Morbid - Listener Tales 90
Episode Date: September 26, 2024Weirdos! Today's episode is brought TO you, BY you, For you, FROM you, and ALLLLL about you! It's Listener Tales 90!Today we have a great batch of tales submitted by YOU! We have ghost cats, we have c...hildren dropping in to say 'hieeeeeee' BEFORE their birth, we have ghosty grandfathers playing with the grandson they never met, and we have Kitty's tale which will leave you with tears in your eyes!If you’ve got a listener tale please send it on over to Morbidpodcast@gmail.com with “Listener Tales” somewhere in the subject line :) Cowritten by Alaina Urquhart, Ash Kelley & Dave White (Since 10/2022)Produced & Edited by Mikie Sirois (Since 2023)Research by Dave White (Since 10/2022), Alaina Urquhart & Ash KelleyListener Correspondence & Collaboration by Debra LallyListener Tale Video Edited by Aidan McElman (Since 6/2025) Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, weirdos. I'm Elena. I'm Ash. And this is morbid Lighthouse Edition.
That's right. I know. It sounds weird, but it's awesome.
Yeah, haunted lighthouse edition, I should have said.
Yeah, we decided that, you know, we were looking through some, you know, books. And I always save, if I see, while I'm looking for a case, if I see a book that I'm like, ooh, that's interesting.
Yeah. I immediately save it to my Kindle. And I'm like, I'll go back to that.
You're like, I'll do that now.
And I have an unbelievable and absurd amount of, like, haunted lighthouses and, like, spooky
lighthouse books.
Because there's a lot of books on this stuff.
Every single state with a lighthouse in it has spooky haunted lighthouses.
Yeah.
And some of them have, like, multiple lighthouses in the state.
So we decided, you know what, the next case that I'm doing is going to be a doozy.
Yeah.
So we figured, you know what?
let's give you some spooky haunted places, because these still have true crime in them.
Mine has murders.
Oh, good.
It also is so, like, there's definitely true crime and spookiness.
But it's like not going to be with the next case is, which I don't want to tell you what it is.
But it's one most do you know about.
The next case is going to be a lot.
It's, yeah.
It's one of my least favorite cases.
Yeah.
It's a tough one.
So we figured we'd do this one before because, person,
I needed a little break from looking at that other case. So this works. But this is also really
intense. So get ready. So buckle up, bitches. Yeah, this is wild. So I think we're going to go
back and forth here because we each took a couple of lighthouses and went hard into them. So I think
Ash is going to stat. A-A-ash is going to stop. Okay. So my first lighthouse is from Michigan.
You know. Did you get that? It's from Michigan. I'm from Michigan.
So this is...
Mean girls, rough.
I wanted to see if they got it.
You guys got it.
You got it, of course.
I am.
So, oh, before we started this, too, I wanted to say that in my research, I found out that the first
lighthouse built in America was actually built in Boston.
Oh.
On Little Brewster Island in 1716.
Look at us.
Just a little fun fact of us.
Look at us.
Also, a quick little Bostonian thing that I just wanted to mention.
Oh, yeah, you have to say this.
In our last...
episode, we said something about Worcestershire sauce.
Yeah.
And of course, it's like it always happens that like if somebody says that differently,
that's the only way to say it.
Yep.
When it comes to pronunciations of words, there is something called regional dialect.
Yeah.
Bostonians do say certain things differently.
Like everybody that I have ever met in my whole life in this fucking city, in this fucking
city guy.
In this fucking city, Ken.
In this motherfucking place.
town, baby. We say Worcestershire sauce. Because we have a city called Worcester.
And you're like Worcester. I'm like Worcester. And it looks just like Worcestershire.
Yeah. That's why we say the word. I'm not changing how I say the word. No. You can say the word
however you want and I promise not to tweet it you or email you. You can say it Wustachir. You can say it
wore chest ashire. I don't...
Some people say woestashir?
Most to share. You can say it however you want.
But for me, Worcestershire sauce doesn't give me any woes.
It doesn't.
So why would I call it woes to shear?
It's a woe.
It gives me a woes.
It gives me a woose.
But yeah, I just like, I just, every time it's like that kind of pronunciation, like, first
of all, no, it's okay if we say Worcestershire sauce differently, no one's getting offended by it.
No.
It's fine.
It's not pertinent to any of the stories.
We tell it is cool, so there's just literally no reason to say it.
But I just want to point out that people in this country, the United States, say things differently.
Everywhere.
And it's okay.
It's okay. It's okay. It's okay. You can say things however you want.
And sometimes when you work like really hard on a case about like focusing on a victim and when it's unsolved and somebody's like, you said Worcestershire Rog.
I'm like, that's what you got out of my episode.
Dude, like, it's infuriating.
So just, come on.
Just so, you know, we're happy to correct ourselves when we see, you know, we might say like,
town names wrong every now and then we're like, okay, we don't live there, so I don't have
a right to be like, yeah.
Worcestershire?
Forever.
I'm going to say Worcestershire like that until the day I die.
So I just, I can etch it on my two.
I had to clear that up.
If you Google it, Bostonians say it that way.
It's not just us.
It's not just us.
I just needed to clear that up because I was like, man, I'm going to say,
Wistachia's lost like that forever.
I feel like it's lost all meeting at this point.
Worcestershire.
Worcestershire, Ked.
Okay.
So back to Michigan.
Love you so much.
Pronunciations though.
Oh, man.
All right, so we're in Michigan.
And we're going to the Point Iroquois lighthouse.
Now, we're there.
Here we are.
I'm here.
Just took our tow boat up there.
Yeah.
I got a lot of the information that I'm going to spit forth from the spookiest
lighthouses by Terence Zepke and Michigan's
haunted lighthouses by Diana Stampler.
Oh my God, I got some of those too.
Oh, honey, look at you.
I love it.
All right.
So before this lighthouse was built, there was this huge battle between two Native American tribes,
the Iroquois tribe and the Ojibwe tribe, who are also referred to as the Chippewa tribe.
Okay.
So this happened in 1662.
The Ojibwe tribe was familiar with the land nearby, and it was their space.
They lived off of this land.
they fished there, they hunted, that was their spot.
And then the Iroquois came from New York and invaded the space.
And there was a massive battle that actually ended up leaving most of the Iroquois tribe dead on the nearby beaches.
And the way that this person wrote it in their book, I believe it was the book by Diana Stampler.
She said like their blood soaked into the beaches.
Oh, that's so ominous and horrific.
Just totally setting it up for a massive haunting.
I was just going to say that is a rest of it.
recipe for hunting. And everybody agrees. The Native Americans today referred to this area as
now do wee Ejunning, which loosely translates into Iroquois Boneyard. Oh, I just got a chill.
Super, super spooky. So in 1864, the St. Mary's Falls Canal, also referred to as Sue Lox, was opened
because copper and iron ore were found a plenty in the Upper Peninsula. And ships needed to go to the
Upper Peninsula to gather copper and iron and then bring those metals back down to the steel
plants in the lower Great Lakes. So they were like, we need a canal for this. Yeah. So where there's a
canal, there has to be a lighthouse. I thought you're going to say where there's a canal,
there's a canal, there's a way. Where there's a canal, there's accurate, and a lighthouse. There you go.
Where there's a canal, there's lots of things. There is. And the U.S. Lighthouse Service gave $5,000,
which back then was a whole bunch of coin for a lighthouse to be constructed in the area. And the
lighthouse ended up being constructed about eight years before the canal even got opened. So the main
tragedy after the Iroquois Boneyard that we have there on this site happened in November of
1919 when a steamship called the Mark Hopkins capsized and killed all 17 crew members on board.
Now, there was a blizzard that rolled in this night when they were all sailing and it brought
60 mile per hour winds with it. Damn. So,
this boat started taking on water almost immediately.
And waves are crashing.
They had to get rid of everything they had on the boat to like make it way less stuff like that.
Craziness.
And the captain on the boat, Walter R. Neal, was the only one who stayed on the ship while it was going down.
He was like, this is my boat.
Yeah, that's a captain thing, man.
That's a fucking captain thing.
Wow.
So all the crew members go onto these lifeboats, but it's so cold that they froze to death.
All of them.
That's like Titanic style.
