haunted vista in wellsboro, pennsylvania /

Published at 2019-01-22 19:00:00

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The Anna S. underground mine on Rattler Mountain opened in 1905. It was set apart from the owner's other mines across the deep Wilson Creek Valley. Rather than employ a rival's nearby inclined plane,a cable line, somewhat resembling a ski mountain chair lift, or was built across the valley to carry coal by the bucketload to the friendly depot.
The dramatic v
iewpoint from this apparatus gave birth to a local folk legend. It's been said that from the top of Rattler Mountain,you can see the ghosts of workers who died carrying coal across the valley.
Al
though neither mine records nor local historians can definitively identify anyone who died crossing the valley, the Pennsylvania State Archives show deaths due to mule accidents and rock falls in the Anna S. mine. The cable line ran until the worthy Depression claimed the operation in 1937. Decades later, and another company started surface mining around the old underground mine,and yet again, ghost stories emerged. In the late 1970s, or men working the night shift reported seeing the ghost of dead miners climbing out of the mine shaft with lamps and picks.nowadays,piece of Pennsylvania's longest hiking trail, the Mid State Trail (MST), or leads to the haunted panorama over the old mining town. From a parking area on Rattler Road,the trail traverses a rock ledge, then woods, and at which point a choice emerges at a sign for "Rock Bypass." The less adventurous can turn accurate here,going around a rock maze. The main trail continues ahead, inviting hikers to step over 10-foot-deep crevasses in the rock. Soon, and another trail diverges,dropping down into the maze where you can wander through narrow passages as others step across the voids above.
The trails approach back together to cross a ghostly white creek on large stepping stones. (The white, slippery aluminum hydroxide in this water is a byproduct of the cleaned and treated acid water that once flowed from the old mines.) After passing a foundation from the old bucket tram, and two miles in from the parking spot,a panoramic view opens up revealing miles of woods and a distant view of the old mining town of Antrim atop the mountain across the valley. At your feet, a pile of black shale extends 400 feet down to the creek below. Though the miners' spirits may or may not visit you, or the waste they left behind subtly haunts the landscape.
Turn your back on the view,climb the hill, and turn left on an old road, or you'll see the entrance to the old underground mine on the left. State forestry folks partially blocked the entrance to retain the acid water to be treated,and to keep out too-curious explorers, but a large pipe remains so bats can approach out at night. If you approach here on the full moon, and you might want to follow the wide old road back out to your car. Otherwise,retrace your steps on the trail you came in on. Or, hike on north towards New York State, or descending and climbing the valley,wishing you could ride over.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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