The Tape Library - Archive of the Paranormal & the Unexplained - The Horrifying Legends of Portlock, Alaska
Episode Date: February 23, 2024Why did they leave? Let’s explore one of the most infamous ghost towns in north America. This is the terrifying story of Portlock/Port Chatham in Alaska. A town that is home to legends of a Sasquatc...h style creature known as The Hairy Man, as well as a whole host of ghost stories and other strange legends. Do you have a supernatural story to share? Drop me an email at thetapelibrary@protonmail.com You can check out The Tape Library in video form at www.youtube.com/thetapelibrary https://www.tiktok.com/@thetapelibrary Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/people/The-Tape-Library/100094332411836/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thetapelibrary Archive of the Paranormal, the strange and the unexplained. The Tape Library brings you the creepiest stories, to keep you horror junkies up all night. True scary stories of ghosts, cryptids, UFOs and true crime. Additional footage and audio from Evanto, Singularity, Midjourney and Pexels. All other footage used under fair use. CHAPTERS 00:00 Nantinaq/The Hairy Man 08:49 Alaskas Playground 18:23 Seeing The Hairy Man 20:23 Portlock Ghost Stories 22:33 The Portlock Murders 27:41 What Really Happened? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the snowy peak of Mount McKinley, to the sapphire waters of Prince William Sound, nearly recovered from last year's spill.
Come visit Alaska.
Back in 1973, a group of friends were out deep in the Alaskan wilderness.
They were well prepared, and had planned a few days of hunting and hiking on the Kenyre Peninsula, a large but sparsely populated area of the state.
Their names were Ed, Dennis and Joe, free capable and experienced outdoorsmen.
They were exploring an area known as Dogfish Bay, at the very bottom of the peninsula,
when the weather took a turn for the worse.
Rain and high winds battered the trio, and the dark clouds overhead told them
that there was no way they were sailing out of the bay on that day.
They set up camp and prepared themselves to be here for some time.
A rather uneventful evening followed, and all three soon found themselves ready to sleep,
in the hope of being able to wake up early the next morning and see the storm long gone.
While the rain battered the sides of their tent, they were well equipped for the harshness of the Alaskan weather,
and soon slipped into a comfortable sleep.
That was, until 2 a.m.
Ed was awoken by his friend Dennis,
squeezing his leg.
Ed opened his eyes to see Dennis looking down at him.
His friend looked concerned.
Dennis raised his finger to his lips,
signalling for Ed to keep quiet.
And that was when Ed heard it.
A heavy crunch of branches just outside their tent.
Immediately Ed's mind went to the idea that a bear was outside.
But as the pair listened intently,
it began to sound less,
like an animal. It sounded like it was walking on two legs, heavy, deep footsteps. But the
slowness made it feel like whatever was outside was trying to creep around. The footsteps
appeared to be moving around directly outside their tent, circling them. The men held their
breath when the steps stopped right near the door of the tent they waited patiently but the sounds had just ceased they didn't hear anyone walking away it just went silent after some time of sitting there too nervous to step outside and see if anyone was out there fatigue from the day's hike finally got the better of them and they fell back asleep
In the cold light of day their reactions felt silly.
The pair barely mentioned it and decided not to bother telling Joe.
An animal, a bear or a moose, had likely wandered into their camp,
and when it realised there was no food, it simply wandered off quietly into the night.
But something about it still lingered in their minds.
The weather had improved, but still wasn't ideal for them to sail out of the bay.
so they prepared themselves for another night.
They told Joe they were worried about bears in the area,
so they made sure their rifle was loaded
and a flashlight was at hand before going to sleep their night.
At 2.30 a.m., Ed was once again gently nudged awake
and saw Dennis looking down over him, his eyes wide in terror.
Ed glanced around to see Joe sat up.
clutching the rifle in his hands, looking equally terrified.
The footsteps were back,
and had already been circling the three men for several minutes.
Yet again they noticed it sounded like a man walking,
but whoever it was must be big.
The footsteps circled the tent repeatedly,
until it once again stopped,
what sounded like a few feet back,
from the entrance to their tent.
After silently gesturing to one another,
the free men plucked up the courage,
and with Joe leading with the rifle,
and Ed over his shoulder with the flashlight,
the three men burst from the tent.
But no one was there.
All they were met with was the darkness
of the Alaskan forest,
and an eerie silence.
The next morning they investigated the camp
but could find no tracks of any kind.
