MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - Ghost Town
Episode Date: November 21, 2024Today’s podcast will feature 2 stories about ghost towns. The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel, which is just called "MrBallen," and has been r...emastered for today's podcast.Story names, previews & links to original YouTube videos:#2 -- "Portlock" -- A ghost town with a very dark history (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2u2_q4tFp8)#1 -- "Ghost Town" -- A place so evil, it is illegal to go there (Original YouTube link -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLxVfVdr8-g)For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early
and all episodes ad-free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
Today's podcast will feature two stories about ghost towns.
The audio from both of these stories has been pulled from our main YouTube channel and has
been remastered for today's episode.
The links to the original YouTube videos are in the description.
The first story you'll hear is called Portlock and it's about a town in Alaska with a very
dark history.
The second and final story you'll hear is called Ghost Town and it's about an abandoned
town in an off-limits forest.
But before we get into today's stories, if you're a fan of the strange, dark and mysterious
Deliberate in Story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday. So if that's of
interest to you, the next time the follow button is playing an intense game of
online FIFA, wait until they take the lead and then go ahead and unplug their
Wi-Fi. Okay, let's get into our first story called Portlock. This holiday season, give your loved ones only the best from L.L. Bean. For 80 years,
L.L. Bean has been making their Scotch plaid flannel shirts the same way, better than everyone
else's. Their Scotch plaid is brushed on each side to create a smooth and cozy feel. And at
just $79, this long-lasting plaid is a perfect way to stay comfy all winter long. Give only
the best gifts from L.L. Bean at
Oakville Place, Georgian Mollenberry and CF shops at Don Mills.
I'm Afua Hirsch. I'm Peter Frankopan. And in our podcast Legacy, we explore the lives of some of the
biggest characters in history. This season we're looking at the life of the
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. For many people in the UK, he's a national hero. For others, he's a symbol of racist imperialism.
It's fair to say he is a complex and controversial character.
So almost exactly 150 years since his birth, we are exploring parts of his story you might
not be so familiar with.
How does his legacy hold up today? What do you think, Afewha? He is worshipped, provokes anger.
I actually think it's going to be a really challenging
and stimulating discussion for us to have.
I can't think of a figure who had more of a front row seat
at so many different chapters of the making
of the 20th century, so it's going to be fantastic.
Follow Legacy now wherever you get your podcasts.
Or binge entire seasons early and ad free on Wondery Plus.
Wondery Plus
Scattered across the North American continent are many ghost towns, places that used to be vibrant and alive that are now dead and abandoned. In these
places you can find old churches and buildings and schools that are usually
in a pretty significant state of decay. The reasons a town might die varies,
sometimes it's because a new railroad or highway is put in that bypasses the
town, or the town has just exhausted all of their natural resources which were
the original draw to the town. Mining towns has just exhausted all of their natural resources, which were the original draw to the town.
Mining towns are a good example of that.
Other reasons are wars, natural disasters, political wranglings, there's a whole bunch
of reasons why towns just suddenly stop existing.
But there's one ghost town in North America that has a really unique and very dark reason
for why it ultimately was abandoned, and that town is Portlock, Alaska. Portlock, which is also called Port Chatham, is located
on the farthest southwestern tip of the Kenai Peninsula. It's easily one of the
most beautiful areas in all of Alaska, but it also happens to be very remote.
And Portlock specifically, even by Kenai standards, is considered extremely
remote. You can only get there by boat or by bush plane.
The town was technically founded in 1787 when Captain Nathaniel Portlock of the Royal Navy
landed there, but it wasn't really turned into a real settlement until the early 1900s
when commercial fishermen built a cannery there.
By 1921, the town's fishing economy was doing so well that the US government believed they
would be the next major commercial fishing hub, and so they actually established a post
office there.
Everything seemed to be going great for Portlock until the 1930s, when rumors began seeping
out along the Kenai Peninsula that there was something wrong with Portlock.
Men from this cannery town were going missing at an alarming rate, and the few that were found again were always found dead and mutilated in a nearby lagoon.
Initially, the townspeople believed these were bear attacks, but the natives of the Kenai Peninsula that found out about what was happening in Portlock, they stopped by and they said those are not bear attacks.
Those are almost certainly attacks by a creature we call the nantina, which means half man half beast. And they are tall two-legged hairy creatures that
live in the forest right near you. Now of course this just sounds like folklore, but when you
consider the fact that from 1930 to 1950, dozens of Portlock residents disappeared in that forest or were
violently killed and then dumped in the lagoon right outside of the forest, it makes you
wonder what's in the forest.
