pjthompson: (mysteries)
[personal profile] pjthompson
Some of you may know this haunting song by Alison Krauss:



Some of you may even know it's based on a true story.

On the morning of April 24, 1856, in the remote and dense forest of Spruce Hollow, Pennsylvania in the Blue Knob region of the Alleghenies near Pavia, Samuel Cox went out hunting for dinner while his wife was distracted with chores. When he returned to the log cabin he'd built for his wife Susannah and their two sons, Joseph, aged 5, and George, aged 6, his frantic wife told him that when she'd looked up the boys had disappeared. She'd been calling their names and searching the area but they never responded to her calls, and she could find no trace of them.

Samuel commenced a desperate search, but had no better luck. Neighbors were implored for help and within hours nearly two hundred people had joined the search. They scoured the area for days, the numbers of searchers growing to almost one thousand persons. Some came as far as fifty miles to aid the Cox family at a time when traveling through that rugged country was very difficult. A dowser and a local witch were even brought into to help. Nothing—no one could find any trace.

Inevitably, with so many searchers coming up empty, rumors and gossip began to fly. Eventually, even the parents were suspected of murdering their own children, some people going so far as to tear up the floorboards of the cabin and digging up the land around it to search for bodies.

At the height of this rumor-frenzy, a man named Jacob Dibert, living some twelve miles from Spruce Hollow, had a nightmare. In this dream, Jacob saw the search parties looking for the Cox children and saw himself amongst them—though in reality he hadn't joined them. He became separated from the rest and didn't recognize the part of the forest he moved through, but then he came to a fallen tree and saw a dead deer. Just beyond the deer, he spied a small boy's shoe, and just beyond that a beech tree lying across a stream. Crossing the stream, he ascended a steep and stony ridge, then down into a ravine. By the roots of a large birch tree with a shattered top, he found the missing boys lying in each others' arms, dead from exposure.

Shaken by this dream, Jacob at first told only his wife, but it returned to him the next night, and the night after that, so he finally told his brother-in-law, Harrison Whysong, who lived in Pavia. Whysong was skeptical, but he knew the area and knew a ridge that matched Jacob's description. Jacob was so shaken up that Whysong decided to ease his mind by taking him there. On May 8, they began their search. They found the fallen tree, they found the dead deer, they found the small shoe. They ran for the stony ridge and down into the ravine, towards the roots of that birch tree with the shattered top. They found the two small boys, lying in each others' arms, dead from exposure.

lost children


The boys were buried in Mt. Union Cemetery. In 1906 on the fiftieth anniversary of the tragedy, the people of Pavia erected a monument. In 2002, it was vandalized, but the good folks from Culp Monumental Works of Schellsburg restored it. C. B. Culp, who founded the company, made the original chiseled marble stone. You can still visit the monument. It's quite a hike, I understand, and there's even a geocache there for people who are interested in geocaches.

Sources for this story:

The Lost Children of the Alleghenies
Anomalies: The Pavia Monument
Lost Children of the Alleghenies

Date: 2011-02-09 09:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
Oh wow, wow, wow---the song is giving me intense chills, and the story.

Oh man, that song's going on my list of songs to get.

And what a story, what a story.

Thanks for making my afternoon.

Date: 2011-02-09 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
Glad to! I felt the same when when I encountered first the story, then the song.

Date: 2011-02-09 09:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lizziebelle.livejournal.com
What a haunting song, to go with a haunting story! Thank you.

Date: 2011-02-09 10:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
You're welcome. It certainly haunted me.

Date: 2011-02-09 10:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mer-moon.livejournal.com
What a haunting song ... and what a haunting story. It reminds me a lot of Polly Paulusma's The Woods.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTDlmvY7MKM

Date: 2011-02-09 11:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
What a wonderfully eerie song. Thank you for sharing it!

Date: 2011-02-10 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] helios137.livejournal.com
I love the stories that you share. Thank you. Hope you are doing well today.

Date: 2011-02-10 05:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
Thank you. And we're in a good holding pattern right now.

Date: 2011-02-10 09:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
How utterly sad. Haunting was the word that occurred to me, as I see it did to the other commenters. Yet, the song is beautiful.

I don't know what it is about being a parent, but all the sudden, I take stories like this so much more to heart when my mind starts doing its imagination thing and putting my Soëlie into the place of the child(ren) portrayed. Heartbreaking...

Date: 2011-02-10 05:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
I actually thought of you when I posted this story because I thought it must be like that, once you become a parent. The story broke my heart, took my breath away, but I imagine it's so much more powerful to those of you with kids.

Date: 2011-02-14 09:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mnfaure.livejournal.com
*nods* Something in you shifts and you can no longer perceive the world in the way did before you had a little one to take care of. At least that is what both Julien and I have found.

Date: 2011-02-14 05:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
It's what most people I know have found to be true once they've had kids. And, really, I would hope it wouldn't be any other way. :-)

Date: 2011-02-10 06:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skogkatt.livejournal.com
Here via [livejournal.com profile] asakiyume, and wow, I have goosebumps.

Date: 2011-02-10 08:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
Welcome. Glad you "enjoyed" the story.

Date: 2011-02-14 11:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmkibble75.livejournal.com
And now I must find out why the kids wound up where they did, if anyone knows why...

Date: 2011-02-14 11:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pjthompson.livejournal.com
No one knows how, as far as I could tell. Either they wandered lost or were somehow led...

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