Unhappily, they were forced to spend a third night camped in the bay.
This time they spent the majority of the night awake,
waiting for the visitor to return.
But they never did.
The trio crawled out of the tent at dawn,
realized the bad weather had completely passed over
and quickly packed up their belongings.
Rather than heading to their next destination, the free men quickly returned home instead.
They never spoke about their experience.
How could they explain it to anyone?
They heard some heavy footsteps, but no one was there.
They were cold, wet and tired.
The winds and rain were bashing their tent all night.
Maybe it was just their minds playing tricks on them.
or something explainable.
It wasn't until six years later that Ed found himself
with a copy of an old Alaskan sporting magazine
from a few decades ago.
He was flicking through when an article caught his attention.
It was about the area he and his friends had sought refuge in
all those years ago.
The article spoke about how the area was once a thriving fishing village
and that the cannery had been opened there.
but that a number of residents were fleeing the area, slowly turning the village into a ghost town.
The reason? Workers at the cannery had apparently started to go missing in the area surrounding the village.
Bodies had apparently been discovered.
No one knew why it was happening, but the native spoke of a large hairy man who lived deep within the woods.
It was seemingly enough for the workers to flee the once thriving town.
with armed security even being deployed to bring the seafood workers at the fish process implant out.
The article was dated 1935. The story was only referencing the first time there was a mass exodus from this area.
But it wouldn't be the last. Ed's hands were shaking as he read the article.
Had he and his friends encountered this thing in the woods, if they had stepped out of that tent just to the
few moments earlier? Would he even be alive to be reading this article?
Welcome to the tape library. Tonight's episode was intended to be a series of short stories,
exploring the history and urban legends surrounding several infamous ghost towns.
But I started writing the first section up and then it kind of spun into an episode all of its own right.
If you still want me to make an episode exploring different ghost towns,
towns. Then let me know in the comments below and I'll get to that one soon. I initially
dismissed this story as not really being anything that interesting. But the more I got into it,
the more fascinated I got. It really is a great mixture of traditional folklore and modern-day urban
legends, all surrounding a very real mystery. Tonight we're getting into cryptids,
unexplained deaths, ghostly apparitions, one-eyed tribes.
and the creation of one of the most infamous ghost towns of all time.
This is a wild tale when it takes place deep in the Alaskan wilderness.
I think this will be a fun one.
So get yourself a warm drink, dim the lights and get comfortable.
This is the horrifying legend of Portlock Alaska.
Portlock Alaska is a story has really gained a lot of popularity over the last few years.
On paper it's such a compelling haunting tale.
A small village somewhere out deep in the Kenai Peninsula, surrounded by dark, unforgiving forests.
It's the perfect setting for a scary story.
And that's exactly what you get from it.
In 1950 the entire village was left empty.
The story goes that numerous people were turning up dead in the area,
and the entire village fled in terror.
because of what the locals referred to as the hairy man.
It was claimed this man was responsible for the mangled bodies that were showing up in the lagoons,
washed down from the streams that went deep into the trees.
There is even a short story that appeared in a book in the 1970s,
but it's apparently a much older tale that has been passed around by the natives in the area.
There is a caveman in Portlock.
The caveman is tall
The caveman is hairy
The caveman is a real person
He didn't want to live with people
He went to live in the forest
Soon his clothes were worn out
So his body became hairy
Soon his shoes were worn out
So his feet became big
He did not see anyone
He did not talk with anyone
Soon he forgot how to talk
He talked by whistling
He can see you before you see him
He will not harm you
He is like a big bear
If you bother him
He will bother you
This is the story of the caveman
Of Portlock
The story of Portlock
Begins in 1786
When Nathaniel Portlock
The Captain of the British Royal Navy
Found himself sailing through the area
He wrote fondly of the area to the south of the Kenai Peninsula, making note of the abundance of natural resources that the area offered.
Just a few years later in 1791, a commander by the name of George Vancouver explored the area, naming the bay after his ship, the HMS Chatham.
This leads to some rather confusing name in of the region. It appears to be referred to as both portals.
Port Chatham and Port Lough, interchangeably by people.
Some have suggested that the bay is called Port Chatham, or the town was Port Lough.
Others claim that the area actually consisted of two very small towns next to each other.
While this doesn't matter too much, I think this naming confusion just goes to show the level of official structure that was in place within this community.
Over the years, people slowly headed towards the Portlock area to try and to try and.
utilised the abundance of natural resources that Captain Portlock had written about.
