Travel

Google Maps: ‘Creepiest’ Street View location ever revealed in America – ‘hear her scream'


Google Maps users often take to the Street View website for the sole aim of planning their journey. Others opt for a little browsing, pinpointing their home or place of work or trying to spot themselves as a passer by when the Google cameras came to call. The latter have taken to forum Reddit to flag what they deem the “creepiest” location ever seen. This falls in Albermarle, North Carolina, and more specifically, Sides Road.

One Google Maps user took to Reddit to quiz: “What are some creepy places on Google Maps one can explore?”

Flagging the American forest road as number one, another put: “Booger Holler is a haunted old one lane bridge.

“Legend says that once a horse and buggy were swept away here, killing a woman.

“She still haunts the area, and if you stop on the bridge you can hear her screams faintly in the distance, getting louder and closer.”

Another replied and put: “That’s a cool looking area, looks like it’d be creepy as hell at night.

“The legend sounds somewhat similar to the ‘cry baby bridge’ urban legend.

“I thought the one in our area of Ohio was unique, until a few years ago the internet informed me there are many ‘cry baby bridges’ throughout Ohio, and all over the US (at least).

“Lots of ghost mothers and babies out there, I guess.”

Kim Simpson of Southernspooks.com told how she visited the site and appeared to confirm its creepy reputation.

She said she staged a stake-out on the bridge and added: “About 20 minutes, just sticking around and waiting, you could just feel the pressure change.

I don’t know how to describe it. The pressure changed near that bridge, and all of a sudden we heard what sounded like a woman screaming.

“We looked around, shined the flashlights and didn’t see anything.”

Meanwhile, a very real Google Maps find with its roots in popular history has come to light.

The exact coordinates of the ill-fated Titanic liner’s ruins have been pinpointed, in what is the 107th anniversary of its sinking on April 15, 2019.

The Titanic sunk after colliding with an iceberg on her route from Southampton to New York, in 1912.

It was the White Star Line ship’s maiden voyage.

More than 1,500 passengers lost their lives, during what is the seventh largest maritime disaster in history.

The Google cameras have pinpointed the remains at coordinates 41.7325° N, 49.9469° W.

For those looking at the scenes, the wreckage can be seen south of the island of Newfoundland.



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