Just a small thing, but in the first story... Alabama and Texas do not share a border. You've got Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas between the two states. Perhaps you meant Arkansas?
I live in East Texas and we share a border with Louisiana. Caught my attention too! Went to a&m and never heard about a ghost in the engineering building. 🤷♂️
Sorry to burst your bubble but it never actually happened here in Texas. It did happen in Salt Lake city. Not sure on if they do that baby powder thing thier but yeah didn't happen here in Texas.
@@FlannelDan90 Heard a long time ago there was no recorded bus/train incident. However I do know people who've done their own test on the tracks, the results were palm prints in baby powder on the trunk.
It's the classic theory of the Captain going down with his ship, but the ghosts of those children would not let him die the same fate they did. It was heartwarming.
Thank y’all so much for mentioning different places in Louisiana other than New Orleans. I commented about this a few weeks ago. Y’all are the best for hearing your audience.💜💛
I had family in Lake Charles - my aunt's house was spooky! The whole state feels spooky to me. There's so much history in the state, it's not impossible to believe the whole place is haunted.
I live in San Antonio Texas...... I've spent a couple of nights at The Menger Hotel...... did hear a voice while everyone else was sleeping, voice kept saying "mom" and felt super cold. Lasted about 5min. Kids were knocked out deep sleeping, since they had spent the whole day in the swimming pool. But did not feel spooky nor uneasy. Had a great time being a tourist in my own city. I literally live about 2miles from the railroad tracks. We usually go in October and experience the car push.......and its true...... you will get small hand prints in your rear bumper. I've even idled in reverse mode and did get pushed off the tracks and had small handprints on my front bumper.
My aunt was a bartender at the Menger, it was creepy. She said that salt would get sprinkled on her from above but nobody was there, and she felt like she was always being watched . I have also been to the railroad tracks, super creepy but a thing that all kids do in that area…
I just assumed Arkansas since the story he told actually happens in Arkansas, not in Texas. It was proven many years ago that the lights were caused by gasses.
"2223 Billings Ave, this address seems a little too specific" ..... Why is that? Most haunted buildings have specific addresses. Hotel Glavez has a specific address, the Texas A&M engineering building has a specific address, the mineral point hotel (or whatever it's name was) has a specific address, so why is a specific address "a little too specific"? 🤔
Pretty Please will You turn the Background Music down about 2/3🙏🙏 as after about 5 Minutes It creeps into Our Brains and Drives Us Insane !!!!!! ....its good Music But ,Just to Dam Loud !!!!! Please Pretty Please 🙏🙏 Love Your Channel !!!!🙋♀
While the Marfa Lights can be a bit disconcerting, they're not really all that terrifying. What was also missed is that they often appear to travelers as a town in the distance, and that you should always follow the main road, never the lights. Had a cousin get lost while out there hiking cus he didn't know about the Marfa Lights and thought it was a town in the distance that he was never reaching.
My mom was born in East Texas. Grew up hear and even seeing the ghost lights of Saratoga. In the 1960s we called in the old Bragg road. THE PINEYWOODS of east Texas has many ghost stories. Sad thing is unlike Mt generation and ones before the story tellers are going away thanks to technology.
My mom was born and raised in Silsbee Texas my cousin Betty used to live in Honey Island Mary and Saratoga no one we have I heard of them I have seen them
It's been renovated and the address changed to discourage visitors. That being said, the original movie fucked me up back in '79. I am now 56 years old and unless the house is _on fire_ I'm not getting out of bed for any reason between 3-4am and I expressly avoid windows at night. Eat a bag of dicks, Jody.
Could be because it’s not located in Texas… it would have been cool if they had some places in Canada and Mexico as well since that’s also North America.
Here's a suggestion. If you don't mention that the places of a particular segment are from a certain state, then do so after each location that's mentioned. Yes, some cities are obvious to the us citizen, but for international listeners and some us citizens who've never heard of some of these places, it'll help. It's not hard to do!
As well , they mention ‘Jefferson’ which is an area on the California - Oregon border that people today still want made into its own state. Similar to the Texans who would prefer the state to succeed the union altogether.
I've lived in the US my whole life and I don't know what state these are in, either. Most states have the same city names that other states have, so you can't know which ones they mean.
@@mynameisworld Exactly! Even if it's obvious when it's cities like Los Angeles, there could be a dozen Los Angeles's out there, not only in the US but around the world. It still wouldn't hurt anybody if you said Los Angeles California. I got so annoyed with this video that I couldn't even finish.