The peninsula was home to many Native Americans, but interestingly the Portlock area specifically
had been left mostly uninhabited and untapped for hundreds of years. In one of the stranger
tales from the area long before Portlock was officially established, a hunting party was said
to be out on the waters, not far from the area on a small canoe.
Having not seen any other human beings for days, they were a little surprised to see a similar
boat with another hunting group, paddling along the water not too far in front of them.
The hunters rode faster to try and catch up to speak with the other hunters.
But as soon as they grew close, the other boat appeared to be attempting to evade them.
This strange occurrence only made the hunters more determined, and they rode as fast as they
could to catch up with the other boat.
But when they finally did, they apparently saw something that shocked and confused them all.
The men in the other boat initially refused to look at the hunters, shielding their faces in
the darkness.
The hunters expressed that they meant no harm and simply wanted to greet them, and talked to
some other people, having been alone for so long in the wilderness.
The men turned to face the hunters, who clearly,
claimed that they all had a single eye in the centre of their foreheads.
The cyclops men claimed to be from a nearby village, hidden away deep in the forests surrounding Portlock.
They said they did not associate with the tribes in the area due to being mistreated for their unusual appearance.
The two groups apparently trade supplies and then bid farewell to one another.
No reports of a one-eyed tribe were ever made in the area again.
but I thought it was a fascinatingly weird legend that adds to the general strange fill of the area.
It wasn't until the early 20th century that Port Lock was officially established.
An American fishing company brought a fleet of boats to fish the mostly calm seas around Port Chatham
and soon realised they could set up shop here for a considerable amount of time.
A cannery and fish processing plant were opened up, mostly to prepare and package sound.
But the community quickly grew, seeing a coal mine, sawmill, logging companies and fur sellers, all popping up throughout the village's short life.
A school and post office were also opened. Port Lock had very quickly become an active and bustling outpost.
Many of the workers were local Aleut natives.
Most of the native tribes that reside in Alaska apparently have tales of creatures that resemble what many in the US,
would refer to as Bigfoot.
In the area surrounding Port Lock, the creature is known as Nantanok.
There is some debate about what that name would translate into in English.
But interestingly, it's very similar to a name given to a similar folkloric creature
by Alaska's Dinaina people.
Their version is called Nantina, which chillingly translates to,
The Ones Who Steal Us.
Stories of a wild, hairy half-man, half-beast have plagued the area long before the settlement of Port Lock was officially opened.
Although as this is mostly just oral history, stories of the creature have either been lost or walked with time.
No definitive description of what it looks like or how it will behave is seemingly available.
In some versions of the legend, the hairy man as is often called, isn't an animal at all.
but a man who has somehow transformed into a beast of some kind.
The recurring parts of the story, however, always centre around it being very large,
walking like a man, and covered head-toeing fur.
If such a thing were to exist anywhere in the world, the Kenai Peninsula,
an area of Alaska that has been known to produce exceedingly large bears,
and gives miles and miles of thick, dense, uninhabited,
forest to hide in would likely be an ideal candidate. Many of the residents of Port
Locke in the early 20th century would have passed these stories off as simply native folklore,
a way to convince children to not venture out into the forests that were likely full of very
real world dangers, and those dangers were, often large and very. This all changed in
2005, however. The exact timeline of events in Port Lock is tricky to get definitive information,
on it. But seemingly, just five years after the official creation of the town, a number of people
had gone missing in the wilderness surrounding the area. And this shouldn't be that surprising in some
ways. Alaska is a dangerous place, especially in such an isolated area in the early 1900s.
However, according to the legend, this wasn't just the case of people going missing. A number of
number of bodies were found, including dismembered limbs, washing up on the shores of the
lagoons. Apparently all of the native workers in the fish processing plant walked off the job
that year, claiming they were leaving because Port Locke wasn't a safe place. Something was in the
woods, something that was killing people. Fearing they would be next, the workers quickly departed.
Apparently the fishing company were concerned enough.
to send armed security, to escort the workers out of the area.
This was a story that Ed would read about in a magazine decades later,
and would mark the first, but not final, mass exodus from the town.
After a year or two, the workers mostly returned to the town,
but the whispers of something living in the woods continued.
Much as the local natives had for so many years,
parents began not to let their children play alone too far from the drive,
dwellings and main area of the town. In 1923, a portlock resident reported a direct sighting of the
creature that lived in the woods. Sergius Moonin was 16 years old at the time and was walking
along the shore with his girlfriend to check the fish traps that have been left out overnight.