But since none of the people who went missing were ever found alive again, there was never
any good description of what it was that was causing them to disappear in the first place.
Well, with the exception of one case.
In 1943, John Meyer, who was a resident of Portlock, was at his campsite and he was crouched down when he felt something leap onto his back and start pummeling his head and hitting him
on the side. He kind of went into the fetal position and then at some point his dog started
barking and caused whatever was on his back to get scared and run off. And so John, who's been badly beaten, rolls over and he looks towards the tree line and
he sees this enormous tall hairy man running into the woods.
And so John gets up and he stumbles his way into town to try to get help and he's able
to tell someone what happened to him before he ultimately succumbs to his injuries and
dies.
After the John Mayer incident, another group of portlocked men
were up in the forest doing some hunting when they discovered these enormous 18 inch long tracks and
they followed them to a clearing where it looked like there was this epic death struggle that
clearly two huge animals had gotten into a struggle here. There's blood everywhere, there's pieces of
what looked like a bear or maybe a moose, and then these tracks continued out of this clearing and went right up the mountain,
and the men did not dare follow those tracks to see whatever it was that emerged victorious
in this clearing. Even the Alaskan newspapers began speculating that something was off about
Portlock. This was more than just some crime being committed, that there's something happening there that we can't understand.
And so by 1949, when people were still going missing mysteriously in the forest, and then
other people were turning up dead and mutilated in the lagoon, the townspeople said, enough.
This is an unsafe place to live.
We don't know what's causing this, but we have to leave.
And then practically overnight,
the town evacuated, leaving behind most of their possessions. The only person that stayed a little
bit longer was the postmaster, because he had to wait for the post office to be shut down. And he
said it was horrifying that he would see things walking in the trees, and he would hear these
horrible sounds, and so he was eager to get out of there. And so in early 1950, he was allowed to go,
and then that was it. The population of Portlock went down to zero.
After they left, none of the people from Portlock
or any of their family members ever went back to Portlock.
So the only people that have really ever gone back to Portlock
are people that unfortunately wound up there,
like in the 1970s, when some fishermen got caught in in a storm and so they sought refuge in Portlock. But after setting up their camp,
they saw something huge walk past them in the treeline and it apparently was so terrifying
that they literally packed up their camp, went back in their boat, and then went back
out into the storm to avoid whatever it was they saw. Besides the fishermen, the only people that have gone to Portlock are people that want
to come face to face with whatever it is that drove the people out of that town.
But to put in perspective how few people do that, there's almost no modern photographs
or videos of Portlock.
But there is one very eerie modern photograph of this building that's right in the heart
of Portlock.
It's one of the very few buildings that didn't collapse, and it's located right next to the
forest where many of the men who went missing were last seen.
And it's also not far from the lagoon where many of the dead men and dead people that
were taken were found.
And even if you don't believe there's some nantina running around the forests of Portlock,
you have to understand that something was killing and taking these people, and to date, we still
have no idea what it was.
With Audible, there's more to imagine when you listen.
Whether you listen to stories, motivation, expert advice, any genre you love, you can
be inspired to imagine new worlds, new possibilities, new ways of thinking.
And Audible makes it easy to be inspired and entertained as a part of your everyday routine,
without needing to set aside extra time.
As an Audible member, you choose one title a month to keep from their ever-growing catalog.
Explore themes of friendship, loss, and hope with Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby
Van Pelt.
Find what piques your imagination.
Sign up for a free 30-day Audible trial and your first audiobook is free.
Visit audible.ca to sign up.
Hey, listeners.
Big news for true crime lovers.
You can now enjoy this podcast ad-free on Amazon Music with your Prime membership.
Listen to all episodes of my podcasts, Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries and Mr. Bolland's
Strange Dark and Mysterious Stories, along with a huge collection of top true crime podcasts
completely ad-free.
No more wading through cliffhangers or dealing with ads, because let's be honest, ads shouldn't be the most nerve-wracking part of true crime. To start your ad-free listening
journey, download the Amazon Music app for free or head to Amazon.com slash ballin. That's
Amazon.com slash B-A-L-L-E-N. Dive into uninterrupted true crime stories today.
The next and final story of today's episode is called Ghost Town. It was a bright summer day in 1906 and Dr. William C. Clark and his wife Harriet were
driving slowly through a beautiful part of northwestern Connecticut called Litchfield
County.
Litchfield is a rural, very hilly area with lots of winding country roads and the Clarks
were there to try to scout out an area to build their second home. The couple lived full-time in
New York City where Dr. Clark was an oncologist, which is a cancer doctor, and he was also a
professor at the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons. And while the Clarks' lives were
very exciting and fulfilling in the city,
they were also very hectic and chaotic and so the reason they had settled on Litchfield as the place
to look for a location for their second home is because it was the total opposite of the city.