And the saddest thing is, is that they all could have been rescued because a couple of boats in the area were trying to rescue these people.
But their attempts failed because the people and the crew members in the lifeboats, their hands were so numb with the colds that they couldn't catch the lines.
Oh.
And then it started becoming too dangerous for these other ships to try to help them.
Like they were getting caught in this terribleness and like they were going to go down.
So they had to go away.
So now there stands a museum where the original lighthouse was.
And inside there's tons of different artifacts and different reports about the history of the area.
And one of the reports is written by Norm Mills and says that one of the crew members gave the captain some chewing tobacco right before the boat started taking on water.
And the captain was able to be saved because he kept chewing that tobacco, which kept his jaw from freezing, which saved his life.
Oh, I was just going to say. Oh, my God.
So they found him just floating on like what was left of the roof of the boat.
And they were able to rescue him.
Wow.
Insane.
Because of his chewing tobacco.
Because of his chewing tobacco.
Which is such a bad habit.
But look at that.
It saved him.
But, you know, it might save your life and a shipwreck.
So the crew members who white literally froze to death were found in various states.
So one lifeboat was found a few days after the accident.
And only some of the crew members were found on this boat.
And all of them were in.
encased in ice.
Oh, quote unquote, encased in ice.
Damn.
So those who were not encased in ice started washing up on the shore and were literally
just brought to the local undertaker for $25 per person because you got a reward for
finding these missing crew members.
Wow.
But then there were eight men that just didn't wash up on shore that November, like that
winter.
And they weren't found until the springtime.
They literally froze into a second.
of the water between Point Iroquois and Whitefish Point, and they had to be cut from the ice.
Oh.
Isn't that the most horrific thing you've ever heard of?
Like chipped out of the ice.
Chipped out of the ice.
And they were all buried at the Mission Hill Cemetery.
So there's a memorial marker where they're all buried and a sign on the white fence that surrounds the area that says Sailors of the steamer, Myron.
Oh.
It's just like...
That's so sad.
So spooky.
Morbid.
Now in 1972, they actually found the shipwreck, and it was below water about 50 feet.
And now it's part of an underwater museum run by Whitefish Point underwater reserve.
And scuba divers can go down and see the shipwreck.
That must be so spooky.
It says they can quote, take nothing but pictures and leave nothing but bubbles.
That's like what the association says.
I love it.
Because can you imagine?
I'm sure some people try to.
like break off a piece or something. Oh yeah. People like love, which is that would be
nuts. Like no thank you. No, I don't need that. Some bad vibes. I don't need those bad vibes in
my life. No. So that was like one of the second things that happened there. Now the last thing,
I just want to give everybody a trigger warning. There is like an animal that dies in this part. So
just so you know, but there's also a very young child that dies. So my God. You know,
just wanted to put that out there. Really just going to kick us all in the stomach. Yeah. Just really.
starting off here with a bang.
So this last thing took place in the area of the lighthouse.
And it's basically surrounding the death of a three-year-old little girl named Carol Ann
Palm Ranking.
She was killed on July 7, 1948.
So Carol was living with her parents and her older brother, Alan, in a cabin inside the Marquette
National Forest.
Her father, Arthur, was the keeper of the fire observation tower in the National Forest.
So her mom and her brother were inside when a black bear started coming up on their property.
But little Carol Ann was on the porch, like playing on the porch.
So her mom sees this bear approaching the house, but she doesn't have enough time to get outside
before the bear literally scooped up Carol and started taking her away, carrying her away.
Oh my God, that's horrific.
Now the coroner said that most likely Carol was killed, like, immediately because the bear's teeth punctured her brain.
Oh.
So that hopefully that happened like soon and she wasn't super terrified.
So Carol's mother called the forest rangers who Arthur was actually working with that day,
the father.
And through sob, she explained a black bear is just taking Carol away.
And at this point, she doesn't know if Carol's alive or dead.
No.
So all of the Rangers and a bunch of volunteers start heading out to try to find Carol or
what's left of Carol, to be quite frank.
Now, they found her body lying next to a stream in the forest.
and they waited for the bear to return to the area because obviously it's going to come back.
Yeah.
Now when it did come back, they shot and killed it.
The bear was only a year and a half old, but it was like extremely underweight, which was super strange for them.
Huh.
Because there was plenty of the bear's usual food in the area.
But it was like a very like freak accident.
Yeah, that's weird.
And after Carol was killed, Arthur quit his job as the keeper of the observation tower.
And he and his family just moved out of the house days after.
after Carol was killed. They could not be there. Yeah. So back to this lighthouse, Pointeeroy Lighthouse,
a psychic who went to the lighthouse in the 90s told a volunteer that was working there named Janet Russell
that she saw the apparition of a little girl and said she was probably about three years old.
Oh. And the woman explained that sometimes spirits go to places that make an impression on them.
And Janet said, quote, for a three-year-old, seeing that massive tower with her family would have been very
impressive. And that's why she would have gone back there. Oh my God. So people will see like her spirit
walking around near the lighthouse and people have felt taps on their hands or tugs at the like the back
of their clothing. I would just want to scoop that little ghost girl up. I would be like,
come into the lighthouse. I'm so sorry. Yeah. And then other people who have visited the lighthouse over
the years claim to have not only seen Carol walking around, but they say that you will be walking
through the lighthouse and all of a sudden you'll just hit a freezing cold point. Oh, damn. And there's
no explanation to it whatsoever. Except that it's Carol. Except that it's Carol or the Native Americans
who died or like all the people who died and washed up on the shore. Wow. And people say that when
you walk into the light, there's just this feeling like a heavy feeling. Like a heavy feeling. But
there's all these artifacts that they have in different reports of like these incidents that relate to
the lighthouse. That must be fascinating. So I feel like it would be a really cool place to visit.
Yeah. And it would probably be really heavy like the Lizzie Borden house.
definitely because that was the only time that I've like truly it's like there and in Salem are the only
two places that I've really felt that like physical heaviness that people talk about and I feel
like that would be another place where you would just get like oh yeah with it easily just because of all
the tragedy that happened there's so much damn that's a crazy one that was a crazy one I just couldn't
believe all of that stuff happened one area what I was going to say was I just can't believe that
much stuff happened like what the fuck seriously a little girl gets eaten by
a bear. Oh, like, where do you hear that? That's horrible. And it just makes me think of, you know,
chunky bear, like Hank the tank there in California. What I thought of. How's you doing, guys? Like,
how's it going in California? Lock your doors. Like, lock your doors, but like, get a garage.
But Hank the tank, man. Hank the tank. I don't want him to go. I can't. Please tell the story of
Hank the tank. Oh, my God. So first of all, let me start this really quick. And this is just a
quick side story, I promise. But I was putting the girls to sleep the other.
night and one of them had like a little tummy ache. And so I was just trying to make her laugh.
And I was saying like, oh, like, what if I gave you my tummy? Like my tummy doesn't hurt.
I'll give you my tummy and I'll take yours. And the other twin was like, uh, your tummy's way too big.
And I was like, oh, fun, like out of the mouths of babes. You're like, cool, cool, cool, going to go get on my
exercise. Yeah, I was like, cool, all right, crunch as it is. But then the other morning, we were watching a little
news story about Hank the tank there. And the girls were like, whoa, that's a huge bear.
And one of the twins goes, yeah, dad, da, you're bigger than that bear. And Hank the tank is like,
and it was massive. Of course, this like picture of just like chunky bear. And they're like talking
about how chunky. They're talking about, yeah. And of course, they're saying it like, oh, daddy,
you're taller than that bear. Like, that's what they meant. But the way they said it,
John was like real nice, guys. Thank you. He literally goes.
thank you.
Out of the mouths of babies.
They're just so funny.
But I'm like, man, they will check you real fast.
Oh, yeah.
You ever, you are, if you are ever feeling yourself, they will, they'll bring you back down to Earth.
And then on the flip side of that, when you're ever feeling down, they will make you feel like a goddess or a God.
Yeah, it's so funny.
I know.
Because they're just like, yeah, I'm just going to tell you how it's real.
They're so cute.
But onto my lighthouse.
And my first lighthouse.
is from Georgia.
Oh.
