandoned.

In 1929, the area became Lake Bomoseen State Park. Years before this, the lake already had a firm reputation for being haunted.

Lake Bomoseen at sunset.
The cause for this was connected to three Irish quarry workers that lived in the area during its boom years.

One night, these three men rowed across the lake to visit a local tavern to celebrate and drink.

After they left this bar drunk, they were never seen again. It was believed they must have drowned in the lake, on their way home.

Their bodies were never found. But their rowboat was discovered several days later when it drifted ashore.

This incident would not be remembered today—except for the strange sight it caused.

One artist's depiction of the phantom rowboat.
Ever since the loss of these three men, witnesses have claimed to see a strange rowboat gliding across the lake—especially if there is a full moon.

The boat is described as empty and completely quiet.

People report seeing the oars rowing, but what is creepy, is they don’t see anyone in the boat. Even scarier is none of these witnesses heard a splash as the oars hit the water.

Also strange is there is no ripple on the surface of the water as the rowboat passes.

So are these three men doomed to row this boat for eternity?

*  People don’t need to experience a lot of activity for it to be frightening. 

When I was in high school, every time I was alone at home, a lamp in our den would turn on by itself. It never happened when others were there.

My family had it checked. There was not an electrical short etc. But this pattern of it happening when I was alone in the house—freaked me out.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Alaska’s Copper Railroad Ghosts


One area is said to have more ghostly activity than all others in Alaska. This activity is the result of one of the richest copper and gold strikes, during the state’s frontier history in the Valdez-Chitina district.

The Kennecott mines, the communities that sprang up around these mines, and the railroad that serviced them all have paranormal activity that is so scary that seventy-five years later, people still refuse to re-settle the area.

Like many of Alaska’s strikes the Kennecott mines were in a remote area that was hard to reach. Located in the Wrangell Mountains, the ore had to be brought out from deep inside these mountains. But this was just the first challenge.

The ore was then carried across a 3-mile aerial tramway before it was conveyed 4,000 feet down a steep frozen mountainside to the mining town of Kennecott. From here it was loaded onto the Copper River and Northwestern Railway.

This railway consisted of a 200-mile track that crossed the Kennecott Glacier to Cordova on Prince William Sound. The ore then was shipped south to smelters in Tacoma, Washington.

One section that remains
J.P. Morgan financed the Kennecott Copper Corporation, which built this railroad between 1907 and 1911. It cost 20 million dollars at the time--in today’s terms, this amount would be 458 million dollars. 

This investment in the end financially paid off in wealth. But it came at a much higher price--the loss of many human lives.

Part of this railroad spanned a massive glacier-- because of this the tracks had to be moved regularly, for this glacier shifted and settled steadily. Over 128 bridges had to be built many over deep canyons.

Even more of this track had to be laid on narrow treks, that just barely hugged the sides of steep rock walls, that dropped off steeply. At the bottom was the rushing waters of the Copper River.

This construction required over 1000 workers. At every turn, they faced new perils. They often dug through ice, snow, and avalanches. Others set blasts to move mountainsides to lay more track.

Many of these workers lost their lives during this construction. The Copper River and Northwestern Railroad were called the CR & NW for short, but many of the workers at the time stated this acronym actually stood for, “Can’t Run and Never Will.”


One narrow passage that the
Copper Railroad passed through.
Even more good men lost their lives during the mining boom that lasted for 30 plus years. 

Several small communities near the town of Kennecott sprang up during this boom. One such city, McCarthy, which was adjacent to Kennecott, offered diversions such as gambling, saloons, and brothels. 

When the mines played out, these communities became ghost towns overnight. One of the few that survived was McCarthy because it had several gold mines nearby. 

As time passed, scary stories started to circulate about the Copper Railroad and the areas that surrounded its broken down tracks. It was said this area was not only haunted but that several of the old boomtowns were as well.


Tourists have shown the local residents of Chitina, photos they have captured of mysterious children and old miners in the surrounding area but they cannot be identified.

In the forest next to the old tracks many witnesses have seen full-bodied apparitions, both during the day and at night.

When the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park was established the old Copper Railroad grade was used to build a road that leads to this park. The small town of Chitina west of this park is now a tourist spot with summer cabins, etc. to rent.

Many visitors to this town have stated they have seen a strange phenomenon along this road. As they head for the park, they report seeing old tombstones just off the dirt path that is parallel to the former Copper Railroad. 

These same tourists state that when they head back down this road, these tombstones are no longer there. People have tried to photograph them but to no avail.

In the 1990s, the state of Alaska decided to develop this area once more. They sent construction workers to build government housing along part of the trail, that was the CR & NW Railroad.

But during this construction, the workers started to report seeing “full-bodied apparitions” walking around and hearing “disembodied voices” of both children and adults alongside the old tracks.

This activity became so pronounced it prevented these workers from doing their job. Their tools started to vanish--often taken by unseen hands right out of their tool belts and boxes. This scared them to the point, where they refused to stay.

Because of this, the decision was made by the state to abandon the project altogether. Since no one has dared to try and resettle in this area.

This part of Alaska is still remote. In the winter, like many places in the state, this park is closed.