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Abandoned, Haunted

Beyond NYC: Ghost Hunting in the “Bloody Pit”

Autumn in New England

Autumn in New England

Imagine a picture-perfect October afternoon—white steeples set against a crisp blue sky, apples to be picked, pumpkins to be carved, colonial headstones moldering beneath a gaudy display of fall foliage…

Only in New England is the essence of autumn so vividly arrayed, no more so than the Berkshires of western Massachusetts. The pastoral region was revered among literary luminaries of the 19th century—it’s rumored that Melville first envisioned his white whale in the wintry outline of Mount Greylock—but it’s also a wellspring of inspiration for local storytellers. The Berkshire hills are laced with legends and more than their fair share of ghost stories, so I got out of town to explore this mysterious region and hopefully encounter a few ghosts, just in time for Halloween.

The Old Coot has been caught on camera before, but I had to settle for this re-enactment.

The Old Coot is usually sighted in January; so I settled for this reenactment.

My first stop was the Bellows Pipe Trail on Mount Greylock, known to be haunted by a ghost called the “Old Coot.”  This unfortunate soul went by the name of William Saunders in life and earned his living as a farmer before being called away to fight for the Union in 1861.  His wife Belle assumed the worst when the letters stopped coming after receiving word that her husband had been injured in battle. But Bill Saunders had survived, only to return home and find Belle remarried. He retreated to a ramshackle cabin on Mount Greylock, where he lived out the rest of his days as a hermit, occasionally working on nearby farms. One day, a group of hunters entered his shack and came across his lifeless body. They were the first to describe a sighting of the Old Coot’s spirit fleeing up the mountain, but he’s haunted the trail ever since.

Madame Sherri is said to appear at the top of this staircase from time to time.

Madame Sherri failed to make an appearance on her old staircase. (Click here for a less ghostly image)

Madame Sherri

Madame Sherri

On the outskirts of Brattleboro, rumors about one eccentric local are still raising eyebrows more than fifty years after her death. Madame Sherri was a well-known costume designer in jazz-age New York City whose designs were featured in some of the most successful theatrical productions of the day. After her husband died of “general paralysis due to insanity,” Madame Sherri retreated to an elaborate summer home in the Berkshires, where she was known to throw lavish and unsavory parties for her well-heeled guests, often gallivanting about town in nothing but a fur coat. Gradually, her fortune was depleted and the dwelling was abandoned in 1946. Late in life, she became a ward of the state and died penniless in a home for the aged. Her “castle” burned to the ground on October 18, 1962, but its dramatic granite staircase remains to this day. Sounds of revelry have been heard emanating from the ruins of the old estate, where the apparition of an extravagantly dressed woman has often been spotted ascending the staircase.

At the base of Mount Greylock.

Parked at the base of Mount Greylock.

If Madame Sherri’s Forest and the Old Coot’s trail don’t give you goosebumps, this next one might. To get there, you have to go down—way down—into the Hoosic River Valley to the bedrock of the Hoosac Mountains in North Adams, MA. Turn off on an unnamed dirt road, park at the train tracks, take a short hike, and you’ll come face to face with one of the most haunted places in New England. How far would you be willing to venture into the “Bloody Pit?”

The town of North Adams appears from a hillside en route from Mt. Greylock.

The town of North Adams appears from a hillside en route from Mt. Greylock.

In 1819, a route was proposed to transfer goods from Boston to the west, and the Hoosac Range was quickly identified as the project’s biggest obstacle. Construction began in 1855 on the 5-mile Hoosac Tunnel, but the dig was plagued with problems from the beginning. When steam-driven boring machines, hand drills, and gunpowder proved too slow, builders turned to new, untried methods, namely nitroglycerine, an extremely powerful and unstable explosive. The tunnel claimed close to 200 human lives over the course of its 20-year construction, earning the nickname “The Bloody Pit.” The work was merciless, but precise—when the two ends met in the middle, the alignment was off by only one half inch.

An abandoned pumphouse sits beside a waterfall in the woods near the railroad tracks.

An abandoned pumphouse sits beside a waterfall in the woods near the railroad tracks.

On March 20, 1865, Ned Brinkman and Kelly Nash were buried alive when a foreman named Ringo Kelly accidentally set off a blast of dynamite. Fearing retaliation, Ringo disappeared, but one year later, he was found strangled at the site of the accident, two miles into the tunnel. No one witnessed the crime, but most men agreed—the ghosts of Ned and Kelly had slaked their revenge.

The entrance to the Hoosac Tunnel

The entrance to the Hoosac Tunnel opens up from around a bend in the tracks.

The most costly accident in the tunnel’s history occurred the following year on October 17th, halfway through the digging of a 1,000-foot vertical aperture called the Central Shaft which was designed to relieve the buildup of exhaust in the tunnel. Thirteen men were working 538 feet deep when a naphtha lamp ignited the hoist building above them, sending flaming debris and sharpened drill bits raining down. The explosion destroyed the shaft’s pumping system and the pit soon started filling up with water. When workers recovered the bodies several months later, they discovered that several of the men had survived long enough to construct a raft in a desperate attempt to escape the rising waters. The accident halted construction for the better part of a year.

The entrance to the Hoosac Tunnel

The entrance to the Hoosac Tunnel

When work resumed, laborers reported hearing a man’s voice cry out in agony, and many walked off the job, claiming the tunnel was cursed. Through the 19th century, local newspapers reported headless blue apparitions, ghostly workmen that left no footprints in the snow, and disappearing hunters in and around the Bloody Pit. As recently as 1974, a man who set out to walk the length of the tunnel was never heard from again.

Like looking down a long pit, lightless tunnel.

Staring down the black maw of the Hoosac Tunnel.

In spite of these tales, I found myself standing at the entrance to the West Portal, where a single bat sprung out of the darkness, setting the tone for what would prove to be a rather unsettling experience. The tunnel is undeniably creepy, lined with old crumbling bricks, half flooded with gray water, and coated with almost two centuries of soot and grime. It didn’t help that I was visiting on October 17th, the anniversary of its grisliest accident…

Sure enough, the moment I stepped across the threshold, my camera started taking pictures by itself. (Granted, it’s been having issues lately, but the timing and severity was uncanny.) The whole time I was in the tunnel, I was unable to gain control of the shutter, and had to resort to setting up a shot and waiting for the “unseen forces” to take each picture. It beats me why a ghost would choose to fiddle with my camera rather than, say, making the walls bleed, but the entire encounter left this skeptic scratching his head. Were these the spirits of the Hoosac Tunnel?

*     *     *

Back at the campsite, with the fire extinguished, I settled in for a fitful sleep on the hard ground, unable to shake that uneasy feeling. That night, the falling leaves outside the tent sounded just like footsteps. When the wind blew, the whole forest sounded like a crowd of ghosts walking. It was exactly the kind of night I had hoped to pass in the Berkshire hills, a chance to experience the other side of the season, beyond the spiced cider and the pumpkin lattes, far older than the covered bridges that cross the languid Hoosic River, that ancient date that marks the beginning of the dark half of the year, when the boundary between the living and the dead is at its thinnest point.

Further into the Hoosac Tunnel, bricks collapse from the ceiling.

As far as I dared to go in the haunted Hoosac Tunnel.

Happy Halloween!

A bit of Halloween spirit displayed outside the Bellows Pipe Trail.


 

 


Discussion

13 thoughts on “Beyond NYC: Ghost Hunting in the “Bloody Pit”

  1. Filmed at Olivia’s Overlook. The beautiful sweeping views really make for a great shot.

    Like

    Posted by Rafael Rivera | 10-21-13., 7:19 pm
  2. Fall is probably the time when I feel the most homesick (Rhode Island native stranded in Texas), especially when I get on Flickr or WordPress. Thanks for the great photos. When my dad would take my cousin and I camping, you bet there were all kinds of crazy stories. Lots of Headless Horseman-type stuff.

    Like

    Posted by CJ Vali | 10-21-13., 8:11 pm
    • I’m a Texas transplant myself, never saw the leaves change growing up. You get a little color here in the city, but New England really blew me away. We almost stopped at Sleepy Hollow on the way back–maybe next Halloween.

      Like

      Posted by Will Ellis | 10-21-13., 8:48 pm
  3. nice story, nice piece of writing. I really enjoy your project. The Northeast is definitely an epicenter of the supernatural, or at least it feels that way. Certainly Washington Irving, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and others thought so. As a skeptic myself, I have, in the past, found myself questioning my assuredness.

    Like

    Posted by Caleb Crawford | 10-21-13., 8:42 pm
    • Thanks for reading, Caleb. Big Hawthorne fan here. It definitely has something to do with the literary tradition of the area, and all the gloom and doom that went along with that Puritan mentality. H.P. Lovecraft also comes to mind.

      Like

      Posted by Will Ellis | 10-21-13., 9:08 pm
  4. Thanks…that was fun and the photos are beautiful.

    Like

    Posted by Frank | 10-22-13., 5:54 am
  5. Great,beautiful story.

    Like

    Posted by gualtiero | 10-31-13., 5:57 pm
  6. Amazing story and photos. 🙂

    Like

    Posted by zeenyc75 | 11-24-13., 2:54 pm
  7. bush one day i woke up and went to the mirror and saw somebody that wasn’t me it was a goast

    Like

    Posted by Bushman Jim | 11-25-14., 10:42 am
  8. I liked the story I myself have Ben aproxamity 2.5 miles into the tunnel with a friend well things became lively and my friend could not take the sprit activities in the tunnel so we had to go well if any one would like to go I will be willing to meet you and go ( I’ve seen some really strange but good things

    Like

    Posted by Richard Lanoue | 3-1-15., 7:45 pm
  9. I was at the tunnel yesterday. I grew up in the Berkshires but had never been to the infamous Hoosac Tunnel. I figured after 56 years, it was time. My daughter and I ventured in and the temperature dropped immediately a good 10-15 degrees. A sick feeling came over me as we watched a shadowy figure cross the tracks in front of us and disappear into the wall. After we left the tunnel and were standing near our car, we looked back just to see it “breathing” a creepy rolling fog along the ground. It was as if the entire tunnel was breathing. The fog came out full force enough to cover the entrance. Then it all disappeared as quickly as it came. Seconds later, it appeared again and the chill reached all the way across the parking lot to us. It felt like an icicle went right through us. A man nearby said “the smoke is from the train that just went by”. Hmmmm we had been in and around that tunnel for 90 minutes and no train had come by. What had he seen? It certainly wasn’t a REAL train!

    Like

    Posted by Denise M | 10-13-15., 10:34 pm

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