And it's the St. Simon's Lighthouse.
Okay.
Now, this lighthouse was built in 1810 originally.
Oh, dang.
And it was built by James Gould.
It was 70 Gould.
Like Gould.
Like, ghoul.
It was 75 feet high, and it helped to guide ships into St. Simon's Sound on St.
Simon's Island in Georgia.
Lots of St.
Simon, St.
Simon, St.
Lots of saints.
Lots of them.
Lighthouses.
Lighthouse eye.
Yeah, Lighthouse Eye.
I know that.
Unfortunately, 51 years after it was made, it was destroyed by Confederate soldiers,
which seems to be a running theme in all of these lighthouses.
I'm like, Confederates stop ruining lighthouses.
Oh, girl, just wait.
But don't worry, because a 104-foot replacement was built in its place and was finished in 1872.
But the architect Charles Kluski actually died likely by malaria in 1871 the year it was actually, like, right before it was.
was completed. So like that's sad. You didn't get to see it. Now next to the lighthouse tower
is a home where the lighthouse keeper would live because that was generally how that worked.
This home had two stories and would allow the lighthouse keeper and their spouse on one level
and an assistant lighthouse keeper and their family on the other. So they would work together
and live together. Yeah. Now Bradford B. Brunt was the original keeper. Yeah, he was. In 1874,
he left the job and was immediately replaced by Frederick Osborne.
Let's talk about Frederick for a second.
Let's let us.
He was originally from England.
He immigrated to New York in 1863 when he was 30 years old.
He served the union in the Civil War and enlisted in the United States Army after the Civil War ended.
He married Julia Pauline Pagson sometime in the 1870s and had a son William Thomas Osborne, November 5th, 1873.
When he took the job as keeper of the St. Simon's Lighthouse, he had another son, Frederick Page Osborne, on October 9th, 1875.
But that son passed away when he was only two years old.
Now, just a quick little flash forward, people will say that they do see like a toddler wandering around sometimes.
Yeah, that's one of the ghost stories that I've seen floating around.
So you wonder if it was little Frederick Osborne.
Now, he and his wife had a daughter also named Elizabeth Frederick.
Osborne on February 14th, 1880.
February 14th.
Yeah, Valentine's Day, babe.
Now, all was well.
And Osborne got himself an assistant lightkeeper named John Stevens.
John moved into the keeper cottage attached to the tower.
And he and his wife lived on the second floor while the Osborne family lived on the first floor.
Now, Osborne and Stevens immediately did not really get along at work.
I had that feeling when you were like, work together and live together.
Work together and lived together.
It started because,
Osborne was kind of a picky dude.
He liked things a certain way and was known to be a big control freak.
I kind of relate to him in this way.
Capricorn question.
It can be tough.
And when things were not done to his satisfaction, he wasn't exactly someone who
was going to be like, hey, can you just come over here and I'll like show you how this
should be done?
He would like berate Stevens.
Like he was very like, are you stupid?
Like, but he just, that's who he was.
Shitty work environment.
Yeah, he would, but he would make Stevens feel like shit.
It's like, you can really.
just tell someone they did it wrong. Right. But also Stevens was somebody who didn't like being told
that he did something wrong. He couldn't handle criticism. So even if he had taken him over and was like,
can you just do this a different way? It would have annoyed him. Like they just didn't work together.
I was going to say not a good pairing. Now, this obviously started to bother Stevens more because he was
the one getting the brunt of this. And they often got into little arguments about it, little fights about it.
couple this with the fact that like we said, they had to live in the same home together with their spouses and the Osborne children,
basically be up each other's ass 24-7 and this relationship was getting more and more tense by the day.
Then in March 1880, things came to a head. Apparently, Stevens was away for the day. And when he returned, his wife told him that Osborne had not been nice to her.
Uh-oh. You don't mess with his wife.
No.
She had tried to take on some of Stevens duties to, well, John was away.
And Frederick Osborne, ever the control freak, didn't like the way she had done it.
He basically berated her the same way he would do with Stevens.
And she's like, I don't even have to do this.
Yeah, she was just trying to help out, man.
And Stevens was raging angry about this.
Come on, guys.
So the two men go outside.
They're going back and forth.
if Stevens is defending his wife, Osborne is defending himself.
It was definitely a fight caused by the sass at Stevens' wife,
but it seems like it was really a culmination of all the shit that Osborne had made him feel.
And Osborne is pissed because he feels like Stevens isn't doing the job well enough,
not to his standards.
And it got so bad that Osborne drew a gun.
Oh.
And told Stevens, because I think what was happening was, by all reports,
they were getting into each other's faces.
It was starting to get physical.
So Osborne drew out his gun and told him, like, back the fuck off me or I'm going to shoot.
Oh, shit.
And it was like the 1800s.
So, like, this is how it went down, apparently.
Now, that's when Stevens took this fight to a fatal place.
Okay.
Because remember, Osborne has the gun.
He's telling him back off of me.
Now, according to the Brunswick advertiser and appeal newspaper, on Sunday morning at about
8.30, an unfortunate occurrence transpired at St. Simon's Lighthouse, in which Mr. Fred
Osborne was seriously shot by his assistant, Mr. John W. Stevens. It seems that there had been a
bad feeling between these gentlemen for several days, and on Sunday morning they went out into the
bushes in front of the house to settle their difficulty. During this interview, Stevens threatened
to chastise Osborne when Osborne drew his pistol and ordered him not to advance further,
whereupon Stevens went back into the house, took down his double-barreled shotgun, which had been
previously loaded with buckshot for deer hunting.
Oh.
And as Osborne advanced along the path near the fence leading to the gate, Stevens fired at a
distance of 98 feet, hitting Osborne in four places.
Oh, wow.
Only one shot, however, taking serious effect.
Now, Frederick Osborne died from his wounds at the hospital.
He was shot in the stomach, which was the kill shot.
Yeah.
Now, apparently this murder took a toll on Stevens' psyche, and he just couldn't forgive himself.
It was clear he immediately regretted what he had done.
Crime of passion.
This was absolute insanity.
Yeah.
He made a very fatal error.
And he immediately knew what he had done.
But still, he's a murderer.
Yeah.
He's a flat out murderer.
From those same newspapers, it says, quote,
It is a fact worthy of much praise that as soon as he shot Osborne,
Stephen sent at once for medical assistant for the wounded man,
repaired immediately to Brunswick and gave him self-uptain.
up to the proper authorities.
And the very moment the bond for his appearance was signed,
he returned to his post as assistant lightkeeper
and has been on double duty ever since,
performing both his and Osborne's duties incessantly day and night.
I love that they're like, let's give credit where credit is due.
That's what's so funny.
It's like, OK, so they're literally saying,
it is a fact worthy of much praise that as soon as he shot this man
dead four times with a double-barreled
shotgun filled with Bokshot for killing deer. He called somebody. And then he did his job. And said,
maybe we should help this guy. And then he turned himself in, which is like, yeah, let's pat him on the back.
Like what? And then he took on more work, you guys. And obviously he was immediately arrested,
but he was released on Bond very quickly. That's crazy. So he did return straight to the lighthouse
as the assistant keeper, which is weird to me. And I wonder what happened to Osborne's wife and children.
Yeah, I know. When he just came back to work, were they?
They live there.
What the fuck?
Maybe they went to stay with family.
I sure hope so, because I'm like, I, what is going on?
So when he-
Toxicity is rife.
So when he started back at work, you know, after murdering the original keeper,
Stevens walked into that lighthouse and was shocked to see something standing at the very
top of the 125 stairs.
Always at the top of the stairs.
Always at the top.
Now, this was not Frederick Osborne's ghost.
It was a dog.
Huh.
Who was at the top of a hundred.
And he was actually the yard dog on site.
His name was Bull.
Yeah.
And he was like a captain's dog that was just like around and they just like kind of everybody
do him.
He was standing at the top of the lighthouse, just staring at the light.
And he wouldn't bulge.
Wouldn't bulge.
I was like he would be one.
He stayed there all night, just standing guard.
And he had never done that before.
What?
Never done it before.
And they were like, that was just weird.
I would be so freaked out.
And I guess he did that for a few nights and then stopped.
