The Untold Story Of Helltown, Ohio

This video tells the untold story about the various legends that have made Helltown, Ohio (OH) infamous for decades. From ghostly apparitions to spooky cults, and even Satan himself. We go in depth on this supposed gate of hell in this episode of Mystery Archives. Discover what truly happened in Helltown.

The disappearance of Chance Englebert

July 6th, 2019. On a warm, Nebraska day. Chance Englebert and his family were out golfing for the day. After an argument with his in-laws, an upset Chance opted to start a journey back home to Wyoming. A trip that would’ve taken 12 hours on foot. A storm rolled through the area shortly after Chance’s departure, and he was never seen again. This video covers the full story and a variety of theories as to what could’ve happened to him. I hope his family can eventually get closure.

The disappearance of Chance Englebert

Watch all the episodes of Mysteriously Missing here: https://www.youtube.com/c/mysteryarchives

The disappearance of Maureen “Anu” Kelly

Maureen Kelly, also known as “Anu,” left her group of friends at Canyon Creek Campground on foot on June 9, 2013. She stated she was going on a “spiritual quest” and left wearing no clothes and only a fanny pack. She was last seen heading towards the woods at about 5pm. She was reported missing by her friends in the early hours of the following morning. Investigators believe it is likely Anu died in a mishap in the wilderness, but her body has never been found and her case remains unsolved.

The disappearance of Maureen Kelly “Anu” | Mysteriously Missing #4

Watch all new episodes of Mysteriously Missing here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO6SjU9EC7_RmajZrmhugbBB5RU2xrnRI

The disappearance Sydney West

September 30, 2020 was the last time anyone saw or heard from 19-year-old Sydney West. She vanished without a trace from San Francisco, CA, near the Golden Gate Bridge. She seemed like a girl who had her whole life ahead of her. What could’ve caused this intelligent young woman to go mysteriously missing?

The disappearance of Sydney West | Mysteriously Missing #4

Watch all new episodes of Mysteriously Missing here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO6SjU9EC7_RmajZrmhugbBB5RU2xrnRI

The disappearance of Natalee Holloway

Natalee Holloway was a young woman who went missing in 2005 in Aruba, whose case made international news. She was never found. In this video we examine the full timeline of events leading to the disappearance of Natalee Holloway. As well as we examine multiple theories as to what could’ve happened to her here on the latest episode of mysteriously missing, a true crime series.

The disappearance of Natalee Holloway |Mysteriously Missing #2

Watch all new episodes of Mysteriously Missing here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO6SjU9EC7_RmajZrmhugbBB5RU2xrnRI

The disappearance of Tara Calico

Tara Calico was a 19 year old woman who went mysteriously missing in Belen, New Mexico on September 20th, 1988 while on a bike ride. Her disappearance would soon turn into a missing person cold case. But after a strange polaroid photograph was discovered in 1989. The cold case thawed and new details began to emerge. In this video we discuss all the details of her case as well as possibilities as to what could’ve happened.

The disappearance of Tara Calico | Mysteriously Missing #1

Watch all new episodes of Mysteriously Missing here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLO6SjU9EC7_RmajZrmhugbBB5RU2xrnRI

Indrid Cold | The Smiling Man

Things always seem mysterious on chilly fall nights in the country.

For Woodrow Derenberger, his mysterious encounter with an almost human grinning man on the backroads of West Virginia one November night would affect him and his family for almost a quarter of a century.

In 1966, Woodrow Derenberger was a sewing machine salesman living in Mineral Wells, West Virginia. One November night that year, Derenberger said he was returning from a business trip to Marietta, Ohio, when he had to stop to adjust a sewing machine in the back of his truck. Once he got back on the road, he noticed lights ahead of him.

Thinking the lights were police officers, he stopped, only to discover that the lights didn’t belong to a car, but to what he said was an aircraft that looked like a “kerosene lamp chimney.” Derenberger said a man stepped out and approached his truck.

“He looked perfectly natural and normal as any human being,” Derenberger told Ronald Mains, during an interview on WTAP-TV in Parkersburg, West Virginia, the day after the encounter.  

