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Spooky campsites
Most Americans are unfamiliar with the haunted campgrounds scattered about our wild lands and our public places. (Photo: MivPiv/iStock)

Visit the Most Haunted Campgrounds in the U.S.

Forget haunted houses and corn mazes. Head out to the woods instead, where the real scares await.

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Spooky campsites
(Photo: MivPiv/iStock)

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The campfire is out, it’s dark outside your tent, and you hear something rustle in the woods. You know it’s probably nothing, but your body is on alert. Then, as a moonlitshadow slowly passes over your vulnerable tent, you ask yourself:Why did I think it would be a good idea to spend the night at a haunted campground? For the thrill, of course. But haunted houses are cliché, and you visited the corn maze last October, so put your nerves to the test and head out into the woods, where strange sounds, floating figures, and high electromagnetic readings abound. Here are a few campgrounds across the spooky spectrum that you can visit this Halloween.

Lake Morena, California

Spooky
(Helen Shaffer/San Diego Union)

This , near the start of the Pacific Crest Trailandnot far fromthe Mexican border, has experienced unexplained activity for at least 40 years. On October 26, 1983, the San Diego Unionran a story with the headline“More than Fish Haunt Morena.” At the time, park volunteers and rangers attested to witnessing levitating bodies, hearing heavy footsteps when nobody was around, and seeing an old man in their peripheral vision.

On one occasion, reported the newspaper, when a ranger hosted a relative in his house, she woke in the night to see “a baby’s christening gown across the room. It floated to her, brushed her cheek, floated back where she had first seen it and disappeared.” In the years since, guests have reported similar experiences of floatingfigures, unexplained sounds, and even a woman in white standing atthe shoreline.

Big Moose Lake, New York

Chester Gillette (left) was convicted and put to death for the murder of Grace Brown, his pregnant lover.
Chester Gillette (left) was convicted and put to death for the murder of Grace Brown, his pregnant lover. (Kevin Rivoli/AP)

Stories of hauntings are often preceded by legends of murders, and—if the murder happened at all—the details are murky. This isn’t the case for the story of, site of the well-documented murder of Grace Brown in 1906. Located in a remote region of the Adirondacksnear Fourth Lake, in a placethat hasprimitive campsites,the lake and the killingthat took place therehaveinspired numerous fictitious accounts, includingTheodore Dreiser’s novel An American Tragedyand the movieA Place in the Sun,starring Elizabeth Taylor.

The storygoes that18-year-oldBrown was working at a skirt factory in Cortland, New York, when she met the company owner’s charming nephew, Chester Gillette. They began secretly dating, and soon enough, Brownwas pregnant. She begged Gillette to marry her, desperately wanting to avoid the fate of an unwed young mother. To her delight, he promised he’d take her on a trip, presumably to propose. They traveled toupstate New Yorkand decided to paddlea canoe onto the lake. Brownhad mentioned that she couldn’t swim, and when they got far enough out, Gillettegrabbed a tennis racket from his bagand smashed in her head. She fell into the water and drowned.

Gillette was arrested within daysand eventually sentenced to death. Ever since, campers have reported seeing a supernatural presence at Big Moose Lake. “I understand her ghost haunts the lake,” a told The New York Times in 2006.

Fort Worden State Historical Park, Washington

Spooky campsites
(Scott_Walton/iStock)

There are miles of buried tunnels, dead ends, and old rooms beneath , a former military base that’s now a campground 60 miles north of Seattle. “There is a lot to be explored here that will get your spine tingling,” says Megan Claflin, who works forthe park, where youcan explore century-old fortifications that housed nearly a thousand troops and officers. While Claflin would not confirm whether the area is definitely haunted, she did say that visitors have had unsettling experiences.

Ghost hunters who have visited the fort claim to have witnessedparanormal activity, includingglowing orbsightingsand high electromagnetic readings. “This was an active military baseand then juvenile detention center for about tenyears,” says Claflin. “There is certainly an echo of the individuals who made the fort their home, and if you believe in that kind of thing, perhaps there are some who have yet to move on.”

Braley Pond, Virginia

Spooky campsites
(Slavica/iStock)

Thispopular fishing spotin George Washington National Forest, 60 miles from Charlottesville, is the site of Virginia’s most haunted campground, . Rumors of disembodied laugher, floating figures, and other unearthlyactivity escalated after a took place there in 2003. According to a story by , not long after the murder, paranormalresearcher Shea Willis visited the pondand immediately began experiencing nausea and dread upon arriving.