But like as soon as he returned back into that lighthouse, that dog had climbed 125 spiral stairs to get to the top of that.
Yeah.
Like real weird.
That's crazy.
Now, Stevens was actually acquitted of murder because the jury said he was likely just acting in self-defense because Osborne had pulled again.
So, I mean, he shot a guy in the stomach with a shotgun, but like, okay.
Like after the guy had already walked away.
They were like, as he was advancing the fence, walking away.
away from the fight. He drew out his gun in self-defense and shot him in the stomach. Now, they obviously
weren't going to put Stevens in as the, like, head as the actual keeper. Yeah, you don't get promoted
for murder. Yeah, like, he was a legit murderer. So, like, I think they were like, yeah,
that takes you out of that running. Yeah, can't set that as a precedent. Yeah, and I think it would
look bad if he murdered the keeper and then got the keeper's job. I feel like that would set a really
bad precedent for, like, just murder the keeper and you can have his job. But then, like, who wants
to be the keeper if the assistant murdered the last keeper? So, well, I guess,
guy named George Aspel became the new keeper.
Okay, brave man.
He immediately started hearing footsteps in that tower when he was there at night and no one
else would be there.
He said that doors would slam out of nowhere, like the door at the bottom of the tower would
slam in the middle of the night.
They would actually see figures in the lighthouse.
And a lot of them said that they saw what looked like Frederick Osborne's figure at the
wheel.
I bet.
Or at the light and on the stairs, they would see.
him walking the perimeter fence where he last was. He's making sure his duties are actually done the
right way. He was an anal guy and he's anal in the after. You don't just lose it in the afterlife. You're
still the same way you wear. Once a Capricorn, always a Capricorn. You know what I'm saying?
That's what I always say. Now, you could also apparently, and you still can, visitors to this
today say you can sometimes smell a waft of tobacco smoke and Osborne always smoked a tobacco pipe.
Oh. Yeah. And you have two options.
You can wander around your local grocery store or wine mart picking bottles at random and having no idea what you're about to bring home.
Or you can get personalized wines that you love delivered right to your doa and for a fraction of the cost.
Now, the next keeper's wife, like the next, so George's wife, said that Frederick Osborne invented and constructed something that would aid in repairing the light should it ever like break or dim.
Oh, wow.
Like he had made something that made sure that there was like a backup.
Yeah.
And he was insistent that if this apparatus or the light broke, that no one was
to try to fix it themselves, they were to call him immediately and he would come do it.
Okay.
Again, control freak.
Okay.
So someone had made a joke to him.
And she was there because remember these lightkeepers, these new lightkeepers,
weren't just strangers.
They had been part of this whole like thing for a while.
So they knew him.
And I think, I guess someone who she knew was.
was there when this happened and made a joke to him and said, well, what if you can't come and fix it?
Right.
And they said, what if you're dead or something?
Like, what am I supposed to do?
Just let it fall into disrepair.
And he responded with, quote, well, call me anyway and I'll come back from hell and tend to it.
Oh, my God.
I love it.
I love also that he was like, I am going to hell.
Yeah, he was like, I will come back from hell where I'm definitely going.
I will ask Satan for a hall pass.
Now, in the San Francisco call from 1908, there's a story about what happened.
happened with that story. So the keeper's wife is referred to as Mrs. C, but she, I think it was because like, nobody really knew who the fuck was talking at this point. Like there's so many different names and stuff. It's 1908. And she would help her husband the keeper at the time with the light. And one night there was a storm and the light was dimming and she was alone. And she said, so this is what the newspaper says. Mrs. C seized the largest wheel of the works and started to revolve the machinery by hand.
She was absolutely alone on that part of the island and had no means of communicating with anyone at the settlement four miles inland.
As she turned the frame, her mind ran back to the conversation her husband had had with the inventor and his reply to the question of possible accident.
Almost unconsciously, she said out loud, well, come, come and fix it now.
Like saying like, all right, you said, call you from hell.
There was a clink and a rattle.
And looking up, Mrs. C saw the distal.
of Frederick Osborne bending over the works.
Overcome by the reaction, she fainted.
And when she regained consciousness, the steady click-click of the works assured her that
all was well with the light.
The man had disappeared and Mrs. C called down the tower steps, thinking he had gone below
for restoratives, but there was no answer and he did not return.
What?
So they said literally he could, and every time it would break, it would mysteriously fix
on its own.
Dude. Isn't that wild?
What a fucking great guy to have around.
Like, he's still doing his job.
Yeah, I know he was a control freak and like,
he was a tough nut.
He was a tough nut to deal with and he yelled at a lady, so like not nice.
No.
He was a tough nut to cry.
He just wanted things the way he wanted him.
And look, he cares so deeply about the lighthouse.
He even cares about it in the afterlife.
And I love that.
I love that so much.
And then people might have seen if you look up this lighthouse,
there's this story that like always goes along with it,
this other story of this like boy who killed his parents,
like strangled his parents.
parents and now they all haunt the lighthouse. There is literally no historical record of anything
like that happening. So I didn't want to say it because I couldn't find any newspaper to even
slightly back it up. Oh, that's, I hate when that happens. I know so many times with like haunted
things like this, you'll find a story and you're like, oh, wow. Like, how interesting. Let me learn
more. And then it's like that never happened. That never happened. So awesome. I found actual newspapers
that like, yeah, had this in it. So I was like, okay, yeah. But you might hear that story.
And I'm not saying it didn't happen.
I'm just saying I couldn't find any information about it.
So I don't know.
But people do say that they see like a ghostly figure of a boy.
They say that they see, you know, people walking around the perimeter and then they'll go to like call to them and they'll disappear.
They definitely see Frederick Osborne around.
People have said they've seen the dog bull, like who was clearly long since passed and they'll see him.
He did?
Yeah.
I know.
It's crazy.
You would think that like a hundred years later.
He'd still be, you know, dogs.
You know what I mean?
But no.
Bull is gone.
But he's still around.
But he's not gone.
Still doing his thing.
All right, bull.
You know?
So that is the St. Simon's lighthouse.
That was a, like, fun?
Fun.
Fun?
That was a cool one.
That was fun.
Not fun.
And I got the, a lot of the information for this particular
lighthouse story from haunted lighthouses by Ray Jones.
And I also found this really good website,
History Southeast.
And you can search for the St. Simons Lighthouse and they had a really cool, like, in-depth discussion
into it. And then I also used newspapers.com to find all the cool old-timey newspapers.
Love that. So there it is. Love that so much. Love that for you.
I love that for you. And for St. Simons. I love St. Simons. All right. Now let's get on a boat.
Let's get on a boat. Row on over to Maryland. Let's do it. We are going to the Point Lookout Lighthouse in
Scotland, Maryland. Yeah, we are not Scotland, Scotland, Scotland. Scotland, Maryland. And this information
I mostly got, um, I got from like a few different sources, but the main one that I used was
Maryland.gov. And they basically like repurposed an article written by Dorkas Coleman for the fall 2001 issue
of the natural resource magazine. Look at that. I love that issue. I do too, because it was written in
the fall. In the fall, in the autumn. In the autumn. It's an atomic. It's an atomic.
issue. Ooh, that was a fun. Atumnal. You know? So Point Lookout Lighthouse is often referred to as
the King of Lighthouses. Oh, look at you, Lighthouse. King of Lighthouses. And it sits inside
Point Lookout State Park, or what used to be Point Lookout State Park. Now, originally,
inside of the state park, there was like this summer beach resort owned by Leonard Calvert,
who was the first governor of Maryland. Get it. And there was like all these little cottages for
people to stay in. There was a wharf where ships would come and go.
and of course a lighthouse that was built in 1830.
For some reason, describing this place in my head,
I'm just picturing like dirty dancing when they go to that summer, like,
getaway place.
I feel that.
Do you want to hear a funny thing about me?
No, because I already know what you're going to say,
and it's a fact about you that infuriates me.
I have never seen dirty dancing.
Infuriating.
Everybody shame her.
This is like when I said I never saw a weekend at Bernie's, but worse.
Yeah.
Worse.
Yeah.
A classic.
I don't know, man.
I know some of the quotes from it.
I know the general premise.
Nobody leads to me in a corner.
Yeah.
