Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Ichabod Crane Obituary


Ichabod Crane was a young lad that moved to Sleepy Hollow, New York from his home state of Connecticut.  He was a schoolteacher in Sleepy Hollow and gave music lessons, where he met the heiress of Bault Van Tassel, Katrina Van Tassel.  As time went on, Mr. Crane learned from the ole Dutch wives some of their favorite haunted stories from the surrounding areas, and a particular favorite was of the Headless Horseman, a Hessian soldier who lost his head during a war.  His body is rumored to have been buried in the church graveyard of Sleep Hollow and he roams the night in search of his lost head.  Ichabod believed in witchcraft and its components, and to believed, in the legend of the Headless Horseman.
One night on his way home from a party at the Van Tassel’s, Mr. Crane encountered the horseman and was never heard from again.  Not much was found of Mr. Crane, except for the smashed pumpkin that had been thrown at him, hoof prints, and his hat.  Some of the townsfolk believe Abraham Van Brunt pulled a prank on Ichabod by using his fears against him in order to have nobody else in the running to take Katrina Van Tassel away from him; others believe Ichabod ran away to another city and remained under the radar, but was able to tell his story of the Headless Horseman; and there are those who believe in the tale and that Ichabod passed away the night he encountered the horseman.

Monday, September 10, 2012

The Beast of Ballitoy


            The town’s people in Ballitoy, Ireland celebrate the holiday of Alberich every year, in thanks for their children.  Long ago, in the 17th century, children would disappear and never be heard from again.  It was said that a beast would snatch the children from their beds in the night for a duration of three weeks a year.  The disappearances of the children lasted from 1610 to 1637.
            Fear was spread throughout the village and on to the surrounding villages.  Many people left the area and moved away from their Hell out of fear that their children would be taken just like so many others had been.  Others stayed out of pride, believing that they were too good for it to happen to them.  They were mistaken.
For 27 years, children were taken from their homes and families, never to be seen or heard from again.  Nobody knows what had ever happened to the children that were taken; nobody will ever know.  Their bodies have never been found and the beast was never caught.  They say a stranger came to town in 1637; it is said he preformed a ritual that warded off the beast.
Since then, there have been no more disappearances to anyone’s knowledge that were to have been caused by the beast.  The stranger left town shortly after performing the ritual and left nothing behind, not even his name.  To this day, no one knows what happened to the beast or if there was an actual beast, or what happened to the bodies of the children.  Some suspect that the village had a serial killer with a sick fascination with children. Some believe in the myth, and some don’t know what they should believe.