Just before midnight, Willis and her colleagues heard something moving in the water, “splashing violently.” As they ran back to the car, Willis claims something landed on her back and began crawling all over her body. They escaped the campground and made it home, but Willis continued to feel haunted, experiencing nightmares and not feeling like herself for weeks afterward. “It was like a communication with whatever this thing was,” she told the Dyrt. “Like little bits and pieces of it were still stuck with me.”

Holy Ghost Campground, New Mexico

Spooky campsites
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In New Mexico’s northern Sangre de Cristo Mountains, , within Santa Fe National Forest, is an isolated but scenic place to spend the night. But before you go, know that it’s rumored to be the haunting grounds of a Spanish priest who was murdered there in the 17th century.

According to local ghost-tour guide Allan Pacheco, the surrounding Pecos Wilderness is home to all kinds of bizarreactivity. “There are a number of people who have gone missing in that vicinity,” Pachecosays. “It’s like the Bermuda Triangle of New Mexico—people disappear into thin air. No clothing or bones are ever found.” According to Pacheco,people have also spotted UFOs, seen strange shadows, and heard voices. “There’sall kinds of speculation. Maybe there is a cosmic doorway that opens up there, maybe a Star Trek–type dimensional wormhole. Different beings, different energies, you name it.”

When reached for comment, a spokespersonat Santa Fe National Forest denied the existence of paranormal activity in the area: “Holy Ghost Campground cannot be haunted for one simple, yet big and important reason:ghosts are not real.”

Update: On Friday, October 18, after this story published, a group of ϳԹeditors bravely spent the night at Holy Ghost to investigate the claims of paranormal activity. The night passed peacefully, but the next morning, associate managing editor Aleta Burchyski got up early to fish the nearby Holy Ghost Creek. About ten minutes in, her hook got snagged on a root along the bank. As Burchyski worked to free the hook, she saw a dark figure of a man in her peripheral vision, approaching her. “He was walking weird, kind of loping,”Burchyski says. Initiallyshe thought it was her husband coming over to tell her how cold he was, walking strangely in an attempt to warm up. “But then I turned to say hi,”she says, “and NOBODY WAS THERE.”

Bannack State Park, Montana

Spooky
(kevinruss/iStock)

The Montana Territory, before it became the state in 1889, was a rough-and-tumble place. During the gold rush of the 1860s, acivilian group known as the Montana Vigilantesset out to capture and hang members of the Innocents,a highway gang that targeted shipments of gold passing through the territory. The Vigilantes accused Henry Plummer, the local sheriff of Bannack, of leading the gang, and Plummer was hung from the same gallows north of town that he had previously ordered built. It’s still disputed whether Plummer was guilty, and in a 1993 posthumous trial in Virginia City, Montana, the jury was split six-six.

Maybe it’s the ghost of Plummer whohaunts today—now a ghost town with a spooky reputation. Visitors regularly report paranormal experiences. “Our most commonly seen spirit is a young girl named Dorothy who drowned here,” says John Philip, a ranger at Bannack State Park. You can camp nearby, and while visitors are not usually allowed in Bannack itself after dark,are scheduled therethe weekend before Halloween.

Humboldt State Park, California

Spooky campsites
(anneleven/iStock)

Hiking through the redwoods of at night during a full moon, or camping overnight atone of 250 sites, you might encounter strange“ghost trees.” They look like regular redwood trees, but their leaves are pale, as white as a skeleton.

While eerie in the right light, these albino redwoods are more hauntingly beautiful than anything. Only about 400 are known to exist around the world. Without chlorophyll, these redwoods are unable to produce their own sugar, so nearby trees will pass sugar to albinos through their roots, allowing them to live. Why do the other trees give up precious nutrients? One theory points to the fact that albino redwoods have , which could kill an ordinary redwood. So it’s possible that a symbiotic relationship exists, in which other redwoods feed the albino trees, and the albinos in turn remove more heavy metals from the soil.

These trees are fragileand easily damaged by visitors. Enjoy them from a distance, or you won’t need a ghost story to scare you—an angry ranger will do the job fine.

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