I love, you know, Patrick Swayze for life.
But you don't love him.
If you haven't seen all of his work.
I have not seen it.
It just was not one that ever came across my life.
That's unreal.
Which is weird.
It has come across to your life, though.
I feel like it's been on and we've like changed it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I'm going to make you watch it.
Your face, you're like, shut up.
All right.
So, yeah, little cottages, super cute.
yada yada and then the lighthouse was built in 1830 but when the civil war when the civil war broke out
the civil war that actually auto corrected in my notes so that's cute I'm like why would it be a
civil wear why civil war broke out in 1861 about 30 years after this lighthouse was built
people were not frequenting this summer getaway just like oiling up and tanning on the beach anymore
now they were kind of like really sad and busy fighting a war
Yeah.
So they decided the government to lease the land and they built Hammond General Hospital on this land.
And eventually the hospital would be expanded and some of the grounds were used to confine Confederate prisoners captured by the union.
Now, these people weren't always Confederate soldiers.
They could be people who were believed to be spying for Confederate soldiers, people who, you know, just, like they thought that they went against them in some way.
gave off a vibe of a Confederate
soldier? Yeah, gave off a Confederate vibe,
which you never ever want to do. Yeah, you don't want to give off
that vibe. Ever, ever, ever. So the area
where they started to be held was
known as Camp Hoffman. Now, Camp Hoffman
was only supposed to hold
10,000 prisoners. But over
the years, the number of prisoners
at this camp doubled. And there was
20,000 people being held in an area
designed for 10,000 people. That sounds
smelly. It was.
That's actually really
funny that you should say that because we're going to get to a smelly place in a minute. Oh, okay.
But before we get there, I do have to tell you that some of these prisoners froze to death.
Some died due to absolutely filthy conditions. A man named Edwin, Edwin Warfield Bitzel wrote point lookout, prison camp for Confederates.
And in the book, he says, quote, it is a story of cruel decisions in high places, a story of diarrhea, dysentery, typhoid, and typhus, of burning sand.
and freezing cold in rotten tents.
It is a story of senseless shootings by guards.
It is a story of despair and the death of almost 4,000 prisoners,
many of whom could have been saved.
Wow.
Yeah.
The fact that that whole thing started with a story of diarrhea was enough for me.
As soon as it's a story of diarrhea, you got a dip.
Yeah, it's a sad story.
It's really sad.
It starts with that.
That's really.
It's horrific.
That sounds not great.
Now, the war ended in 1865, and the number of prisoners who were kept at Camp Hoffman at that time
totaled around 52,000 over the years.
Oh, my God.
And anywhere from 3 to 8,000 of those prisoners had died on the grounds.
Of course.
Wow.
Leading to a ton of hauntings.
And then in 1878 in October, there was a shipwreck where a steamboat, the express, ended up sinking.
Now, one of the crew on board was a man named Joseph Haney, which weirdly sounds like the most familiar name ever.
It really does.
Right?
So he was said to have rode to the shore to get help, but unfortunately he died in the attempt.
And when they found his body, he was buried after that.
He washed up on shore.
But one night, somebody staying inside of the lighthouse, woke up late at night to a knock on the door.
And when the person opened the door, he saw that there were puddles leading up to the door, like a bunch of puddles.
And he thought he saw a man walking back toward the bay, but the man just literally disappeared right
before his eyes.
And many people think that that was the ghost of Joseph Haney.
I also believe that.
Me as well.
So then a famous parapsychologist Hans Holzer, or Hans Holzer.
Hans.
He decided to head out to the lighthouse with a team of fellow paranormal investigators.
They recorded 24 different voices while they were.
there whenever voices come out of like EVPs freak me the fuck out oh yeah some people on these EVPs
were singing songs like super old songs like sea shanties probably yep like love it absolutely others
were just like talking to each other one of the recordings was a voice saying let us not take
objection to what they are doing oh my god isn't that so creepy oh i just got full chills let us not
take objection to what they're doing oh i like a bunch of like ghosts is plotting against you and one of them's like
No, it's okay. It's all good. Like, it's cool. And another voice, and it was a woman's voice, said,
this is my home. Oh. And that voice was believed to be the voice of Anne Davis, who was the wife of the first caretaker of this lighthouse.
Now, visitors at the lighthouse, they see Anne all the time. Well, like the ghost of her. She usually is standing at the top of the staircase, wearing a long blue skirt and a white blouse.
Oh, get it. People will see her all the time. She's so, I love that she's. She's so, I love that she's,
so like comfortable and flowy in the afterlife. Oh yeah, absolutely. She's growing that. I mean,
a blouse isn't like super comfy, but. Maybe it's flowy. She's chic. I'll give her that.
There you go. Now Hans and his team noted what other visitors of the lighthouse did too when they
stumbled across one room that had a incredibly foul smell. I knew it was smelly. It was smelly.
So Hans goes public with his findings at the lighthouse and he has this theory about the smell.
He believed that this smell came from all the quote unquote tormented
spirits that were kept there. Now apparently right after he made his findings public, the smell in
that particular area of the house, or of the lighthouse, just ceased to exist.
What? He goes public with his findings and the smell just stops.
Did they all get embarrassed? I don't know if they were like waiting to be recognized.
Wow. You know? Wow. Yeah. Crazy. Oh. Just like one day it's smelly. The next day it's not.
Oh, we're not done. So in the 70s, they had a seance there.
And during this seance, one of the most famous photographs associated with the haunting was taken, and I will definitely post it.
It shows Laura Berg, who served as Secretary of State in Maryland while she was living in the lighthouse, standing in the middle of the room.
She's in this picture, standing in the middle of the room, holding a candle.
And to her left, you see a man, like, leaning up against the wall.
He's wearing soldiers' clothing, and he just has a gun slung over his shoulder.
Stop.
But he's, like, kind of faded, so he, like, you can tell he's not.
there, but he's there.
Stop. Now, Laura said that she experienced a ton of shit while she lived at the lighthouse.
She'd hear loud footsteps outside of her room, like, walking around. And the footsteps were so
distinct. She felt like they were coming from somebody wearing boots, which soldiers boots.
Correct. I'm looking at the photo right now, and I'm like, I was finishing this up, this,
like, specific lighthouse around like 1130 at night. I'm, like, sitting in bed, like, furiously typing
this. And I was like, I have to.
look at that picture. Yeah. So I went and I looked at it and then I had like this really fucked up
weird nightmare. Oh, I hate it. That was horrible. But so while Laura was living there, she would also
hear like loud snoring, but she would look next to her at her husband and it wasn't him.
Ooh. And she'd be like, what the fuck? No. And then on one occasion, she had a woman named Helen
visiting her and Helen woke up in the middle of the night hearing somebody wailing her name.
Oh, nope. Nope. Nope. I'm out. No. I'm a head out. No. I'm a head out. I'm a head out. I'm a head out.
just like,
Helen.
Precisely.
No.
Like, imagine waking up in the middle of the night and hearing.
No.
No.
No.
No.
So scary.
No, I won't.
So scary.
I will not.
And you know what?
I know what that feels like, like minus the whaling.
But I used to hear people whisper my name at Mount Papa's house.
Ah.
So spooky.
So spooky.
But Laura said that she never, and this is how I felt living at Mount Puppas house.
And you've said it too.
Never felt threatened by any of these paranormal happenings.
And she even thinks.
that a ghost may have saved her life while she was living there.
Whoa.
So she was home alone one night in the lighthouse, and she wakes up in the middle of the night,
and there's all these weird lights, like, quote unquote, dancing over her bed.
Love that.
So she thought it might have been a reflection somehow of like a boat coming in,
but then she looked out onto the water and there were no boats coming in in the area.
So she's like, where is this light coming from?
She's trying to figure it out, trying to figure it out.
And then as she's standing there trying to figure out what the fuck is going on,
she gets this smell of smoke.
So she follows the smell downstairs and realize that there was a space heater that actually caught fire.
Oh, shit.
And it was like a pretty big fire.
It had spread from the electrical, like, outlet in the wall to the actual space heater.
Holy shit.
And if she hadn't woken up, she could have died in the fire and the notorious landmark would have burned to the ground.
Oh, my God.
And some people think that it was Anne Davis.
