Posted 15 May 2009 - 10:32 AM
The Charles W. Morgan in Mystic, CT is supposedly haunted by a man working in the lower decks. Not very exciting I know, but quite typical. Highly routinized jobs like lighthouse keeping, guard duty, working on a ship in general, seem to leave those who die suddenly caught in a trap of routine. If I had to spend eternity or just a few dozen more years at work after I die, well, lets just say I now believe in Hell. Heh, heh, but seriously, many shipwrecks at the race where the Atlantic Ocean dumps into Long Island Sound at the deep point. There was a ghosthunter's episode there, it's called Race Rock Light House, and further most people know about Ernie in Ledgelight who plays pranks on the Coasties who maintain the place after having killed himself when his wife ran off with a ferry captain.
What is more interesting I believe is the shadow people of Napatree Point. I haven't seen a ghost ship unfortunately but Napatree Point in Watch Hill Road Island is a sand bar that curves like a hook out into the Sound. At the end of that hook is the remains of an old stone structure where lookouts would warn the pirates and smugglers of New London, Stonington, and Groton, CT of British patrols and even merchant ships by lighting signal fires. The less romantic and far more nefarious practice which also took place here was land piracy, where salvagers would lure ships to sandbars with phony signals and then plunder the wreckage and it is believed the shadow entities on Napatree Point are the victims of this, though it could also just be a regular shipwreck caused by incompetence or foul weather.
Regardless, all of the historic coastal towns have shipwreck ghost stories but the sheer numbers involved in these tragedies would be mind-numbing by today's standards. Perhaps air travel doesn't sound so dangerous after all.
"The big brain am winning! I am the greetest! Mwa-ha-ha-ha! I must now leave Earth for no raisin! " -Chief Big Brain of Futurama