Varina is suspected to be "black " according to some sources. She could be a "passé". Like a very light skinned creole. However Varina is a Slavic name meaning foreigner,. Many white women complained about her olive completion. Only Anglo western European were considered part of the true white race. Greeks sicilians and slavs were not. She seems to resemble light skinned creole. But how did she wind up with a Slavic name
Dude - the Menger Hotel in San Antonio...also the Alamo if you are doing Texas hauntings. The haunted train tracks are awesome. The location is a true, natural optic illusion. Go there, put your car in neutral. The road APPEARS to go slightly up hill, but your car will coast towards the tracks. The road actually goes downhill. Been there, done that, took the measurements.
Bragg Road doesn't border Alabama (Texas doesn't border Alabama). Additionally, neither Bragg Road, nor Hardin County (wherein it is located) border Louisiana. All of the timber recently has been cut along Bragg Road and it's not what it was.
It would help if you mention what state these are in. While I know it is possible to search the town names, it is also possible to find the same name in multiple states.
The day we visited the Hoover Damn in July 2013 someone took their own life shortly before we got there. The ambulance passed us as we were driving down the road.
A couple of stories. There's a lady named Mary in a mausoleum in one of Galveston's many cemeteries. According to my mother, Mary could talk. If you went by her grave and asked her what she needed, Mary would say "nothing". It took me years to figure that one out. During the American Civil War, a young man in Wilmington, NC decided to go do his duty and fight for the South. He was only 16, and his mother begged him not to go. He was her baby, and she was terrified thar he wouldn't come back. Finally, she made him promise, on her grave, tht he would come home. So, the young man packed his things, and left to join the Confederate Army. He ended up being stationed in Galveston, TX, and was glad, because the climate was like that of home. He wrote his mother faithfully, until. He never saw battle, but during an outbreak of yellow fever, the young man died. It was summer, and it was too hot to send bodies back to their homes, for fear the germs on their bodies were still contagious. So, their name was written on their coffin and they were buried in Galveston. The young man's mother grieved, but nothing could be done. The War ended, and time passed. The great 1900 storm that hit Galveston took more than 12,000 souls, and the flooding was so severe that coffins came up out of the ground and were found for miles up and down the beaches. Most of them, anyway. Three months later, a lone coffin washed ashore on the beach in Wilmington,NC. The people tht found it figured it had floated up the Gulf Stream Current, and marveled that it made it this far. All the way from Galveston. They saw the name on the coffin, and carried it to the farmhouse just out of town, where an old widow lived with her memories. Her son had come home. I don't know the young man's name, but this is supposed to be true. Believe it or not!
In northern VA there's the Bunnyman bridge. In western PA there's Greenman's tunnel. There's creepy haunted places scattered all over. If you're sensitive to the paranormal, you'll likely be afffected to some degree. I like the woods. I fished, hunted, rode dirtbikes, four wheeled, hill climbed... I spent a lot of time in the woods when I was young. Yeah, there's a lot of creepy places.
I've been lucky enough to visit several states. Hands down, the spookiest state I've been to is Louisiana. Whenever I visited my aunts and uncles there, I always felt like someone was following me, but I never saw this "someone." Creepy.
Here's a creepy thought. With all the deaths that happened during the construction of sin city were they sacrifices to the devil since this was his city? And others too, mobsters dying in a newly constructed home, rich people dying in strange ways....
I just love the guys enthusiasm about the ghosts of gunslingers and hoover damn! This guy is very magnetic and entertaining!! Hope to see more of him!!
Speaking of LSU students taking their lives. I was in Baton Rouge doing security after in the early 2000’s. Being Security I had many conversations with Baton Rouge’s finest on more than one occasion. One officer told me of a self harm that he had gotten called to at on campus. He said when he got there it was a male student and he had left a note, that said “I hope when you find me I’ve been here a few days and I stink, F@*K You!” Poor kid
The San Antonio Texas road, where children, ghost children are said to push your vehicle if you put it in neutral and let it sit near the tracks or wherever it is. Zak Bagans of Ghost Adventures fame, went out there with his crew hired a survey team and prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that is an optical illusion the road doesn't actually go up it goes down, so that is why the vehicle looks like it's going uphill, being pushed by the children. That has been debunked
I live in Montana, close to all of the places that are stated in the video. I can confirm that they all are EXTREMELY haunted. There are so many other places to talk about. Maybe ya'll could do a video on Montana's most haunted locations? Also, my friend works at the Boulder Hot springs, and he has told me some stories about thing that he has experienced.
I have a story for you...I used to work at the Hilton in Dedham, Ma. as their auditor. While making the hotel rounds, I noticed room 302 was sealed. So, I asked my supervisor why the room was sealed. It was told that a car accident happened close to the hotel, and the people who died haunts that room. When the room was used before the day, the occupant(s) would come running out demanding a refund because of seeing apparitions. After too many reports, the room was sealed. You can still hear noises coming from the room, but I did not listen to find out.