Being like, wake the fuck up.
Because I don't want my house to burn to the ground.
Yeah, this is my house.
Imagine.
Oh. Like I even, I like already knew this and I just got chills. Oh, I'm getting chilly willies everywhere.
For some reason, this last one that I'm about to tell you freaks me the fuck out. Oh, I'm excited.
So the last haunting in the area isn't in the lighthouse itself, but it takes place nearby and I definitely thought it was worth mentioning.
So a park ranger named Donnie Hammett was working on the Potomac River side of Point Lookout one day.
Shout out to the Real Housewives of Potomac. I knew that was coming. I knew you did. I knew you were going to just fly over that.
You can't say the word Potomac without recognizing those beautiful ladies and all their drums.
So he's working on the Potomac side of the river and it was March of 1977.
And he said while he was working, he noticed an older woman just like wandering in the area.
And he said she was looking down and kind of shuffling along.
And it looked like she was looking for something.
So his first thought was like, oh, did she lose her keys or something like that?
Yeah.
So he goes over to see if he can help her find what she's looking for.
and he said immediately he felt like he shouldn't have gone over to her like she was irritated that he
did and she said she was looking for a gravestone but she didn't need his help oh and he was like
okay so he walks away from her he's like she does not need my help i will take that as the answer
and he finishes up his work and he leaves pretty soon after he ran into her now when he looked around
she was gone and then he went out to the parking lot to actually leave and there was no car
is in the area. But he was like, she's gone. Her car isn't still parked here. And from where he was
standing at that whole point in time, he would have seen a car coming or going. So she hadn't left by
car. And then she's nowhere in the area. So he's like, what the fuck? So later on he's talking to the park
manager, Gary, or excuse me, Jerry Sword. And he finds out that there used to be an old family
cemetery right around the area where he met the woman. So the cemetery belonged to the Taylor family
and a woman named Elizabeth Taylor had been buried there.
But somebody had stolen her grave marker because of the name Elizabeth Taylor.
Yeah.
Obviously.
And it was later found at a local hotel.
But the graveyard to this day has never been found.
Stop.
Like there's public record that this graveyard existed.
But they can't find it.
So he, Donnie, actually went back with his mom with like metal detectors trying to find.
any like sense of some kind of anything and they couldn't find anything oh i want to find it i want to
find it so bad but to this day it's never been found what crazy oh that freaks me out so people think
that that woman was elizabeth taylor looking for her grave marker oh oh and maybe that's why she was
irritated she's like where the fuck is my grave she was like what like did you steal it right exactly
holy shit oh great i don't know why that's spooky the old woman ghost thing freaks me
No, that was spooky oaky in every way that you can be spooky uki.
A lost graveyard?
Yeah.
And that's the thing.
When you can't find a graveyard but you know it's there, like what?
And that's horrible.
How do you lose a graveyard?
Let's get some ground penetrating radar.
Let's go.
In there and let's do that shit.
We got a.
I got to know.
Everybody needs to know.
It's important.
Yeah.
I need to know now.
This is really important.
Wow, that's a crazy one.
That one was nuts.
That one gave me several cases of the chills,
which is not easy to do.
And just the king of lighthouses.
The king of light.
It really is, to be honest.
Yeah.
Wow.
Okay.
Well, the one that I'm going to follow up with is the Bolivar Point Lighthouse in Texas.
Tejas.
Hello, Texas.
Howdy?
So September 7th, this one begins with a hurricane.
Oh.
And a gnarly hurricane.
So this was September 7th, 1900.
A hurricane referred to as the great.
Galveston storm, which is still considered the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history,
by the way, and I didn't even know that this had happened.
I've never heard of this.
It hits south of Houston and thousands of people died.
Oh, wow.
Thousands.
And I found a really good NPR article about this that I will link in the show notes.
I also used the haunted lighthouses by Ray Jones, and it is insane.
So here we go. The Balaver Point Lighthouse, I hope I said that right. Because like I said,
pronunciations of towns. I understand. You probably want me to say it right. Towns are important.
Bollivar Point Lighthouse was built in 1852, but only 10 years later, the Confederates fucked it up again.
The Confederates are right in this story.
They are so wily. They're just ripping apart lighthouses.
Yeah, you can't be out here doing that.
You can't. So they ruined this lighthouse by pulling it apart to make weapons from the material.
Oh, okay. Now, luckily in 1872, it was rebuilt by a construction crew that was brought in from New Orleans, and it was 117 feet tall.
Whoa. And was built like a brick shit house. Like this thing was...
It was made to withstand a lot of wind, a lot of waves. It wasn't going anywhere. I wonder why.
And it still stands today. And actually, today, it looks really gnarly because it has rusted into a jet black color.
Yeah, it did. So it's so ominous. Sorry, remind me. The name.
again? It is the ball of our point lighthouse. I'm going to Google it. So in 1900, when the hurricane was
about to hit, the keeper was Harry Claiborne. And he was the keeper for 25 years. He began his post December 15th,
1894. And he was known as literally the best lighthouse keeper in the multiple places he had served.
Yeah, he was. He would like, he literally earned that title. Like he was that good. I believe it.
Now, throughout the week before this, everyone around Galveston was a little worried. They were
little on edge. There had been reports that a hurricane had literally leveled Trinidad across the
Caribbean. And after it had left devastation in its wake there, it was traveling across the
Caribbean. And in those days, no one knew where it was going next. Right. But there was a path to
them. It could happen. So the entire community was kind of getting ready to at least face, you know,
some of the winds and sailors were coming in telling stories about these like horrific waters they had just
faced out there when they were sailing through the Gulf. And still no one was totally ready for
this thing to hit dead on. Right. Because I think the like the likelihood of it hitting dead on
was very low. Okay. So they just weren't really thinking about it. So with all of these little hints that
it was coming that way and with the barometric pressure starting to drop all of a sudden out of nowhere,
it was like a lead balloon drop, the weather service and the media did put out a notice that said
hurricane coming. They didn't know how bad it would be. Because again,
And at this time, they didn't have radar.
Meteorologists existed, but they were very different than what they are now.
Of course.
Now, unfortunately, when this hurricane message came out, everyone ignored it.
They figured, like I said before, it was very unlikely that this hurricane was going to hit head on.
Even worse, people were gathering on the beaches and actually coming to the island from other places to see these giant waves that were coming from the storm off in the water.
Now, apparently a meteorologist from the Weather Bureau who was named Isaac Klein saw this.
Like, he noticed all these people gathering.
He was seeing people coming.
He was like, don't do this.
He knew that, like, something bad was happening here.
So he came to the beaches and was riding up and down the beaches in a horse-drawn carriage.
Icon.
Which, just picture that.
Icon.
Yelling for people to get inside and get to higher ground.
And still, he was ignored for the most part.
Oh, no.
And just the fact that, like, he even put himself.
in danger. Yeah, and he was just like trying to get everybody to listen. Now waves began raging.
I mean, they were huge anyways. That's what people were looking at. But now they were becoming just
walls of water. And soon it got so bad that they completely shattered the borderwalk.
Wow. They were so hard. So, so rough. So people started to panic. And hurricanes, you know,
they're not just like tooting in slowly. Hurricanes move fucking fast. When they come, sometimes it's
too late. If you're not already on your way out of there, it's
too late. It's coming. It's here. So most people had not cleared out in time. And now they're looking
for somewhere to save their own lives at this point because they know now they were not fucking
around. Right. Now, according to the NPR article about the storm that I mentioned before, it said,
quote, Survivors Road of Wind that sounded, quote, like a thousand little devil shrieking and whistling.
Oh, God. Of six foot waves coming down Broadway Avenue, of a grand piano riding the crest,
of one, of slate shingles turned into whirling saw blades, and of streetcar tracks becoming
waterborne battering rams that tore apart houses.
Whoa.
Yeah.
A woman named Catherine Vedder-Paul's, who was six at the time in that article said,
quote, The animals tried to swim to safety, and the frightened squawking chickens were
roosting everywhere they could to get above water.
People from homes already demolished were beginning to drift into our house, which still
stood starkly against the increasing fury of the wind and water. Well, enter Harry Claiborne,
the lighthouse keeper. Enter. He had made sure to keep that light burning for this exact occasion.