As they were walking, the pair heard what they described as a piercing, whistling sound. There was so loud,
but in intense, it caused their ears to ring. Whistling sounds were something that the
Nantinoch was said to produce. Obviously aware of the legends that surrounded the area,
Sergius's girlfriend said they should leave immediately. However, just one week later, the pair
were walking towards the creek again, when they heard the sounds of footsteps. Loud,
clumping sounds in the sand, coming from just over the ridge in front of them.
The pair carefully crept up to the edge, and there they claimed they saw it.
A large, hairy creature walking along the beach.
Sergius claimed it was carrying something that looked like a branch or a club of some kind.
His girlfriend almost screamed as she was overcome with fear from the sight of it,
but he quickly placed his hand over her mouth.
They watched the creature walk off into the distance,
before disappearing into the tree line.
They rushed home to tell their parents what they had seen,
but none of them believed them.
Around this time, the Anchorage Press started reporting stories about the area.
Rumors were spreading that a similar creature
had been spotted hanging around the entrances to one of the mines,
and that trees had been found uprooted and thrown to the ground,
or even placed back into the ground.
upside down. But the hairy man living in the forest wasn't the only strange tale that appeared around
Port Lock at this time. The area is often described as being haunted or housing some kind of evil
within it. Although specifics about what exactly that means were not really available.
One native woman from the area spoke of a mysterious apparition of a woman who would appear
and disappear on the cliffs that surrounded the bay.
She was said to have a long, flowing dress, dark hair, and a pale white face.
Another fascinating little ghost story from the area comes from a local fisherman.
He had just moored up his boat and was walking along the docks as the day turned to dusk.
The dock was deserted that evening, as most of the boats had already come in for the day.
He did however spot three children
As he walked to grab a cart to unload his boat
The children all had their backs to him
As he passed
So he never saw their faces
They all appeared to just be looking blankly
Forward at the sea
Not making a sound and barely moving
Their feet gently dangling in the water
The fisherman greeted the children as he passed
but they didn't even acknowledge him.
After getting his cart at the end of the dock,
the fisherman, likely tired and grumpy,
from a long day's work,
decided he was going to lecture the children
for being rude
and not returning his greeting.
However, as he turned back, he realised
the dock was empty.
There was nowhere they could have gone
rather than jumping in the water.
Only seconds had passed,
since he last saw them.
There was no sign of them anywhere.
The fisherman claimed he had never seen the children before,
and he never encountered them again.
In 1931, things would take a darker turn,
with multiple deaths being reported in the area once again,
the most famous of which is apparently that of a man named Andrew Kamluck.
Andrew was a logger, working just a short walk away from the settlement.
He was alone when the incident happened, so what exactly took place we will never know.
He had spent the day chopping down trees with his axe, but he never returned to his home that evening.
The following day a search party was sent out into the forest, something that was seemingly becoming fairly common for the residents of Portlock.
Blood was found splattered around the area. Andrew's body located about 10 feet further away.
as though he had been launched in that direction.
His head all but caved in.
Next to him, dented and blood-soaked,
was a large piece of logging equipment,
something that no man would be able to pick up and use his weapon.
But apparently, someone did.
Around this same time, a prospector had apparently been heading up into the forest each day alone,
digging for gold.
One day he just didn't come back.
Again, a search party was sent out, track him down.
But unlike Andrew Kamluck, no signs of the unnamed prospector were ever found.
It was like he just vanished into the wilderness.
Nearly a decade later, a man named Tom Lawson, the owner of the local sawmill,
woke up early and stepped into the cold Alaskan air one morning.
He headed down the path from his cabin to the nearby stream to check his fish traps.
Still half awake, he was quickly jolted into reality
when he approached the creek and saw what appeared to be a bear
standing over one of his traps with its back to him.
This had become something of a common occurrence for Lawson.
His fish will repeatedly be impinched by the animal
and he was pleased to have finally caught it in the act.
before he could leave to go and grab his rifle however
Tom noticed something strange
the creature was holding the trap in one hand
and reaching into it with its other
specifically he zeroed in on that detail
its hand
not poor
he watched it hold the fish up to its mouth
before devouring the whole thing
this was no bear
Lawson became convinced
this was the creature
he had heard so many tales about
and quietly retreated back to his cabin.