Ive been to the Alamo back in 1994 when i was 5 years old. Still got the T shirt from there to this day. I never felt anything there as far as ghostly apparitions but, then again, being around so many other tourists could drown that. Its probably when the grounds arnt as populated with people is when you feel the spirits of the dead or hear the sounds of residual hauntings or even poltergeist activity.
lol my wife and I are driving from our ranch in south texas to our daughter and granddaughter in Alabama for Christmas. For a minute I thought our trip was going to be much shorter!
Just a heads up. The predominant mineral in the water of Mineral Wells is sulpher, since it sits on quite a large sulpher dome. So, when people visited to partake of the mineral rich water, they didn't drink it. They BATHED in it. Seems there were more benefit that way.
I remember when Ghost Adventures debunked the train tracks in San Antonio. People still perpetuate the urban legend because.....i guess it's fun to think kids died and are forced to push a car off from train tracks for people's entertainment?
The lights seen on Brag road are car lights. I grew up there and my Dad and Uncle was able to prove it. On either end of the road you can see the car lights from a very long distance. You can also see lights of other people on Brag road for miles coming towards you. The headless horseman never happened however there was a building towards the end of the road and the owner died there. He was not hit by a train and he did not loose his head. There is also a covered over cemetery out there. So, yes, it is fun to take your kids out there during October and tell all the rumors ever made up about this place. Lol
I think the Alice's grave story may be a case of either someone being interested in her after unalivement, or the case of early medical students using grave bodies for studing anatomy (both r gross n sad tho)
I've been to brag road when I was a teenager. We did the slow drive down with just the running lights on and what not. The only lights we seen, was cop lights. Nice guy, When he got tired of watching us look like idiots, he pulled us over. And slightly robbed us of our bag of peppermints
6:38; what he doesn't tell you is that there is a magnetic Hill fifty yards to the left of the railroad tracks. If the bus had just switched into neutral they could have cleared the railroad tracks and made them mandatory right turn and still had 35 mph to continue down the road.
🎵 Meet me in St. Lou-ie, Louie, meet me at the fair... something something hoochy koochy, something something tootsie wootsie... meet me in St. Lou-ie... 🎵
I live in Henderson, used to bowl until past 11 pm. That damn swing would be going full blast with no wind. The swing next to it was not moving, I have personally witnessed this at least 10 times.
You should do one on Central theater that is down the street from the Ritz it is also haunted and there is a story about a husband and wife and mistress double homicide suicide about it and the place is haunted is very cool I myself have been pushed by the wife down the stairs when I was a child you should look it up
44:36 I have been to the Titanic Exhibit in Vegas let me tell you what, there is most definitely a heavy or sorrowful feeling near that stuff. I'm a paranormal investigator retired myself so I'm not get all emotional or scared around things and places like this. In fact to be honest I'm more of a skeptic. So mean I say that stuff makes you feel strange I'm not joking even a little bit. Definitely worth checking out. 47:41 There are claim's that there are bodies buried in the dam from the time of it's construction that were unable to be removed.
Louisiana is my home state I live in New orleans since Katrina the atmosphere is different. So much death in the streets during that time, unimaginable, now the whole atmosphere of city is altered.
South East Texas is the Gulf Coast and the Rio Grande Valley. North East Texas touches Louisiana, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. Geographical inaccuracies are a pet peeve of mine.
Brown also has their own ghost story. Apparently a USN LT. (O3) ended up taking his own life throwing himself from the tower that is on campus and is said to sometimes be spotted still in uniform. I heard this story from a very freaked out tour guide who spotted me in my working whites just standing in the background listening. As I hope many will guess at the time I was also a Lt. Can understand how she might have been freaked as I was just passing through and happened to stop to listen to the story in her view one second a naval officer was not standing practically in front of her next thing after starting the story there was.
The rail road track story is incorrect. Although there is or was a crossing in San Antonio that has since been altered. The story originated from Utah.
how come the name of the town but not the State happens so often??? most town names are repeated in every other State so it's frustrating and this is hardly my 1st time noticing
Goatmans bridge was goofy. If the farmer did go back and was hung and died, how did you know he saw a goat fury head that did it to him or even the whole story for that matter
I had a teacher in high school saying that Bonnie and Clyde had came through Arkansas and was at her grandparents gas station or some sort of store. This story was told to me and my class around 17 years ago.
Ashaway Line & Twine has a few spirits though none of them are what I would call evil. I personally saw the shadow that has appeared at night on the top floor of mill 1.
It always seems hantings and haunting areas seem to happen in more northern areas (Montana, Connecticut,) and more southern rural areas (Texas, Louisiana). I'm in Maryland and we don't have big ghost areas like this. Yes we have "ghost tours" in our city through the old buildings, some abandoned insane asylums that's meant to be haunted. And some historical sites in Virginia near us ... But no "big" haunting areas that people would travel too. It seems these places are reserved for other states more north or south ? I wonder if it's because there's more land and open land in those areas .
