True Ghost Sightings

From LoveToKnow Paranormal

Whether or not there really are true ghost sightings is a topic that is still highly debated. However, numerous people have reported seeing full body apparitions even though paranormal investigators have found it exceedingly difficult to capture clear evidence on film.

Have you ever experienced a real ghost sighting?

Examples of Supposedly True Ghost Sightings

First stop: ParanormalActivities.net. This website has posted a video that appears to show spirits aboard the Queen Mary ocean liner. Check it out for yourself. There do seem to be transparent human forms walking down the hall, but it's difficult to judge whether this is due to reflections on glass and polished woodwork, creative editing or actual paranormal activity.

Next stop: YouTube.com. The majority of ghost sighting videos on YouTube can be dismissed as outright fakes. However, a small number are worth a closer look to decide if you think they truly show something paranormal. View them with an open mind and a healthy dose of skepticism.

  • Ghost Soldiers in Gettysburg - Gettysburg is the site of one of the worst battles of the entire civil war, and many people claim to have sighted ghosts in various areas around the battlefield. This video may provide proof of their existence, but it's too unfocused to make an accurate judgement simply by watching it. Still, the footage is fascinating, and it does look like someone or something is appearing in and out of the tree line. Are these true ghosts of Gettysburg? Decide for yourself.
  • Ghost Face at Abandoned Hospital - Old abandoned asylums have proven irresistible to both professional and amateur ghost hunters. This image was shot at the Bangour Village Hospital in West Lothian, Scotland in Villa 9. Is it just an unusual looking dust orb, has the videographer altered the image, or could this really be the face of a spirit?

Last stop: GhostsandStories.com. This website allows visitors to submit their favorite ghost videos, and it claims to have sorted out the best for your viewing. Take a look at a few for yourself and decide if these captured "sightings" could be real.

  • Lupton House - This video was purportedly taken during a legitimate investigation conducted by Hidden Realms. Check out the unusual object that passes by the staircase and see if you can tell what it is. This video offers several slowed down views of the pertinent footage to give you a better look, but the film is very grainy.
  • Twisters Restaurant - This surveillance video from a restaurant in Arizona appears to show a misty mass moving through the store after hours.
  • Moonville Tunnel Ghost - The second video on the page is a bit more provocative and appears to show what actually looks like a fairly defined spirit.
  • Vatican Ghost - did a young vacationer really capture the presence of a spirit at the Vatican? The young man believes the image he captured is the shape of a male figure wearing a cloak, but one visitor to the site believes the image is simply a flag carried by a tour guide. What do you see?

Watch Ghost Cams Online

As the old saying goes, "Seeing is believing", and that is exactly the point with the numerous ghost cams found online. The links below offer visitors the ability to keep watch at reportedly haunted locations in an effort to see an actual ghost make an appearance. You can view a few of these projects yourself, and perhaps you'll have the opportunity to experience your own sighting.

Share Your Own Real Ghost Sightings

The one thing that everyone seems to be able to agree on is that very little is know about how the paranormal world works. Do spirits really exist, are they capable of appearing, and do the living have the right technology to capture evidence for proof? Perhaps one day there will be solid answers to all of these questions and more. For now, paranormal investigators continue to search for those elusive true ghost sightings. Feel free to share your own experiences in the comments box below..



 


Comments

Hi Pimpdaddy, thank you for the interesting background on Kenyon College Cemetery. I'm sure readers will find it interesting.

-- Contributed by: Sally Painter

Kenyon College itself has been around since roughly 1827; the record of burials on campus goes back at least that far, and perhaps further, since pioneer graves in the early 1800s weren't always grouped into cemeteries or marked properly. The grave of "an old man" is mentioned by a student who was shown it in 1828 by Bishop Philander Chase, Kenyon's founder and first president. It's likely that this grave was the first one among the hundred-odd graves in the official Kenyon College Cemetery, which is surrounded by a low wrought iron fence behind Rosse and Rutherford B. Hayes halls.


Philander Chase reported on the next four interments in this spot before his successor, Bishop Charles Pettit McIlvaine, turned the job over to the administration of the Episcopal parish. Since Gambier as a village still lacked a government of any kind, the local church was probably the only organization with members who weren't necessarily affiliated with the college.


The parish vestry set up a committee to charge burial fees and build a fence around the graveyard. For years they attempted to enforce the rules by charging anyone who didn't fill or clean up a gravesite a fine--one dollar for an adult, fifty cents for a child under ten. A number of students were buried here in the days before embalming made it feasable to have their bodies shipped back home. Many of the graves you see there today belong to young adults between eighteen and twenty-five years of age.


An expansion in 1854 brought the cemetery's size up to its currents size--as large as property constrants would allow. In 1866 Oak Grove Cemetery was begun by the village, leaving the original exclusively to the college. A new policy allowed only faculty members, officers of the college, their families, and Kenyon students to be offered the option of purchasing a plot. This restriction was modified in 1930 by college president William G. Caples, who expanded the policy to include "persons who have worked for or served Kenyon College or the Episcopal Church, or who are associated with the College, and their immediate families."


Aside from the occasional college-age Kenyon student, the cemetery is crowded with alumni. As you can see above, Frank McLean Mallett (1913-1980) was a student in the 20s. Somebody left a laminated copy of his page from the annual, showing him as a graduating senior.


The cemetery's only mausoleum belongs to the family of John N. Lewis, an engineer from Mount Vernon who received an honorary degree from Kenyon in 1876. Legend has it that bootleggers set up a distillery in the Lewis crypt during Prohibition.

An interesting exception to the occupancy rules was made in 1865, when Kwaku Lebiete, a child from Africa's Gold Coast who was adopted by American missionaries, died in Gambier. He hadn't been a student, but because of the unique cir...stances of his life the college allowed him to be laid to rest under his Christian name: Samuel deWette.


A new music building, erected in 1998, required the relocation of a handful of graves to the other side of the cemetery. Among them was Colonel Lorin Andrews, Kenyon's sixth president. He led soldiers to battle in the early days of the Civil War, including many Kenyon students. He served under General McClellan in the West Virginia Campaign of 1861, during which he contracted typhoid fever and returned home to Gambier, where he died on September 18. Because he volunteered his services to Governor Dennison even before the April 1861 attack on Fort Sumter, he is known as Ohio's "First to Fight."

And then there's John Crowe Ransom, perhaps the most famous inhabitant of the College Cemetery. As a professor of the humanities, he founded the prestigious Kenyon Review and mentored a number of well-known poets, including Randall Jarrell, Robie Macauley, and Robert Lowell. His 1941 book The New Criticism is a seminal text still used in poetry classes today.


The cemetery is located at the south end of campus, just around the corner from Old Kenyon. Unlike much of the rest of the college, there aren't many stories of it being haunted. Click here to read about the less inactive dead people at Kenyon.

Find-a-Grave: Kenyon College Cemetery Kenyon College Alumni Bulletin: "A Permanent Place on Campus"

-- Contributed by: Pimpdaddy

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