It was quiet, it was peaceful, it was perfect. And so as this couple from New York City drove along these winding backcountry roads, they
eventually reached this beautiful covered wooden bridge, and after they drove across
it, they got this view up onto this mountainside off to their right, and high up on this mountain
was this huge shaded beautiful forest.
And they saw there was a road that appeared to kind of spider
off and go into these woods. Now the couple had no idea what was up there but
it was just so beautiful and they were immediately so drawn to it that they
decided they would go check it out and see if maybe there was a spot for their
second home in these woods. And so Dr. Clark took the car and he went up this
access road and very quickly as they began climbing up this hillside, the road became very bumpy and overgrown.
It was pretty obvious that not many cars were driving into these woods.
And so before they even reached the tree line, Dr. Clark had to pull the car over and park
it on the side of the road and then he and Harriet got out and then on foot they continued
up towards the forest.
And once the couple actually entered the forest, immediately the sunlight faded because the
canopy over their heads was so thick and the air became cool and refreshing.
And after walking for only a couple of minutes, the forest, which at first seemed very still
and quiet, suddenly became alive.
They could hear birds chirping and animals running around and insects buzzing, and then up ahead they
saw there was this field off to the side of the road that was full of all these wild apple trees
growing in all different directions, and as they got closer they saw there was just a deer right
in the middle of the apple trees eating apples directly off the branches.
And then just past all these apple trees, the couple began passing these huge beautiful patches
of roses and lilacs and bright yellow bitter tansy flowers that lined the road. And then before long
the couple was stepping over these babbling brooks and off in the distance they could hear the sound
of running water like fresh spring water coming down off the mountain and
Then as the Sun did begin to poke through the canopy above them
It almost looked like the forest was sparkling literally
this forest was sitting on a hillside and the hillside which was made up of rock had mica inside of it and
Mica is a kind of mineral that when sunlight hits it, it almost looks like it's shimmering.
And of course, there were the owls. As Dr. Clark and his wife walked farther and farther into this beautiful forest, they heard more and more owls hooting off in the distance. And to the Clarks,
this made the forest feel enchanted. It was like the owls were personally greeting them.
By the time the couple had turned around and begun heading back to their car, they had
already made up their mind that they were going to build their second home in that forest.
And so, after returning to their home in New York, they promptly put in the paperwork to
purchase 1,000 acres inside of that Connecticut forest.
And that forest had a name.
It was called Dark Entry, and it was named that because it looked like from the outside,
the forest was basically dark all the time.
There was shade cast on it from mountains nearby and then also the canopy
inside of Dark Entry is exceptionally thick. At one time there actually had been a town
inside of Dark Entry Forest, however all the people who had lived in that town were now all gone.
The only remnants of this town were a couple of crumbling stone walls and a couple of home
foundations that were scattered about the Dark Entry Forest floor.
The Clarks had seen some of these ruins as they walked along this overgrown path through
the forest, but they weren't concerned.
Instead, they felt like these ruins actually added some charm to the forest.
After the land purchase was finalized, Dr. Clark began looking for local builders in Connecticut who could help
him build this second home inside of Dark Entry Forest. But no matter how much money he offered
these local Connecticut builders, they all said no. Now none of them gave a straight answer to Dr.
Clark about why they were turning him down, so Dr. Clark just kind of assumed that you know hey
this project is not
huge, it's just one house, and the forest is pretty isolated and hard to get to, and so he thought,
you know, probably these builders think it's not worth the effort. But Dr. Clark was not discouraged,
he decided he would just build the house himself. After all, he was a very handy, competent guy who
had grown up on a farm in New Jersey Jersey and so he knew how to build things.
And so for the next several months Dr. Clark would travel from New York City to Dark Entry
Forest every weekend and he would build this home. First he cut down this massive swath of hemlock
trees on this one flat patch of his land and then with all this lumber he had cut down he built his rustic two-story cabin on
this flat part of his land and then nearby on this hilltop there was a freshwater spring at the top
and so he laid piping from the spring into his cabin so they could have fresh water and then at
the bottom of this nearby hill was this brook and Dr. Clark loved just standing and watching
this brook because inside of it were all these trout that would dart all around and and Dr. Clark loved just standing and watching this brook because inside of
it were all these trout that would dart all around and so Dr. Clark built a swimming pool
with beautiful mossy embankments right up against this brook so he could sit there and
watch the fish.