The whole damn Galveston is hunted and feel very evil I love her now and I worked at the bar and grill in the hotel and it has a very Erie feeling in there. They have remodel it recently since I’ve been gone, so maybe not anymore but the whole town of Galveston feels haunted.
We have a hill here in covington ky called gravity hill. It's up hill but if you come to a stop put your car in neutral and turn it off it will slowly go up the hill turning by itself and all and you will see hand prints it's said a bus wrecked there and the kids push u up the hill and out the way.
I've heard that the mobsters dumped him in the pine barrens in New Jersey due to the soil acidity or quicksand. People supposedly are petrified of the pine barrens due to the legend of the jersey devil. He disappeared here from Bloomfield hills Michigan. More then likely we will never know. This was told to me by my children's father who was from New Jersey and his family had ties to Anthony Provenzano who was meeting Jimmy Hoffa the day he disappeared.
Um, I live in Texas, and we DO NOT border Alabama. I'm sure that's been said often but I'm a Texan sooooo.... I have to say something!! Are all of these in Texas??!!
I like your guy’s videos, but y’all need to find a location with less of an echo, lower the microphone sensitivity, and stop shouting. It hurts my ears.
Just a small thing, but in the first story... Alabama and Texas do not share a border. You've got Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas between the two states. Perhaps you meant Arkansas?
As a fellow Texan u was thinking the exact same thing 🤣
I live in East Texas and we share a border with Louisiana. Caught my attention too!
Went to a&m and never heard about a ghost in the engineering building. 🤷♂️
As a Texan I thank you! I was like “Am I drunk??” Or “Is there some part of Texas or Alabama I don’t know or?!?” lol!!
Yeah I was wondering where his facts came from
I was like "did he just say Texas and Alabama boarder" had to rewind cuz in my 36 years of living in Texas I never heard of that boarder either!! 😳🤣
Sad but awesome too. The ghosts of those kids saving the driver from killing himself by train. That's just incredible
That was my favorite also*
Sorry to burst your bubble but it never actually happened here in Texas. It did happen in Salt Lake city. Not sure on if they do that baby powder thing thier but yeah didn't happen here in Texas.
@@FlannelDan90 Heard a long time ago there was no recorded bus/train incident. However I do know people who've done their own test on the tracks, the results were palm prints in baby powder on the trunk.
That is very touching about the man who tried to kill himself out of survivor's guilt and yet the spirits of those children wouldn't let it happen.
That’s why I don’t get why it’s grouped in with the “pure evil” stuff
Right? I think they were telling him, "No. You did what you could. We're okay."
Discern the spirits, because you may be entertaining angels. ✝🙏🫡
That almost made me cry...
It's the classic theory of the Captain going down with his ship, but the ghosts of those children would not let him die the same fate they did. It was heartwarming.
That’s not the goatman’s bridge- that’s Shane’s bridge 😂
Underrated comment
Also nice buzz feed reference
😭😭
Shane and Ryan’s bridge
Wow, I never thought I'd see a Buzzfeed reference. Thanks a lot ^^!
Loved this. Very interesting and great hosts, what is the name of the host telling about the pioneer saloon please ☺
Thank y’all so much for mentioning different places in Louisiana other than New Orleans. I commented about this a few weeks ago. Y’all are the best for hearing your audience.💜💛
😉🙏
I had family in Lake Charles - my aunt's house was spooky! The whole state feels spooky to me. There's so much history in the state, it's not impossible to believe the whole place is haunted.
@@spoonbendingspacemonkey 👉That’s right ….. Evil lurks everywhere.
JESUS is LORD. Romans ✝
Y’all isn’t a word
I live in San Antonio Texas...... I've spent a couple of nights at The Menger Hotel...... did hear a voice while everyone else was sleeping, voice kept saying "mom" and felt super cold. Lasted about 5min. Kids were knocked out deep sleeping, since they had spent the whole day in the swimming pool.
But did not feel spooky nor uneasy. Had a great time being a tourist in my own city.
I literally live about 2miles from the railroad tracks. We usually go in October and experience the car push.......and its true...... you will get small hand prints in your rear bumper. I've even idled in reverse mode and did get pushed off the tracks and had small handprints on my front bumper.
lay off the drugs
My aunt was a bartender at the Menger, it was creepy. She said that salt would get sprinkled on her from above but nobody was there, and she felt like she was always being watched . I have also been to the railroad tracks, super creepy but a thing that all kids do in that area…
Excellent job Olivia!
Across WHAT border? Someone slept through school. Just saying
😂
I’m a Texan and thought the same thing. We do not share a boarder with Alabama!
I live in Saratoga TX that's funny
Lmao
I just assumed Arkansas since the story he told actually happens in Arkansas, not in Texas. It was proven many years ago that the lights were caused by gasses.
"2223 Billings Ave, this address seems a little too specific" .....
Why is that? Most haunted buildings have specific addresses. Hotel Glavez has a specific address, the Texas A&M engineering building has a specific address, the mineral point hotel (or whatever it's name was) has a specific address, so why is a specific address "a little too specific"? 🤔
Pretty Please will You turn the Background Music down about 2/3🙏🙏 as after about 5 Minutes It creeps into Our Brains and Drives Us Insane !!!!!! ....its good Music But ,Just to Dam Loud !!!!! Please Pretty Please 🙏🙏 Love Your Channel !!!!🙋♀
While the Marfa Lights can be a bit disconcerting, they're not really all that terrifying. What was also missed is that they often appear to travelers as a town in the distance, and that you should always follow the main road, never the lights.
Had a cousin get lost while out there hiking cus he didn't know about the Marfa Lights and thought it was a town in the distance that he was never reaching.
That’s interesting af.
That's crazy..a town 😳
What ? They aren’t “pure evil” ?! 😐
Did family figure it out and go out looking for him ? Scary !
@@lisacolbert5987 Oh yeah, we had search parties looking for him for days. He's alive but he's never going out in that wilderness again lol
My mom was born in East Texas. Grew up hear and even seeing the ghost lights of Saratoga. In the 1960s we called in the old Bragg road. THE PINEYWOODS of east Texas has many ghost stories. Sad thing is unlike Mt generation and ones before the story tellers are going away thanks to technology.
Your mom didn't see or hear ghost, she was a liar
Maybe there's a bright side? A story teller can have a broader audience because of technology. I understand where you're coming from though.
My mom was born and raised in Silsbee Texas my cousin Betty used to live in Honey Island Mary and Saratoga no one we have I heard of them I have seen them
Did they live along the Alabama border?
OMG! This is amazing! Starts talking about the subject IMMEDIATELY upon play!
(only made it past 5 seconds; subscribed)
surprised the Amityville house isn't on here
It's been renovated and the address changed to discourage visitors.
That being said, the original movie fucked me up back in '79. I am now 56 years old and unless the house is _on fire_ I'm not getting out of bed for any reason between 3-4am and I expressly avoid windows at night. Eat a bag of dicks, Jody.
Could be because it’s not located in Texas… it would have been cool if they had some places in Canada and Mexico as well since that’s also North America.
Here's a suggestion. If you don't mention that the places of a particular segment are from a certain state, then do so after each location that's mentioned. Yes, some cities are obvious to the us citizen, but for international listeners and some us citizens who've never heard of some of these places, it'll help. It's not hard to do!
As well , they mention ‘Jefferson’ which is an area on the California - Oregon border that people today still want made into its own state. Similar to the Texans who would prefer the state to succeed the union altogether.
I've lived in the US my whole life and I don't know what state these are in, either. Most states have the same city names that other states have, so you can't know which ones they mean.
@@mynameisworld Exactly! Even if it's obvious when it's cities like Los Angeles, there could be a dozen Los Angeles's out there, not only in the US but around the world. It still wouldn't hurt anybody if you said Los Angeles California. I got so annoyed with this video that I couldn't even finish.
Good suggestion. Try this, Google the names of the haunted buildings, that might help locate them.
Varina is suspected to be "black " according to some sources. She could be a "passé". Like a very light skinned creole. However Varina is a Slavic name meaning foreigner,. Many white women complained about her olive completion. Only Anglo western European were considered part of the true white race. Greeks sicilians and slavs were not. She seems to resemble light skinned creole. But how did she wind up with a Slavic name
Dude - the Menger Hotel in San Antonio...also the Alamo if you are doing Texas hauntings. The haunted train tracks are awesome. The location is a true, natural optic illusion. Go there, put your car in neutral. The road APPEARS to go slightly up hill, but your car will coast towards the tracks. The road actually goes downhill. Been there, done that, took the measurements.
Cool video
Bragg Road doesn't border Alabama (Texas doesn't border Alabama). Additionally, neither Bragg Road, nor Hardin County (wherein it is located) border Louisiana. All of the timber recently has been cut along Bragg Road and it's not what it was.
Thank you! I was going to point this out as well.
And that story isn't from Texas. It's an Arkansas story. And it was proven many years ago that the lights are caused by gasses.
It would help if you mention what state these are in. While I know it is possible to search the town names, it is also possible to find the same name in multiple states.
The day we visited the Hoover Damn in July 2013 someone took their own life shortly before we got there. The ambulance passed us as we were driving down the road.
Oh damn
A couple of stories. There's a lady named Mary in a mausoleum in one of Galveston's many cemeteries. According to my mother, Mary could talk.
If you went by her grave and asked her what she needed,
Mary would say "nothing". It took me years to figure that one out.
During the American Civil War, a young man in Wilmington, NC decided to go do his duty and fight for the South. He was only 16, and his mother begged him not to go. He was her baby, and she was terrified thar he wouldn't come back. Finally, she made him promise, on her grave, tht he would come home.
So, the young man packed his things, and left to join the Confederate Army.
He ended up being stationed in Galveston, TX, and was glad, because the climate was like that of home. He wrote his mother faithfully, until.
He never saw battle, but during an outbreak of yellow fever, the young man died.
It was summer, and it was too hot to send bodies back to their homes, for fear the germs on their bodies were still contagious. So, their name was written on their coffin and they were buried in Galveston.
The young man's mother grieved, but nothing could be done.
The War ended, and time passed. The great 1900 storm that hit Galveston took more than 12,000 souls, and the flooding was so severe that coffins came up out of the ground and were found for miles up and down the beaches. Most of them, anyway.
Three months later, a lone coffin washed ashore on the beach in Wilmington,NC. The people tht found it figured it had floated up the Gulf Stream Current, and marveled that it made it this far. All the way from Galveston. They saw the name on the coffin, and carried it to the farmhouse just out of town, where an old widow lived with her memories. Her son had come home.
I don't know the young man's name, but this is supposed to be true. Believe it or not!
In northern VA there's the Bunnyman bridge. In western PA there's Greenman's tunnel. There's creepy haunted places scattered all over. If you're sensitive to the paranormal, you'll likely be afffected to some degree. I like the woods. I fished, hunted, rode dirtbikes, four wheeled, hill climbed... I spent a lot of time in the woods when I was young. Yeah, there's a lot of creepy places.
I've been lucky enough to visit several states. Hands down, the spookiest state I've been to is Louisiana. Whenever I visited my aunts and uncles there, I always felt like someone was following me, but I never saw this "someone." Creepy.
Here's a creepy thought. With all the deaths that happened during the construction of sin city were they sacrifices to the devil since this was his city? And others too, mobsters dying in a newly constructed home, rich people dying in strange ways....
I just love the guys enthusiasm about the ghosts of gunslingers and hoover damn! This guy is very magnetic and entertaining!! Hope to see more of him!!
San Antonio I thought La Llorona was in Mexico or New Mexico from Buzz Feed Unsolved Shane & Ryan
Well both Texas and New Mexico were once part of Mexico before they were part of the US
Lol can someone also teach him to say La Llorona correctly I was cringing every time he would say it
Speaking of LSU students taking their lives. I was in Baton Rouge doing security after in the early 2000’s. Being Security I had many conversations with Baton Rouge’s finest on more than one occasion. One officer told me of a self harm that he had gotten called to at on campus. He said when he got there it was a male student and he had left a note, that said “I hope when you find me I’ve been here a few days and I stink, F@*K You!”
Poor kid
Story #1 - what’s with the video of two totally different hotels in different locations?
When we went to Boulder Mt. when me and my little sister went there that build was amazing I love Montana beautiful State
The San Antonio Texas road, where children, ghost children are said to push your vehicle if you put it in neutral and let it sit near the tracks or wherever it is. Zak Bagans of Ghost Adventures fame, went out there with his crew hired a survey team and prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that is an optical illusion the road doesn't actually go up it goes down, so that is why the vehicle looks like it's going uphill, being pushed by the children. That has been debunked
I live in Montana, close to all of the places that are stated in the video. I can confirm that they all are EXTREMELY haunted. There are so many other places to talk about. Maybe ya'll could do a video on Montana's most haunted locations? Also, my friend works at the Boulder Hot springs, and he has told me some stories about thing that he has experienced.
Agreed on that!! As a fellow montanan
Montana really fascinates me. 😶🌫️🤓🤙🏽
I have a story for you...I used to work at the Hilton in Dedham, Ma. as their auditor. While making the hotel rounds, I noticed room 302 was sealed. So, I asked my supervisor why the room was sealed. It was told that a car accident happened close to the hotel, and the people who died haunts that room. When the room was used before the day, the occupant(s) would come running out demanding a refund because of seeing apparitions. After too many reports, the room was sealed. You can still hear noises coming from the room, but I did not listen to find out.
Ive been to the Alamo back in 1994 when i was 5 years old. Still got the T shirt from there to this day. I never felt anything there as far as ghostly apparitions but, then again, being around so many other tourists could drown that. Its probably when the grounds arnt as populated with people is when you feel the spirits of the dead or hear the sounds of residual hauntings or even poltergeist activity.
8:02 is just modern day Romeo and Juliet 😂
lol my wife and I are driving from our ranch in south texas to our daughter and granddaughter in Alabama for Christmas. For a minute I thought our trip was going to be much shorter!