“His face looked like he had a good tan, a deep suntan. He was not too dark but it was just like he had been out in the sun a lot and had a good tan. His hair was combed straight back and it was a dark brown and he seemed to have a good thick head of hair. His eyebrows, his face, his features were very normal. I don’t believe that he looked any different from any other man that you would meet on the street.”

But he wasn’t normal, Derenberger said. He had a large grin and kept his arms folded with his hands up under his armpits. And though he spoke to Derenberger, his smile never moved. He spoke, Derenberger said, telepathically.

“He asked me to roll down the window on my right-hand side of my truck and I done what he asked,” Derenberger said during the interview. “And this man stood there and he first asked me what I was called and I know he meant my name and I told him my name and he asked me, he said, ‘Why are you frightened?’ he said, ‘Don’t be frightened, we wish you no harm,’ he said, ‘We mean you no harm, we wish you only happiness,’ and I told him my name and when I told him my name he said he was called ‘Cold’.”

It was Derenberger’s, and the world’s, introduction to the entity known as “Indrid Cold.”

Naturally, Derenberger reported his encounter to the Parkersburg police. By the next day, the media frenzy surrounding the story took off. Derenberger agreed to be interviewed on live television on WTAP. Taking part in the interview were members of the state police, representatives of the Wood County Airport, the Parkersburg Police, and a representative from the Wright Patterson Air Force base in Dayton, Ohio. For 30 minutes, the men peppered Derenberger with questions about the strange encounter.

After the interview aired, however, others came forward with claims that they had also seen a figure matching Derenberger’s description of Indrid Cold. One man reported that a man matching Indrid Cold’s description tried to flag him down, but he was too afraid to stop. Other people claimed to see lights and “fluttering vehicles” on the road Derenberger said he talked to Cold on. And several witnesses reported they had seen Derenberger stopped on the road talking to a man on the same road.

For the next three weeks, newspapers in the area ran stories about Derenberger’s claims and the claims of others.

News coverage eventually died down, but Cold’s visitations continued. Derenberger reported he was visited often by the strange grinning man over the course of the next month. Eventually, Derenberger’s family said they too had seen Cold and other strange things.

Naturally, the media attention given to the story brought locals to Derenberger’s house, hoping to get a glimpse of Cold. The attention, as well as the scorn and ridicule he was suffering from, led Derenberger to seek medical attention. His physician gave him a clean bill of health and found no evidence of chemical imbalance or disruption.

Although he wrote a book about his visits, nothing good came from Derenberger’s recounting his encounter. In fact, it didn’t just negatively affect him, but it affected his family and his friends as well. The family received years of harassing phone calls and blamed lost jobs and friends on Derenberger’s tales of Indrid Cold. Derenberger suffered from painful headaches and depression, and eventually, his wife divorced him. Derenberger moved away from the area to escape his notoriety.

After years of living somewhere else, however, Derenberger moved back to the Mineral Wells area before his death in 1990 at the age of 74 – 23 years after Indrid Cold supposedly pulled him over on the highway. While he never recanted his statement, he never spoke of them again either.

Since then, Derenberger’s account has lingered, propelling Indrid Cold into the realm of the rural myths and legends as well as into tales of the creepy and unknown. After Derenberger spoke to John Keel, the author of the Mothman prophecies, the legend of Indrid Cold was linked to Mothman – even so far as appearing in the 2002 Mothman Prophecies movies.

It’s difficult to tell if it really happened, said Brian Dunning, author of Skeptoid Magazine, but it’s clear that Derenberger gained nothing from coming forward.

“Who knows what actually happened to Derenberger on that strange night,” Dunning said. “Derenberger’s story did little for him. His obsession with it cost him his job and his wife, and according to Keel who visited him a year later, they found him “hiding behind drawn curtains” from what he believed were “hundreds of UFO believers and skeptics,” saying that “Indrid Cold and his friends frequently visited the farm, often arriving by automobile, for long, friendly chats.” He had almost certainly become delusional.”

Cold November nights on lonely rural roads will always be a good setting for mysterious encounters, Dunning said.

“Rural areas are always the best place for a creepy tale,” he said. “It’s dark, there are trees and murky creeks, and you are far from the comforting protection of lights and people.”

The disappearance of Chance Englebert

July 6th, 2019. On a warm, Nebraska day. Chance Englebert and his family were out golfing for the day. After an argument with his in-laws, an upset Chance opted to start a journey back home to Wyoming. A trip that would’ve taken 12 hours on foot. A storm rolled through the area shortly after Chance’s…

The disappearance of Maureen “Anu” Kelly

Maureen Kelly, also known as “Anu,” left her group of friends at Canyon Creek Campground on foot on June 9, 2013. She stated she was going on a “spiritual quest” and left wearing no clothes and only a fanny pack. She was last seen heading towards the woods at about 5pm. She was reported missing…

The True Story Behind The Legendary Mothman Said To Terrorize West Virginia

As legend has it, the flying Mothman mortified countless Point Pleasant residents in the late 1960s. And when a bridge collapsed, the creature was blamed for the deaths of 46 people.

On November 12, 1966, in Clendenin, West Virginia, a group of gravediggers working in a cemetery spotted something strange.

They glanced up from their work as something huge soared over their heads. It was a massive figure that was moving rapidly from tree to tree. The gravediggers would later describe this figure as a “brown human being.”

This was the first reported sighting of what would come to be known as the Mothman, an elusive creature that remains as mysterious as it was on the night that a few frightened witnesses first laid eyes on it.

Just three days after the gravediggers’ initial report, in nearby Point Pleasant, West Virginia, two couples noticed a white-winged creature about six or seven feet tall standing in front of the car that they were all sitting in.

Eyewitnesses Roger Scarberry and Steve Mallett told the local paperThe Point Pleasant Register, that the beast had bright red eyes about six inches apart, a wingspan of 10 feet, and the apparent urge to avoid the bright headlights of the car.

According to the witnesses, this creature was able to fly at incredible speeds — perhaps as fast as 100 miles per hour. All of them agreed that the beast was a clumsy runner on the ground.

They knew this only because it allegedly chased their vehicle to the outskirts of town in the air, then scuttled into a nearby field and disappeared.

Knowing how absurd this must have sounded to a local paper in a small, Appalachian community in the 1960s, Scarberry insisted that the apparition couldn’t have been a figment of his imagination.

He assured the paper, “If I had seen it while by myself, I wouldn’t have said anything, but there were four of us who saw it.”

At first, reporters were skeptical. In the papers, they called the Mothman a bird and a mysterious creature. However, they did print Mallett’s description: “It was like a man with wings.”

But more and more sightings were reported in the Point Pleasant area over the next year as the legend of the Mothman took shape.

The Gettysburg Times reported eight additional sightings in the short span of three days after the first claims. This included two volunteer firefighters, who said they saw “a very large bird with large red eyes.”

Newell Partridge, a resident of Salem, West Virginia, claimed that he saw strange patterns appearing on his television screen one night, followed by a mysterious sound just outside of his home.

Shining a flashlight toward the direction of the noise, Partridge supposedly witnessed two red eyes resembling bicycle reflectors looking back at him.

This anecdote remains a popular one in the Mothman mythos, especially since it allegedly led to the disappearance of Partridge’s dog. To this day, some still believe that the fearsome beast took his beloved pet.

What Is The Mothman Really?

Dr. Robert L. Smith, an associate professor of wildlife biology at West Virginia University, dismissed the notion that a flying monster was staking out the town. Instead, he attributed the sightings to a sandhill crane, which stands almost as tall as the average man and has bright red flesh around its eyes.

This explanation was compelling, especially given the number of early reports that had described the creature as “bird-like.”

Some people hypothesized that this crane was deformed, especially if it resided in the “TNT area” — a name that locals gave to a series of nearby bunkers that were once used for manufacturing munitions during World War II. It has been suggested that these bunkers have leaked toxic materials into the neighboring wildlife preserve, possibly affecting nearby animals.

Another theory suggests that the creation of the Mothman was the work of one very committed prankster who went so far as to hide in the abandoned World War II munitions plant, where some of the sightings occurred.

This theory posits that when the national press ran with the Mothman story, people who lived in Point Pleasant began to panic. Locals became convinced they were seeing the Mothman in birds and other large animals — even long after the prankster had given up on the joke.

It’s worth noting that the Mothman legend bears a resemblance to several demon archetypes found among those who have experienced sleep paralysis, which may suggest that the visions are nothing more than the embodiment of typical human fears, pulled from the depths of the unconscious and grafted onto real-life animal sightings when people panic.

And then there are the paranormal explanations, a morass of complicated theories that weave together aliens, UFOs, and precognition. These theories paint the Mothman as either a harbinger of doom or, more sinisterly, its cause — a legend that has its roots in the tragedy that befell Point Pleasant shortly after the Mothman arrived.

The Silver Bridge Collapse

On December 15, 1967, just over a year after the first Mothman sighting, traffic was bad on the Silver Bridge. Originally built in 1928 to connect Point Pleasant, West Virginia, to Gallipolis, Ohio, the bridge was packed with cars.

This placed a strain on the bridge, which had been built in a time when cars were lighter. The Model T had weighed just 1,500 pounds — a modest sum compared to the 1967 average for a car: 4,000 pounds.

The bridge’s engineers hadn’t been particularly imaginative, nor had they been especially cautious, while creating this structure. The bridge’s design featured very little redundancy, meaning that if one part failed, there was almost nothing in place to prevent other parts from failing as well.

And on that cold December day, that was exactly what happened.

Without warning, a single eyebar near the top of the bridge on the Ohio side cracked. The chain snapped, and the bridge, its careful equilibrium disturbed, fell to pieces, plunging cars and pedestrians into the icy water of the Ohio River below.

Forty-six people died, either by drowning or being crushed by the wreckage.

Following the Mothman sightings, the bridge collapse was the second terrible and bizarre thing to put Point Pleasant on the map in a year’s time. So it didn’t take long for some to connect the two.

In 1975, author John Keel conflated the Mothman sightings and the bridge disaster while creating his book The Mothman Prophecies. He also incorporated UFO activity. His story took hold, and the town soon became iconic among conspiracy theorists, ufologists, and fans of the paranormal.

The Legacy Of The Mothman

Point Pleasant’s fame as the home of the Mothman legend hasn’t waned in recent decades. In 2002, a movie based on Keel’s book rekindled interest in the Mothman.

In the Mothman Prophecies film, Richard Gere plays a reporter whose wife seems to have witnessed the Mothman shortly before her death. He finds himself inexplicably in Point Pleasant several years later with no clue how he got there — and he’s not the only one having trouble explaining himself.

As several locals experience premonitions of distant disasters, there’s talk of visitations from a mysterious figure called the Mothman.

The film — a supernatural horror and mystery — offers no conclusions, communicating instead an eerie feeling of disjointedness that was both panned and praised by critics. Most notably, the film popularized the image of the Mothman as a harbinger of doom.

The idea that visitations from the Mothman predicted disaster led some believers to make ties to the Chernobyl disaster of 1986, the Mexican swine flu outbreak of 2009, and the 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan.

As for sightings of the actual Mothman, they’ve mostly declined since the late 1960s. But every so often, a sighting emerges. In 2016, a man who’d just moved to Point Pleasant spotted a mysterious creature jumping from tree to tree. He claimed to local reporters that he was unaware of the local legend of the Mothman — until he allegedly spotted the beast himself.

Whether these sightings are real or not, the Mothman can still be seen in Point Pleasant today in the form of a historical museum, and also in the form of a 12-foot-tall chrome-polished statue, complete with massive steel wings and ruby-red eyes.

Furthermore, a festival commemorating the Mothman’s visits has taken place annually for years — a fun celebration that attracts locals and tourists alike. Every September, the festivities celebrate one of America’s strangest local legends that still has people scratching their heads to this day.


The Secret Of Skinwalker Ranch

Some have called it a supernatural place. Others have deemed it “cursed.” Terry Sherman got so spooked by the happenings on his new cattle ranch that 18 months after moving his family of four to the property now known by many as “Skinwalker Ranch” in northeastern Utah, he sold the 512-acre parcel away.