By Thanksgiving of that year, the cabin was done and so Dr. Clark and his wife Harriet,
they stayed at the cabin to celebrate the holiday.
And as they were sitting in their swimming pool watching the trout and listening to the
owls hoot off in the distance, they both agreed that this second home was like their little
piece of heaven.
So every summer from there on out and every major holiday that they could manage it, the
Clarks would travel to their home in dark entry forest and they would swim and
hike and relax and they'd watch the leaves on the mountainside turn from green to bright yellows
and oranges and reds. It was perfect. That is, until 1918. That summer, the couple was in their
second home in the forest when Dr. Clark was suddenly called back to New York to attend to
a medical emergency. Harriet was very
upset at the prospect of suddenly being left alone in this cabin in the middle of the forest by herself
for who knows how many days and so when she dropped her husband off at the nearby train platform,
she made him promise that he would come back soon and he said he would. And then Dr. Clark got on
the train, it took off, and Harriet just stood
there with her arms crossed, watching it as it chugged along off into the distance.
From his comfortable seat on that train, Dr. Clark had no idea that his wife was about to endure
a nightmare while he was gone. When the Clarks bought their 1,000 acres in the Dark Entry Forest, they did virtually
no research on the forest or the surrounding area.
If they had, they very likely would not have purchased that land.
You see, the town that used to be inside of the Dark Entry Forest that was now just ruins
that the Clarks saw when they first walked around inside of the Dark Entry Forest that was now just ruins that the Clarks saw when they first
walked around inside of the forest was abandoned for a very specific reason.
It was cursed.
At least that's what the locals say.
And in fact, that was the reason why no builders in the area were willing to go with Dr. Clark
into the forest to go build his house, because they were too scared to go anywhere near the
ruins of this
cursed town.
This town, which was known as Dudley Town, was first settled sometime in the 1740s.
At first it was just a couple of people and a couple of small structures, but pretty quickly
30 families had moved in and it was a thriving little town.
But as the 1700s came to a close, terrible things began to happen
to residents of this town.
First there was the Carter family. They moved to Dudleytown in 1759 and shortly after arriving
there, six members of their family all died suddenly from cholera. The remaining branch
of the Carter family was so grief stricken
from their losses that they left Dudleytown and went to New York where they resettled.
But almost immediately after getting set up there, Native Americans raided their property
and massacred them and the three people that survived this massacre were three of the kids
and they were all kidnapped and taken away.
In 1792, a Dudley resident named Hollister died suddenly. Now we don't know if he fell off a roof or if he was murdered, no one really knows,
but what we can agree on is that his untimely death happened in the home of a man named Tanner.
And Tanner, following Hollister's death, suddenly just began obsessively talking about these
strange creatures he was seeing out in the woods at night, kind of roaming around the
dark entry forest.
And he talked about it all the time and nobody listened to him, and eventually Tanner went
insane and his daughter had to care for him for the rest of his life.
And while Tanner was slowly losing his mind, his next door neighbor named Abel also began reporting that he was seeing weird creatures roaming around the tree line all around the town.
And as Abel continued to report seeing these strange creatures lurking in the shadows, he too slowly went mad and had to be cared
for until his death.
In the early 1800s, a famous Revolutionary War hero, General Herman Swift, who lived
in Dudley Town, lost his mind shortly after his wife was struck by lightning, and then
in 1813, an unknown epidemic rolled through Dudley Town and killed many of its
residents.
After that, more and more residents of Dudley Town either died suddenly or died mysteriously
and also more and more residents began coming forward with stories about having seen these
strange shadowy creatures moving around the treeline at night.
By about 1900, all the Dudley Town residents had either died or simply just left, abandoning
their homes, except for one family, the Brophy's.
But in quick succession, the Brophy family's sheep all died, then the mother died of tuberculosis,
then the two sons were accused of theft in a nearby
town and then they just disappeared, leaving one person, John Brophy, the father.
But the Brophy family home burned to the ground and so John, who was overcome with grief,
just wandered off into the forest and was never heard from again.
At that point Dudley town officially became a ghost town, no one lived there.
And it was at that point in 1906 when Dr. Clark and Harriet had their beautiful summer's
day walk through the forest and discovered where they wanted to build their second home. So, fast forward back to 1918 and Dr. Clark, he's on his medical emergency leave to New
York, it winds up being very quick, he's back on a train within 36 hours and he pulls into
the station right near Dark Entry Forest and he's expecting to see Harriet waiting on the
platform for him.
But when the train rolled into the station, she wasn't there.