Maybe the school bus ghosts will push your car from Texas to Alabama while you sleep.
is your channel on spotify too?
Just a heads up. The predominant mineral in the water of Mineral Wells is sulpher, since it sits on quite a large sulpher dome. So, when people visited to partake of the mineral rich water, they didn't drink it. They BATHED in it. Seems there were more benefit that way.
These are interesting stories, but I think that there are many stories that could be the worst and most horrifying.
I remember when Ghost Adventures debunked the train tracks in San Antonio. People still perpetuate the urban legend because.....i guess it's fun to think kids died and are forced to push a car off from train tracks for people's entertainment?
You forgot the Emily Morgan hotel in San Antonio. I'm not a believer at all, but Ive had weird experiences there.
Number 9: So basicly the Boss admited to be a cleptomaniac in his afterlife.
It is awesome to visit North America
Bring a sandwich. There is much to see!
Texas borders are New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana
The lights seen on Brag road are car lights. I grew up there and my Dad and Uncle was able to prove it. On either end of the road you can see the car lights from a very long distance. You can also see lights of other people on Brag road for miles coming towards you. The headless horseman never happened however there was a building towards the end of the road and the owner died there. He was not hit by a train and he did not loose his head. There is also a covered over cemetery out there. So, yes, it is fun to take your kids out there during October and tell all the rumors ever made up about this place. Lol
Y’all should do a video on what happened to Louisiana and Mississippi if Southeast Texas borders, Alabama as stated in your video lol😂
This just seems to be places in TX not North America as a whole
Texas is part of North America
I was looking for this comment! I was watching, thinking, “literally 3/4 of this are Texas?” lol
The first story is the same story told about Waters meet, MI lights! 🤔 They're called the Paulding lights.
I think the Alice's grave story may be a case of either someone being interested in her after unalivement, or the case of early medical students using grave bodies for studing anatomy (both r gross n sad tho)
I've been to brag road when I was a teenager. We did the slow drive down with just the running lights on and what not. The only lights we seen, was cop lights. Nice guy, When he got tired of watching us look like idiots, he pulled us over. And slightly robbed us of our bag of peppermints
Been to mineral wells. Very very VERY cool. Big door slammed closed scared the living sh*t outta me!
Number 3 with the bus and the kids saving the driver is heartbreaking and gave me shivers. I don't know if it's true or not but damn.
Proof that if ‘ghosts’ exist, they’re not always vengeful 🥲👻
6:38; what he doesn't tell you is that there is a magnetic Hill fifty yards to the left of the railroad tracks. If the bus had just switched into neutral they could have cleared the railroad tracks and made them mandatory right turn and still had 35 mph to continue down the road.
Lived in Alabama my whole life. Did not know I was that close to Texas
How is the train one pure evil. If there’s any truth to it, they saved him.
You can tell she’s not from St. Louis we pronounce the S lol. But I love this channel. You guys do tremendous work
🎵 Meet me in St. Lou-ie, Louie, meet me at the fair... something something hoochy koochy, something something tootsie wootsie... meet me in St. Lou-ie... 🎵
The P Farm is in what state ? Seems like that’d be interesting to know.
Daily Mansion, if you would, please. Thank you... from that mythical place Montana.
I live in Henderson, used to bowl until past 11 pm. That damn swing would be going full blast with no wind. The swing next to it was not moving, I have personally witnessed this at least 10 times.
You should do one on Central theater that is down the street from the Ritz it is also haunted and there is a story about a husband and wife and mistress double homicide suicide about it and the place is haunted is very cool I myself have been pushed by the wife down the stairs when I was a child you should look it up
I accidentally hit a st.bernard in front of the Daly mansion once. Also, fort fizzle recreation area goes crazy with aperitions during snowstorms...
44:36 I have been to the Titanic Exhibit in Vegas let me tell you what, there is most definitely a heavy or sorrowful feeling near that stuff. I'm a paranormal investigator retired myself so I'm not get all emotional or scared around things and places like this. In fact to be honest I'm more of a skeptic. So mean I say that stuff makes you feel strange I'm not joking even a little bit. Definitely worth checking out.
47:41 There are claim's that there are bodies buried in the dam from the time of it's construction that were unable to be removed.
lie a rona i can’t be the only one who thinks the way he says la liorona is hilarious
i've never seen the appeal in having a wedding at a plantation...and i'm southern lol
anyway! I'd still love to visit Louisiana sometime
Louisiana is my home state I live in New orleans since Katrina the atmosphere is different. So much death in the streets during that time, unimaginable, now the whole atmosphere of city is altered.
Just a friendly geography reminder Texas and Alabama are three states part not sure what went wrong here but I just thought I'd let you know
Please do a video on the jersey devil if you haven't yet.
So where’s the “pure evil”? I just see a bunch of haunted places.
