More than 20,000 people have gone missing without a trace in the area during the past half-century alone. ![]() Why it's creepy: Encompassing an area ranging from near Juneau in the southeast to the northern Barrow region to the western metropolis of Anchorage, Alaska's answer to the Bermuda Triangle is comprised some of the most barren wilderness in the US - and it apparently craves souls. After public outcry, it was replaced with more modern equipment, making it slightly less creepy to look at, and also probably resulting in some happier ghosts. In 2007, the city tried to raze the park to make more room for graves and removed the slides and swings overnight. Where it came from: The playground itself wasn't opened until 1985, so you can imagine how much pent-up energy the tiny spirits had after 163 years without a slide. Creepier still, some say the spirits include victims of a rash of child murders that happened in the '60s, when bodies were rumored to have been found in the area that now houses the playground. The living have observed orbs of light going down the slide, seen swings moving on their own, and even heard giggling. Legend has it, though, that the spirits of children who've been buried in the cemetery since the first grave was dug there in 1822 come out to play at night. ![]() ![]() The playground was presumably designed to entertain kids while their parents visited the graves of loved ones. Why it's creepy: This eerie playground adjacent to Maple Hill, Huntsville's oldest cemetery, doesn't just have an eerie nickname for fun.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |