Freetown State Forest Haunting
Freetown State Forest Haunting
Freetown State Forest Haunting
T h e Cu r s e d F o res t o f M as s a ch u s e t t s
There seem to be places in this world to which strangeness seems to
gravitate. Whether it is their geography, topography, or some inexplicable,
unseen forces, these locations possess what can only be described as a
certain disconnect from reality as we know it. They are imbued with some
sort of undercurrent of mystery, strangeness, and sometimes even terror.
Certainly an area that fits the bill as one of the most singularly bizarre
locations on the planet is Freetown-Fall River State Forest, Massachusetts;
a place so saturated in the bizarre and unexplained that it has become
almost the very definition of the term “haunted forest.”
The area has a history rife with friction between settlers and the Native
people who lived there. The whole area originally belonged to the local
Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe, but over the years much of this land was
acquired from them, beginning with the 1659 purchase of Freetown, which
was subsequently incorporated as a town in 1683. Over the years, more and
more of the land was purchased from the tribe, much of it by greedy chiefs
without proper consent from the tribe members. During the King Phillip
War (1675-1676) the Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe fought on the side of the
English and was rewarded with 190-acres of land in Fall River Mass., which
was at the time known as the Wattuppa Reservation. However, in 1907 Fall
River commandeered 100 acres this land through eminent domain in order
to secure the city’s drinking water supply. It was not until 1939 when the
State of Massachusetts returned some of the land that had been taken and
the tribe was left with the current Wampanoag reservation, which covers
227-acres.
Besides its scenic beauty, outdoor activities, and its interesting history,
Freetown State Forest is perhaps most well-known for its intense amount of
bizarre, unexplainable phenomena. The forest sits squarely within the
infamous “Bridgewater Triangle,” a 200 square mile area within
southeastern Massachusetts that is the epicenter of a mind boggling array
of inexplicable bizarre phenomena reported since colonial times, including
strange creatures, Bigfoot, UFOs, ghosts, specters, ominous black
helicopters, mysterious orbs of light, strange disappearances, giant snakes,
poltergeist activity, and cattle mutilations, to name but a few. The exact
boundaries of the Bridgewater Triangle are nebulous, but were perhaps
most clearly laid out by cryptozoologist Loren Coleman in his book
Mysterious America: The Ultimate Guide to the Nation’s Weirdest Wonders,
Strangest Spots, and Creepiest Creatures . Coleman defines the Bridgewater
Triangle as being comprised of the towns of Abington, Rehoboth and
Freetown at the points of the triangle, and Brockton, Whitman, West
Bridgewater, East Bridgewater, Bridgewater, Middleboro, Dighton, Berkley,
Raynham, Norton, Easton, Lakeville, Seekonk, and Taunton inside the
triangle. Within this cauldron of weird occurrences, Freetown State Forest
is said to be the most active; a veritable wellspring of the weird and bizarre.
When discussing the numerous cases of strange phenomena within Freetown
State Forest, it is hard to even know where to begin. The forest is said to be
home to a race of diminutive humanoid creatures known as Pukwedgies,
which have long been known by the native Wampanoag tribe. These
creatures are described as being troll-like beasts around 2 to 3 feet in height
and with smooth, hairy grey skin that is said to glow on occasion. The
Pukwedgies have a notorious reputation for mischief and mayhem, and are
said to intentionally startle people, throw rocks or sand in their faces, push
or shove them, kidnap them, hurl them from cliffs, wrestle with them or
even attack them with knives or spears. The creatures are also said to be
competent magic users and shapeshifters. The Natives of the area have long
given these creatures a wide berth, claiming that they are not to be
approached or trifled with. Although this may seem at first glance as
nothing more than spooky folklore, there are numerous visitors to the forest
who have claimed to have seen such creatures, and the mischievous beasts
have been blamed as the cause of the unusual number of people who have
supposedly fallen from cliffs to their deaths in the area. Such sightings
reports are not even limited to Massachusetts, with such reports coming
from such far-flung locations as New Hampshire, Virginia, and even
California.
Freetown State Forest is also littered with places that seem to be possessed
of some dark power. Perhaps the most infamous of these is an 80 foot deep
rock quarry known as the Assonet Ledge, or simply as “The Ledge.” This
area was once owned by the Fall River Granite Company, and has become
associated with a range of weird phenomena. The quarry has an inordinate
amount of abandoned cars left here, and is the location for numerous
suicides. Visitors to The Ledge have reported being overcome with an
urgent, unshakeable sense of dread and foreboding when venturing near the
quarry, and the area has been rumored to be an alleged hotspot for
satanists and strange cults, as well as ghost sightings. There are numerous
reports of people seeing ghosts jumping from the ledge only to disappear
before they hit the water, or merely standing ominously at the top of the
ledge.
The Ledge is also the site of a particularly infamous UFO sighting allegedly
made in 1974 by then governor Ronald Reagan. The story goes that Reagan
was flying in a Cessna over The Ledge with pilot Air Force Colonel Bill
Paynter and two security personnel when a strange light was noticed to be
tailing the plane. The light was seen to accelerate, decelerate, and become
elongated, all within the space of a few minutes. It then is reported to have
suddenly shot up at a 45 degree angle at a high rate of speed and disappear.
Reagan would go on to relate the incident to Norman C Miller, who was at
the time Washington bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal.
One of the most famous crimes committed in Freetown State Forest is the
murder of Mary Lou Arruda in 1978. On September 8 1978, Mary Lou
Arruda was seen riding her bicycle near her home in Raynham Mass. at
around 4PM. At 4:30PM, the girl’s bicycle was found abandoned by the side
of the road with a skid mark from a car and a cigarette right beside it.
Several witnesses would come forward to report that they had see a green
car with a black racing stripe speeding away from the scene at around the
time the girl is though to have gone missing, and the police were able to
gain enough insight into the driver’s appearance to cobble together a sketch
of the suspect, which was then placed on wanted posters and plastered
across the area.
An intensive police search was also launched into the area of Arruda’s last
known whereabouts, and her decomposing body was finally found on
November 11 1978, tied to a tree within Freetown State Forest. It was
determined that the girl had still been alive when her beaten and battered
body had been tied to the tree in a standing position, and when she had lost
consciousness, the weight of her body had caused stress on her neck and
ensuing asphyxia. It was determined that she had died the same day she had
gone missing.
Freetown State Forest
Another mysterious crime revolves around a place known as the Ice Shack;
a small building constructed for the purposes of logging during the 1940s. It
has long been determined that cult activities and drug dealing had been
carried out in the structure, but one series of murders connected to the Ice
Shack stands out in particular; that of a string of vicious killings by a pimp
and alleged Satanic cult leader by the name of Carl Drew. Drew was known
for using his Satanism to keep his prostitutes in line, threatening them with
human sacrifice or worse if they stepped out of line. On October 13, 1979,
the brutally mutilated corpse of prostitute Donna Levesque was found, and
two alleged witnesses, prostitutes Karen Marsden, 20, and Robin Murphy,
18, explained later that it had been a ritual killing carried out by Drew near
the Ice Shack.
Mardsen had allegedly been repulsed by the violence and sought to break
free from the cult. It would not work out well for her. On February 8, 1980,
she would be tortured and killed in an alleged Satanic sacrifice. Her corpse
had allegedly been brutalized in a most disturbing manner. Mardsen had
allegedly had her hair and fingernails ripped out while she was still alive,
and she had then been savagely beaten over the head with stones until Drew
had then snapped her neck. Her head was then cut off and kicked around by
other cult members. Her fingers had been removed to steal her rings and a
large X had been carved across her chest. This is the story that Murphy,
who was implicated as an accomplice, would eventually tell police, but the
only signs of Mardsen’s body were some skull fragments and pieces of
clothings that were discovered in the forest on April 13, 1980. Murphy
would eventually testify in court to her part in the murders, as well as
Drew’s brutality, and would receive a life sentence. Drew, who had also
been implicated in the killing of Levesque and suspected of at least one
other murder of a prostitute, was found guilty of the murder of Mardsen on
on March 13, 1981, and he would receive further prison time when he was
convicted of assault with a deadly weapon on yet another prostitute. There
have been other murders in Freetown State Forest as well, including a
transient who was apparently mistaken for an undercover police officer and
two men who were found mysteriously shot to death and abandoned in the
forest in 2001. Satanists and cultists are said to favor this location for their
dark deeds not only because of its remote, out of the way location but also
due to its undercurrent of dark energy that they believe they can tap into to
power their rituals and sacrifices.
What causes this forest to attract such violence and suffering? What is it
about this place that causes so many weird phenomena to congregate here?
There are those who would point to the area’s dark history of pain and loss.
It is said that the native spirits of the forest were angered by the stealing of
this land and the massacres and atrocities that took place here, thereby
cursing the forest until the land returns to its rightful owners, the
Wampanoag people. Others say it was the native elders themselves who
cursed the land while under the shadow of oppression and inequality. The
numerous Indian burial grounds that are said to be scattered throughout
the forest certainly give gravity to this eerie story. Or maybe there are just
some places that lie at a crossroads between our world and another, or
which lie on some mysterious vortex that imbues them with a certain
energy. Perhaps there are just places that bump up against a thin spot
between realities, or are somehow magnets for the bizarre. Or maybe these
are things we are not meant to ever know the answers to. Whatever the
answer is, it is abundantly clear that something is not quite right with
Freetown State Forest and the larger Bridgewater Triangle of which it is a
part.