He, from his point in the lighthouse, could see that the wind and waves out there in the sea
were getting gnarly. So he was like, I got to be like a point of safety for people and for ships.
So he had actually got extra oil for his light so that it would remain.
shining brightly so that ships would be able to stop in Galveston Bay for safety.
Now, he was doing his job. He's like, I've got to save people. Yes. Now, the wind, and honestly,
his job is to save ships, but he ends up becoming like an absolute hero. Now, the wind and the waves
kicked into high gear, and hundreds of people were drowning at this point. Residents were feeling
there were like fleeing their homes and floods. They're trying to find higher ground. Meanwhile,
it was like a war zone. Like we said, the winds are blowing.
anything in everyone sometimes.
Dozens of people were actually decapitated by flying debris in these winds.
Oh my God.
Now,
suddenly these people running outside trying to find safety,
they begin to pound on the lighthouse door,
like the ball of our lighthouse door.
Claiborne immediately without a thought,
opened the door and allowed anyone who needed to come into that tower to come into that tower.
Yeah.
And remember,
you saw the picture of a lighthouse is a tall or thin building.
Now, the horde of people pushed into this tower.
And they have like a spiral staircase going all the way to the top.
Well, people were literally clinging to anything, like clinging to the staircase.
They were standing on top of each other's shoulders.
Over 120 people crammed in there that night.
Wow.
And that's a lot of people for a small space.
And they're all standing on top of each other.
And throughout the hours of being crammed in there on top of each other
and holding on for dear life sometimes, they were all crying.
screaming those children, women, men.
I mean, they were wailing as the storm went berserk outside.
That must have been so terrifying.
Hell.
Everyone was in pain.
They were all barely able to breathe.
It was like a thousand degrees in there now with all those packed in bodies.
And then the light burning.
People were throwing up on each other.
Like it was fainting, falling.
There were like muscles were all like breaking down because they're trying to hold people above them.
I mean, through all of it, Claybourne, Harry Claiborne,
and tried to comfort them all.
He had gone into town earlier that day,
and like he usually did as a keeper,
he would buy a month worth of groceries to live off of it for him and his wife.
Sure.
He gave everyone in that lighthouse food
and ended up using all of his rations, all of it on everybody else.
And after the storm had ended,
and everybody who finally left, which we'll get to in a second,
he continued to feed survivors with whatever he had left,
and he just told people, I'll figure it out.
This man.
When it came to, like, him eating.
Yeah. Wow.
Now, the winds reached up to 150 miles an hour that evening.
Dude.
Trees actually fell into the lighthouse, like onto the lighthouse.
The entire thing was shaking and rattling, but it stayed upright.
It never fell apart.
It never buckled.
It never busted a hole in it.
That's wild.
The next morning, the storm had finally gone out to sea after the
entire night of them being stuck in there.
They were all finally able to leave the lighthouse.
And when they opened the door, they were met with piles of bodies, all of whom had desperately
tried to enter the lighthouse for safety, but had failed once the door is closed.
And the hurricane had taken hold.
That must have been horrific to see.
And they said, like, the winds had stripped off all their clothes.
So it was just naked bodies lying everywhere of people, like, who had tried to climb the
lighthouse to get up to higher ground.
Like they said people were in trees. They were on roofs.
Oh, this is horrific.
They were piled outside of other structures. And Galveston itself was almost was like destroyed.
Yeah. And apparently at last count between 6,000 and 12,000 people were dead.
In one night. In one night. I just have like full like. And now you know why it's the deadliest natural disaster.
Of course. Yeah. Now according to that same NPR article, they said, quote,
knots of frightened of people frightened out of their wits,
crazy men and women crying and weeping at the tops of their voices were what they heard.
And they said,
somebody named Louise Bristol Hopkins,
who was seven at the time,
said,
it was a terrible time.
It really was.
I heard the stories of women with long hair who had been caught in the trees with
their hair and cut to pieces with slates that have been flying.
Oh.
Yeah.
Now,
martial law was declared and law and authorities were forcing men
to gather all the corpses and pile them onto ships so they could dump them in the Gulf for,
they didn't know what else to do.
Yeah.
But these bodies kept washing back on shore.
Oh.
And then they had to be lit in massive funeral pyre fires.
Stop.
Yep.
And also, just to put it out there, most of these men that had to, you know, get these bodies,
they were mostly black men and they were forced to do this awful job with bayonets at their back.
Are you kidding me?
Yeah, just as a little side note.
Of all the traumatic things that have gone down in this story,
and then you add that to it.
Forced to do it with bayonets at their back.
Like, you have to gather all these.
Now, Harry Claiborne, he went back to work the next night,
and he lit the lighthouse footlight for ships immediately.
I knew it.
And everything I read was like he must have been so exhausted, so traumatized.
And he just stayed up all night feeding these people.
He was trying to keep them,
and he just climbed those stairs all the way to.
the top and he went right back to work.
What a bad bitch. Now, according to most, if you are near Bolivar Point Lighthouse or the Galveston
beaches, you can hear whispers in your ear. No. And also, you can hear people crying and you can
hear people screaming for help. And sometimes they said, like, it's almost like putting a,
like a shell to your ear and hearing the ocean. It feels like it like engulfs you. Oh, I hate that.
And they said you'll hear it like as soon as you get close to that lighthouse or near the beaches,
you can hear like cries for help.
But they're everywhere.
Like people say it feels like they're swirling around you.
You can hear crying, screaming, wailing, like people saying like God help us and all this.
People go to these beaches a lot.
Well, the lighthouse is no longer actually like a workable lighthouse really.
Well, and it's like private property.
Now it was bought.
It was sold.
But people say especially during.
foggy or stormy nights, they see someone standing guard in the light tower. And many people
believe it is Harry Claiborne, tending the light and protecting people from a storm. Oh, we know.
It's Harry Clayboard. Ships also say they see the light during, they always see this light during
storms and fog. Like they, when they need help, that light goes on and they can see the light.
Now, during Hurricane Ike in 2008, people said they saw the light in the lighthouse, even though
there was no power. Oh, that's so funny. And yeah, and ships said they saw the light that night too.
It's so freaky and so beautiful. I know. It's like Harry. That's her in it. And just like
continuing to be a hero forever. Yeah. To like for infinity. And apparently in 2000, the Coast Guard
actually named a ship after Harry Claiborne. It took that long. Yeah. I know. I'm like,
it should have to look right? I was like, yeah. I get the, I guess the boat is stationed in Galveston and you can,
you can actually see it if you take the ferry that runs between Galveston and Port Bolivar.
Oh, cool.
And it's the Harry Claiborne.
There's also a memorial that's on the Galveston Seawall, and it's to commemorate that
1900 storm.
Oh, yeah.
And all the, what it says is the six to 12,000 people that died in it.
That is unreal.
But it is apparently a very heavy place, which I can imagine.
I would think so, yeah.
Because it's not even just the lighthouse.
The lighthouse was such a scene of like carnage, but also a scene of like heroic compassion.
Yeah.
All at once.
Yeah.
And then also it's just like that place is just rife with, I mean, the amount of death that
happened there and suffering is wild.
Wow.
Yeah.
And the picture of that lighthouse is so gnarly now because it's like jet black.
It's really cool, though.
I love it.
It's a cool lighthouse.
And it looks like it used to be like white and black like stripes.
I think it was white and reddish.
red, I think. Oh, was it red? I just all black and white photo. Strapes, stripes. But it rusted.
Yeah. Just kind of turned black. It looks really cool. But yeah, it's really cool. How symbolic.
I know. Wow. But Harry Claiborne, man. A true gem. The best.
He was Josh Saftee's muse for uncajams. For uncajal.
Uncajohns.
You got to. I had to speak that if you haven't heard of this.
You got to. A good job. A good job.
I have to figure out how to say this place in Oregon, if we could just pause for a second.
I think it's Yakutas.
Yacitas.
All right, I'm going to play this for you so that you can't tell me I'm wrong.
It's...
Yahats.
Yahats.
I hope that's how you say it.
So this lighthouse, the Hekata Head Lighthouse, is named after a Spanish explorer, Bruno di Hecata.
Love it.