This creature was potentially responsible
for the deaths of multiple people in his small community
and he had a chance to be the hero
that not only brought it down
but could prove to the world that whatever the hairy man was
he really did exist.
He grabbed his rifle and then quickly rushed back down the path to the stream.
It was still there.
hunched over the trap, eating another fish.
Lawson managed to creep up relatively close to the creature.
Close enough that he felt he could make the shot.
But as he clicked the hammer back, the creature spun around,
locking eyes with the man.
It was at this point Tom, however, got a look at its face.
It's all too human face.
A wave of compassion here.
hit Lawson. Unsure how the creature would react, he kept his rifle trained on it, as he backed
slowly up the path. He turned to run back to his cabin when he looked over his shoulder back at the creek,
and the hairy man was gone. Throughout the 1940s, various rumours of local hunters going missing
in the forest continued to spread. There were reported sightings of tracks, some as large as 18
foot in length. No one knows what exactly happened in 1949, but something took place that
apparently saw the community give up on Port Lock once and for all. It is said that almost
overnight, pretty much the entire population of the town, packed up and left, leaving only
the postmaster behind, who stayed alone in the post office for an entire year more, but for
himself giving up and leaving. The last remaining system,
isn't a portlock left and no one would ever call the town home ever again. Nature has since
reclaimed the place, leaving behind just remnants of a once thriving fishing community. This is the commonly
reported story of Portlock and Port Chatham, but how much of it really happened? The official story of
what brought about the abandonment of the town is much more mundane. Alaska Route 1 was created.
and gradually settlement started popping up on the opposite side of the peninsula, closer to the highway.
Port Lock was isolated and difficult to get to, making it financially a much more challenging location,
so a lot of the industries simply moved to be closer to transportation.
What remains of the village itself is still the property of the village of Manuelic,
and there has been talk in recent years about reopening Port Lock, but nothing seems to be.
to have come of it. As for the unexplained deaths, records of these taking place are essentially
non-existent. Larry Baxter, who wrote one of the only books available in the Portlock
Mystery, was able to find records of Andrew Kamluck. So it does appear he at least existed and lived
in Portlock. However, no records of his death have apparently been discovered. The problem is,
is that were dealing with events that took place in an isolated region nearly 100 years ago.
Furrow records were not being kept.
Many of the former residents of the village simply became separated out into various other nearby villages,
all but disappearing from Trace.
Melania, Ellen Kell, was the woman responsible for telling the tale of the pale, ghostly woman on the cliff.
She claimed she was born in Port Chatham.
But at a young age, her parents became terrified of the repeated attacks by the Nantanoke and fled the town.
Although, even this has been put into doubt as close family members of Melania claimed she made the story up.
We don't even know for certain if the town was virtually abandoned overnight, as was reported.
or if it simply started to slowly fade away
before a final large group departed at the end of the 1940s.
The unreliability of the events that took place in Port Lock
don't really take away the fascinating aspects of the story for me.
It feels like the perfect mix of old world folklore
with modern day progression,
as though people had brought their modern sensibilities to an area
they did not welcome them.
Were the strange tales of a creature living in the forest true?
Or were the apparent deaths simply the result of people falling prey
to the very natural dangers of Alaska?
Had the Nantinoch really called the area home for centuries?
Or was it simply a way for the Native Americans to keep their children safe?
The events of the portlock abandonment predates the cultural fascinating,
with Bigfoot that sprung up particularly in America across the following decades.
Over time, Port Locke has become a source of fascination for those interests in improving the existence
of the creature. But due to its remote location, very few expeditions have taken place.
A number of people have claimed to see the hairy man over the years, but no notable evidence
has been captured beyond recordings of odd sounds at best.
And the area has also become something of a hotspot for apparent UFO sightings,
with numerous reports of strange lights in the sky, having been spotted.
We may not know what actually happened in Port Lock,
but if the plans to reopen the village do go ahead,
maybe we'll find out in the near future is something in those forests
really does want to be left alone.
That's all for this entry into the tape library.
As always, if you enjoy stories of the paranormal one, Jan explained,
then please do subscribe to the channel.
Also, if you would like me to go ahead and do that proper ghost town episode,
then please let me know in the comments below.
I'm not 100% sure what the next episode will be yet,
as I'm working on a few different scripts,
but over the coming weeks will likely be delving back into the world of cursed films.
and I have two episodes covering some very interesting haunted houses planned.
I know you will love those episodes.
Until next time.
Pleasant dreams.
