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  • The Legend Of Catherine Near Bangor, ME on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#1) The Legend Of Catherine Near Bangor, ME

    Local Maine folklore tells of a woman called Catherine - named after a nearby mountain - who wanders Route 182 between between the towns of Franklin and Cherryfield. Like many phantom hitchhikers, Catherine perished in a car accident along this stretch of road and is now cursed to walk its length for all eternity. But there's a twist to this iteration: the poor young woman is said to have been decapitated, and some who see her spirit insist she walks without a head. 

    And that's not the only terrifying aspect of Catherine's tale. The legend goes, if you do not stop to help the ghost, Catherine will hex you and bring about pain, suffering, or even death. Some tell of an incident involving a motorist who refused to stop for Catherine, only to glance in his rearview mirror and see her severed head resting in his backseat, causing him to crash his car and suffer the same fate as she did.

  • The Post-Pearl Harbor Fortuneteller on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#2) The Post-Pearl Harbor Fortuneteller

    Snopes writer David Mikkelson shared this hitchhiker tale that became popular in America during WW2:

    In the wake of the anxiety rumors that swept the nation immediately after Pearl Harbor came a pipe-dream rumor [that] was undoubtedly the most popular of all: the weird tale of the man who picked up a strange woman in his car. Arriving at her destination, his passenger allegedly offered to pay the man for the gas he had used. But the man refused to accept the money, so the woman offered to tell his fortune. And, as the rumor went, mysteriously she told him, “There will be a dead body in your car before you get home, and Hitler will be dead in six months.”

    Supposedly, then, on the way home the man had seen a serious automobile wreck and had taken one of the victims into his car to rush him to the hospital. But the injured person died en route, which left the hopeful implication that Hitler would therefore be dead within the following six months.

  • The Lady Of White Rock Lake on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#3) The Lady Of White Rock Lake

    People from Dallas, TX, share a phantom hitchhiker story that also features elements of the La Llorona legend popular in Mexico and the American Southwest. The apparition appears at White Rock Lake, along Gaston Avenue, dripping wet and distraught. She tells those who stop to help her that she narrowly escaped a boating accident on the water and needs a ride home. After giving the good Samaritans an address, the woman disappears, leaving only a small puddle of water in the seat she once occupied. The person or persons go to the residence in question and are met at the door by a middle-aged man, who tells them his daughter drowned in the lake after her boat sank. 

    Other variations of this tale, which goes back to at least 1943, suggest the mysterious woman drowned herself in the lake. Still others state the woman goes around knocking on the doors of homes around the lake, rather than soliciting a ride home, though the rest of the story remains the same. There's even one odd retelling from a NeimanMarcus catalog that casts the woman as a devoted wearer of the department store's dresses. 

  • The Black Horse Lake Hitchhiker on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#4) The Black Horse Lake Hitchhiker

    In Cascade County, near Great Falls, MT, people say a phantom hitcher like no other in the nation roams there. Drivers on an isolated back road have reported a Native American man who at first seems to be hitchhiking. But as those behind the wheel approach, the man appears to fling himself onto the hood of the car and roll over the windshield, as though he's been hit.

    The driver pulls over to check on the man, but of course, he is nowhere to be found, and their car shows no sign of damage.

  • The UBC Hitchhiker on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#5) The UBC Hitchhiker

    Phantom hitchhikers aren't exclusive to American folklore. The University of British Columbia in Vancouver boasts its own version of the legend. Originating in 1966, the story involves a couple who have an argument while driving to the campus library. The fight becomes so heated that the women storms out of the vehicle, only to be struck by oncoming traffic.

    Travelers of University Boulevard have since reported seeing a troubled woman seeking a ride, with some accounts indicating she is drenched from rain. If picked up, the woman will, of course, vanish, leaving behind a piece of paper with the library's address written on it. 

     

  • Lydia The Phantom Hitchhiker on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#6) Lydia The Phantom Hitchhiker

    Somewhere near High Point, NC, a young woman named Lydia is said to roam the streets, looking for a ride home. As with countless other versions of the phantom hitchhiker legend, Lydia disappears when she arrives at an old railroad passover now known as Lydia's Bridge.

    Printed reports of Lydia go as far back as 1924. Some researchers believe the tale may have originated with a fatal car crash in the area in 1920, though the deceased woman in this instance was named Annie Jackson.

  • The Prophetic Hitcher on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#7) The Prophetic Hitcher

    A variation of the phantom hitchhiker legend purports that the wayward traveler is in fact an angel - or in some versions, the ghost of Jesus himself - come to warn of impending disasters.

    In most iterations, the driver witnesses their passenger disappear before their eyes, after which they become overwhelmed and pull over. A police officer stops to check on them, and after explaining what happened, the office tells them they're the fourth (or fifth) person to tell them that same story in a week, "proving" the driver isn't crazy.

  • The Browning Road Hitcher on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#8) The Browning Road Hitcher

    In Delano, CA, residents may warn you to stay away from Browning Road. As the legend goes, a young woman died on the road many years ago when she crossed the street and was struck by a car. On the road is a memorial that many believe is in tribute to the woman.

    People say she now haunts that fateful spot. Sometimes, she merely appears on the side of the road as if contemplating if she should cross. Other times, however, she is said to materialize in the backseat of a passerby’s car, throttling them from behind until they crash. Or she might leap in front of your car, causing you to swerve erratically.

    Others say she has the power to crawl beneath your car and remove pieces until you can’t drive anymore, while still others claim that those who seek to communicate with her disappear, only to turn up days later, screaming about unknown horrors. 

  • Resurrection Mary on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#9) Resurrection Mary

    Resurrection Mary is a particularly notable example of the vanishing hitchhiker. Many people have reported seeing her in Justice, IL, a town outside Chicago.

    Those who have seen her have mostly been men. They report seeing a young, blond hitchhiker in a white dress standing on Archer Avenue between Willowbrook Ballroom and Resurrection Cemetery. Her attire indicates she'd been attending some kind of party or dance. Mary is quiet during the drive and will ask to get out of the car near the cemetery. When she exits, she will disappear in the cemetery or simply vanish from the car. 

    Some have attempted to attach the Mary story to two women who were killed in car crashes in the 1920s and '30s,  Mary Bregovy or Anna "Marija" Norkus.

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  • The Walhalla Hitcher on Random Creepy Urban Legends About Hitchhikers

    (#10) The Walhalla Hitcher

    Larry Stephens was a pilot who enjoyed flying his small plane near Walhalla, SC, in the 1950s. On one such journey, however, the weather turned sour and Stephens crashed into a mountain. His body was never found. 

    Local lore, as described in the book Ghosts of the South Carolina Upcountry by Talmadge Johnson, states that those who drive along SC 107 between Piedmont Overlook and Moody Springs may, on nights plagued with inclement weather, see a young male hitchhiker on the side of the road. If you're traveling south, the man will ask to go to Moody Springs. I you're headed north, the man will ask to go to the Overlook. He is a silent traveling companion and disappears into thin air as soon as he gets out of the car, leaving behind only water and mud in the car. Local folks believe the tight-lipped hitcher is none other than Stephens’s restless spirit. 

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