Now Dr. Clark was not a superstitious person, but for some reason when he didn't see his
wife there, he just felt like something was off, there's no reason she wouldn't have
come out here to greet him, I mean she was worried about being all alone in the cabin
and she knew he was going to be arriving at that moment.
And so, feeling a little bit panicked, Dr. Clark left the train station and on foot made
his way over to the dark entry forest.
And when he got there and began walking on that overgrown road path that led to his house,
immediately as soon as he was within the shade of the trees, he began hearing these owls
hooting very loudly off in the distance.
Now normally, the sound of these owls hooting made him feel welcome, but this time he felt scared. He felt like
something was wrong up ahead and so he began jogging through the forest and
it's very dark and all he can hear is the sound of these owls and it's getting
louder and louder and louder and then finally he reaches the clearing where
his property is and at this point it's a cacophony of owls hooting
practically right on top of him.
And he looks up towards his house up on this hill
and he sees the front door is slightly open.
And so now with his heart racing,
wondering what's going on with his wife,
Dr. Clark runs up to his front porch,
he gets to the door and he flings it open the rest of the way.
And then right before he stepped into his house,
this sudden high-pitched noise began up on the second floor inside of his house.
And it was so startling to Dr. Clark that he just froze where he was.
And so suddenly it's so loud from the owls all around him in the woods behind him, and
whatever this noise is, that he just stood there unsure what to do.
And so as he's sitting there getting the courage up to go investigate his house,
he realizes what this high-pitched noise is. It's the sound of maniacal insane laughter coming from the second floor.
Sensing his wife had to be in danger, the doctor charged up the nearby steps up to the second floor and he could tell this
laughter, this high-pitched laughter, was coming from the master bedroom. And so he ran down the short
hallway, he got in front of the closed door that led into the master bedroom, he
slowly opened it up and there in the back corner of his room was his wife. She
was on the ground, rolled up in a ball, facing the door, her hands were clenched
in fists, her eyes were open and unblinking and her mouth was open wider
than was humanly possible.
And as he's staring at his wife wondering what's going on, he realizes this insane
high-pitched laughter is coming from his wife!
But it doesn't even look like it's coming out of her, her chest is just heaving, her
mouth is staying open and the laughter is just coming out of her!
And so the doctor just stood there watching his wife who's staring directly at his eyes and finally he just got so scared he turned and he ran.
During Dr. Clark's 36 hours he was away in New York, something happened to his wife.
We don't know what it was, but it caused her to lose her mind. The only thing
she would talk about was the strange creatures she saw out in the forest.
By some accounts, Harriet spent the rest of her life in a mental asylum. By other accounts,
she went back with Dr. Clark to New York where she took her life.
Today, Dudley Town is not only still abandoned, but it is also illegal to visit.
However, people do still sneak into Dudley Town
and walk around the ruins,
and many of them have reported feeling these pockets
of cold air where there shouldn't be cold air,
and also some others have said, as they've been walking,
they've felt phantom hands slap them and push them.
Some have said they've taken photographs inside of the Dark Entry Forest near Dudley
Town and they've captured strange shadowy figures that they couldn't see with their
naked eye.
The famous paranormal couple, Ed and Lorraine Warren, shot a special series in the 1970s
inside of the Dark Entry Forest and
they declared the area around Dudleytown was demonically possessed.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin Podcast.
If you enjoyed today's stories and you're looking for more bone-chilling content, be
sure to check out all of our studios' podcasts, not just this one, but also Mr. Bollin's
Medical Mysteries, Bedtime Stories, Wartime Stories, and Runful.
Just search for Bollin Studios on any podcast platform and you'll find all of them.
If you want to watch hundreds more strange, dark, and mysterious stories,
just head over to our YouTube channel, which is just called Mr. Ballin. So that's gonna do it,
I really appreciate your support. Until next time, see ya. Hey Prime members, you can binge 8 new episodes of the Mr. Ballin podcast one month early
and all episodes ad free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today.
And before you go, please tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey.
If you're listening to this podcast, then chances are good you are a fan of the strange,
dark and mysterious. And if that's the case, then I've got some good news. We just launched
a brand new strange, dark and mysterious podcast called Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries. And
as the name suggests, it's a show about medical mysteries,
a genre that many fans have been asking us to dive into for years,
and we finally decided to take the plunge and the show is awesome.
In this free weekly show, we explore bizarre, unheard of diseases,
strange medical mishaps, unexplainable deaths, and everything in between.
Each story is totally true and totally terrifying.
Go follow Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries
wherever you get your podcasts.
And if you're a Prime member,
you can listen early and ad free on Amazon Music.