Yeah.
So it was built in 1892, during World War II.
it was actually used as a military barracks.
And from 1970 to 1995, it was used as a satellite campus for Lane Community College.
Hell yeah, it was.
It had a very interesting history.
I was going to say, wow, a very varied history.
It reminds me of the mall in Fear Street.
It was like a summer camp, but also like a village where horrible things happened.
Also a place where they like, yeah, where they hanged a witch.
And then it's just a mall.
Yeah, then just a mall.
Makes sense.
And now it serves as a bed and breakfast.
Yeah, absolutely it does.
A haunted one.
Yeah, it does.
So there's really one main ghosts associated with this story.
So this one's kind of quick, but it's very interesting.
Now, the most famous ghost associated with this lighthouse is named Roo.
She apparently told a group of students that her name was Roo while they used a Ouija board
to ask questions.
What freaks me out, though, is that you could also like Roo a day.
So I'm like, ooh, yeah.
Is that what that means or is your name actually Rue?
But she seems to be a very nice ghost.
Oh, okay.
No one is exactly sure like who she is where she came from, but their best guess is that she was one of the keeper's wives. And she apparently had two children is what people say. And one of them, a baby drowned and died. That's terrible. And there's an unmarked grave on this property that lends itself to that theory. And they say a baby girl is buried there. Oh, stop. So tons of people who have stayed at the B&B have stories about Rue and so do the workers. One of the most famous
stories that you'll see if you look this up comes from a worker Jim Anderson. So he was working
in the attic one day cleaning the windows and he caught the reflection of a woman. And when he turned
around, he saw what he thought he did. But the elderly woman was not from this time period. She was
wearing a Victorian gown and she was like foggy like an apparition versus an actual person.
I wish you could see the hand motions that Asher was just making to be like foggy.
Foggy. Her hands just went back and forth.
like fog.
Kind of like I was like swimming a little bit, I guess.
So he yeeded himself out of there.
He was like, I will never go in that attic again.
Oh, damn.
You will never catch me up in that attic again.
You will catch these hands before you catch me up there.
Were you about to say that?
I was about to say that exact sentence.
That's amazing.
You could catch these hands before you catch the in that attic.
I didn't write it down, but I was about to say that.
So he was like, goodbye.
But unfortunately for him, like a couple of, like a couple of,
days later, he broke an attic window from the outside and was like, oh, shit. I'd be like,
well, there's that. Well, that's basically what he said. He repaired the window from the outside,
but he was like, someone else is going to have to go take care of that glass that's on the inside.
So nobody really took care of the glass. Like, I think they were just like, nobody wanted to go in
the attic. Yeah. So that night, workers sleeping in the house heard scraping noises coming from the
attic when one of them, and one of them finally went up there. And they were like, what the
fuck could this be? All of the glass was swept into one neat pile. Roo. And they think it was rude.
She did it. She was like, I'm sorry, I freaked you guys out. I didn't mean to scare you. Let me clean this up.
This could be dangerous. Let me wait until like 3 a.m. and clean this up. She had kids. She's like,
I don't want anybody having to go to the ER. Exactly. But apparently, she's, she's cleanly,
but she's also a trickster because people staying at the B&B will, like, lose things in their room.
And they'll go to the front desk and be like, oh, I had such and such.
Like, have you seen that?
And they'll be like, no, but it's going to turn up later.
Don't worry.
And they're like, like, what are you talking about?
So, like, literally people will lose things and they'll know that, like, say they have, like, a hairbrush on the dresser.
They'll find it the next day in the bathroom.
That's awesome.
Like, she just moves things around.
She's also said to open locked doors and just leave them wide open.
She's like, no, let the air go through.
Yeah.
She flickers lights.
She makes dishes in the kitchen rattle all about at night.
I'd do that.
And sometimes in the middle of the night, people will wake up and hear her screaming.
Oh, that's not as whimsical as the rest of these things.
And people think that this must be her, like, reliving the night when she found out that her baby had drowned.
Oh, that just hurt every part of me.
Yeah, so sad.
Oh, and she's just screaming.
screaming, wailing, and people will wake up and hear that.
Oh my God, I want a comfort root.
I do too.
I would love to hug her.
Damn.
She's also not a fan of change at the B&B.
On one occasion, they were having it repainted.
And at night, the fire alarms kept going off that night, like the first night that they
started painting.
So one of the workers was like, what the fuck is going on with these?
Like there's no fire.
And after making sure there was no fire or smoke or anything, he just took the batteries
out because he said, I got to go to sleep.
And even with the batteries off,
the fire alarms kept going off. She was like, stop fucking painting. Yeah, she was like,
wake up everybody. They thought it was her. Wow. One guest actually had the chance to have a slumber
party with Roo. She said that she woke up around 4.30 in the morning and felt a presence climb
into bed with her. Hey, girl. She said the present stayed for a few hours. And when she recalled what
happened, because the B&B has this notebook of like for people to write their experiences, like their
ghost experiences. Oh, I love that. And she, this woman wrote, quote, need I say, I feel strange about
this experience, but in a way, honored. She wrote, she wrote that she was concerned, but not harmed.
Oh my God, I love it. I love that she's like, I'm weirded out, but I'm also honored. I am concerned,
but I remain unharmed. She's like, I feel conflicting thoughts. I feel some type of way is really
That's what it comes down to.
And then some people say that there's like a ghost of a gray lady.
And some people are like, it's a totally different ghost.
But other people say that it's Roo and sometimes she just appears in a gray mist.
Yeah, maybe she's just like having a moment.
Yeah, she's just living.
Yeah.
Or not.
She's not.
She's unliving.
And she seems to be pretty much the main, the main haunt there.
Wow, I like Rue.
I love Rue.
But I feel really bad for Rue.
Yeah, I was like, I want to end it on Rue because like she seems so.
great, but it's also, like, really sad.
Yeah, but she seems friendly and she seems like she just like,
helpful.
She makes, you know, she sweeps up the glass when you fuck around.
Yeah.
But she's not into the change thing, which I get.
It's her house.
Yeah, she's like, you know what?
I know.
Yeah.
Wow.
She knows what she's doing.
That was a good one.
These are fun.
These are fun.
Guys, let us know if we want to like start doing these just every once in a while,
just throw one in.
Yeah.
When we all need just like a crazy, like different thing.
It's like spooky roads, but different.
Yeah.
Which is also we want to come back to that.
Yeah, we got to come back to spooky roads.
For sure.
But this could be another one of those that we just like randomly sometimes are like,
you know what?
How about haunted lighthouses today?
How about that?
So we kind of want to like hit every place that has a lighthouse.
So we'll try to hit everybody's.
Oregon, Maryland, and Michigan for me.
And I did Georgia and Texas.
Okay.
So we got like tons more.
Yeah.
And if you guys want to send them in, you can.
You can email us.
Oh, definitely.
And just say haunted lighthouses.
And if you have any experiences at these lighthouses, we can pair that with it, an almost like listener tail lighthouse vibe.
Yeah, because it's like the spooky roads thing where we like to include your personal experiences with these roads.
Yeah.
So if you want to do that, just send it to morbidpodcast.com and just put in the...
Like you do it to morbidpodcast.com.
I can't do these things.
I don't know why I suck.
I can't like, I cannot promote our email ever.
No, I don't even know.
Sometimes I'm like, find us on Twitter.
at a place.
Yeah, morbid podcast at gmail.com.
I am ancient.
But you know how you guys are like,
listener tales in the subject or spooky roads?
Just say haunted lighthouses.
Easy.
And we'll know that that's what it is.
Yeah.
But these are fun.
And I think it's like a, we're going to be like I, like I said before,
you're going to be getting more content this year in the next coming months.
So we want to be able to stretch out, stretch our legs into many different.
things. So this is just another thing that we'll be able to add onto the list. Yeah. And this was fun.
Because remember, you get more content. Content, content, content. Get ready for it. Content, content, content.
We hope you that keep listening.
That's what I was meant to say. All right. So we hope that you keep listening, especially after that.
Yeah. For real. And we hope you keep it weird.
But not so weird that you are haunting the lighthouse, but like maybe keep it that weird so we could keep the story going.
Yeah.
Bye.
Bye.