You should do a New Jersey vid
As a Longhorn fan I find it funny that this video listed Texas A&M as evil. 😆
Hook em' Horns!! 😁🤘
South East Texas is the Gulf Coast and the Rio Grande Valley. North East Texas touches Louisiana, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. Geographical inaccuracies are a pet peeve of mine.
Brown also has their own ghost story. Apparently a USN LT. (O3) ended up taking his own life throwing himself from the tower that is on campus and is said to sometimes be spotted still in uniform. I heard this story from a very freaked out tour guide who spotted me in my working whites just standing in the background listening. As I hope many will guess at the time I was also a Lt.
Can understand how she might have been freaked as I was just passing through and happened to stop to listen to the story in her view one second a naval officer was not standing practically in front of her next thing after starting the story there was.
Anytime you have the number 2 on your tax forms for the IRS, it automatically changes it to a 6 in their systems
Room 308? That's One of Stephen King's best ghost movie. Saw it a few days ago.😰😰
The way he pronounces La Llorona has me in tears 😂😂
Should had started off with the Marfa mystery light...yes texas has that orb
I’ve been to the Hotel Galvez and experienced absolutely nothing LMAOO
Do you guys have any videos about MN?
The rail road track story is incorrect. Although there is or was a crossing in San Antonio that has since been altered. The story originated from Utah.
how come the name of the town but not the State happens so often??? most town names are repeated in every other State so it's frustrating and this is hardly my 1st time noticing
And just FYI, about 22min in at the #7 story, it's pronounced "Cal- ka-shu" Parish in LA. They have Parishes there instead of Counties. 😁
How did the guy Tell his story if the goat man threw him over the bridge And kill him
yaa sounds like "man killed himself and ran away" 🤣🤣
😂🤣😂
Can you talk about places in Tennessee like the bell witch cave
Some of these early comments are stranger than the areas in the videos.
I feel like I have to stay overnight at all these places hahaha.... might actually do it, so thanks ;)
What about these places make them evil? You mean haunted. Two different things!
Goatmans bridge was goofy. If the farmer did go back and was hung and died, how did you know he saw a goat fury head that did it to him or even the whole story for that matter
I had a teacher in high school saying that Bonnie and Clyde had came through Arkansas and was at her grandparents gas station or some sort of store. This story was told to me and my class around 17 years ago.
Ashaway Line & Twine has a few spirits though none of them are what I would call evil. I personally saw the shadow that has appeared at night on the top floor of mill 1.
Literally a video about Texas 😂
It always seems hantings and haunting areas seem to happen in more northern areas (Montana, Connecticut,) and more southern rural areas (Texas, Louisiana). I'm in Maryland and we don't have big ghost areas like this. Yes we have "ghost tours" in our city through the old buildings, some abandoned insane asylums that's meant to be haunted. And some historical sites in Virginia near us ... But no "big" haunting areas that people would travel too. It seems these places are reserved for other states more north or south ? I wonder if it's because there's more land and open land in those areas .
I’m from SE Texas and I’m mad I never heard of this before now
I’m from Dallas , tx and I went to Richardson high school and know well of lake highlands high school never heard this one before 😬
The whole damn Galveston is hunted and feel very evil I love her now and I worked at the bar and grill in the hotel and it has a very Erie feeling in there. They have remodel it recently since I’ve been gone, so maybe not anymore but the whole town of Galveston feels haunted.
Louisiana has many pea farms still. The Lalaurie mansion is still there and it's creepy.
We have a hill here in covington ky called gravity hill. It's up hill but if you come to a stop put your car in neutral and turn it off it will slowly go up the hill turning by itself and all and you will see hand prints it's said a bus wrecked there and the kids push u up the hill and out the way.
It would be better if a state was said after the towns cause it’s not like there’s a Jefferson in multiple states
Oh yeah, Jimi Hoffa is said to be buried near salmon lake Mt. And don't forget Garnet ghost town and stockman's in Missoula...
I've heard that the mobsters dumped him in the pine barrens in New Jersey due to the soil acidity or quicksand. People supposedly are petrified of the pine barrens due to the legend of the jersey devil. He disappeared here from Bloomfield hills Michigan. More then likely we will never know. This was told to me by my children's father who was from New Jersey and his family had ties to Anthony Provenzano who was meeting Jimmy Hoffa the day he disappeared.
Um, I live in Texas, and we DO NOT border Alabama. I'm sure that's been said often but I'm a Texan sooooo.... I have to say something!! Are all of these in Texas??!!
I like your guy’s videos, but y’all need to find a location with less of an echo, lower the microphone sensitivity, and stop shouting. It hurts my ears.
😂🤣😂
@@trishtrish9713 not so sure what’s funny about what I said. They make good content. It’s just too loud.