He and his wife Gwen shared their chilling experiences with a local reporter in June 1996: They’d seen mysterious crop circles, the Shermans said, and UFOs, and the systematic and repeated mutilation of their cattle—in an oddly surgical and bloodless manner. Within three months of the story’s publication, Las Vegas real estate magnate and UFO enthusiast Robert Bigelow bought the property for $200,000.

Under the name the National Institute for Discovery Science, Bigelow set up round-the-clock surveillance of the ranch, hoping to get to the bottom of the paranormal claims. But while that surveillance yielded a book, Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah, in which several of the researchers claimed to have seen paranormal activities, they were unable to capture any meaningful physical evidence supporting the Shermans’ incredible stories.

The ranch was resold to Adamantium Real Estate, which has since applied to trademark the name “Skinwalker Ranch.”

Had the Shermans been lying about what they saw? Or under the spell of a collective delusion? Without evidence, the stories they told are difficult to believe, but they’re hardly unique. The Uinta Basin of eastern Utah has been such a hotbed of paranormal sightings over the years that some extraterrestrial enthusiasts have deemed it “UFO Alley.” “You can’t throw a rock in Southern Utah without hitting somebody who’s been abducted,” local filmmaker Trent Harris told the Deseret News.

Indeed, according to Hunt for the Skinwalker, odd objects have been spotted overhead since the first European explorers arrived: In 1776, Franciscan missionary Silvestre Vélez de Escalante wrote about strange fireballs appearing over his campfire in El Rey. And before the Europeans, of course, indigenous peoples occupied the Uinta Basin. Today, “Skinwalker Ranch” abuts the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation of the Ute Tribe.

Were the Shermans seeing things that nearby Native Americans had taken note of centuries before?

The disappearance Sydney West

September 30, 2020 was the last time anyone saw or heard from 19-year-old Sydney West. She vanished without a trace from San Francisco, CA, near the Golden Gate Bridge. She seemed like a girl who had her whole life ahead of her. What could’ve caused this intelligent young woman to go mysteriously missing? Watch all…

The disappearance of Natalee Holloway

Natalee Holloway was a young woman who went missing in 2005 in Aruba, whose case made international news. She was never found. In this video we examine the full timeline of events leading to the disappearance of Natalee Holloway. As well as we examine multiple theories as to what could’ve happened to her here on…

The disappearance of Tara Calico

Tara Calico was a 19 year old woman who went mysteriously missing in Belen, New Mexico on September 20th, 1988 while on a bike ride. Her disappearance would soon turn into a missing person cold case. But after a strange polaroid photograph was discovered in 1989. The cold case thawed and new details began to…

The Mystery Of The Lost Cosmonauts

In 1961, Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space. However, some conspiracy theorists speculate that the Soviets reached the cosmos on an earlier mission but covered it up because they lost cosmonauts.

Luckily for everyone who didn’t want to see the human race destroyed in an ocean of nuclear fire, the Cold War never turned hot. Instead, the rivalry between the Soviet Union and the West was basically just a contest to see which side could demonstrate the superiority of their system to the rest of the world. And sometimes, it wasn’t even limited to Earth, as both sides raced to see who could put humans into space first.

The Space Race, as the period between 1955-1972 came to be known, saw both the Soviet Union and the U.S. pushing their scientific resources to the limit as they tried to determine whether communism or democracy was better equipped for blasting people into orbit. For a while, it looked like the answer might actually be communism. In 1957, the Soviets launched the first satellite into orbit, and in 1961, Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space.

These victories in the Space Race sent the U.S. into a panic as they feared they might actually lose the contest to the Soviets. But the apparent success of the Soviet program was hiding a few dark secrets.

In 1960, a Soviet rocket ignited on the launching pad, killing at least 78 of the ground crew. In 1961, just before Gagarin’s space flight, a Soviet cosmonaut was killed when a devastating fire erupted inside an oxygen-rich training capsule.

In 1967, another cosmonaut was killed when the parachute on his space capsule failed to open. Gagarin himself would die a year later while training in a fighter jet, adding another name to the long list of fatalities associated with the Soviet space program.

But there have long been allegations that these publically known fatalities are only a small part of the total number of people who died. In fact, some have even argued that a number of cosmonauts were lost in space.

In 1960, science-fiction author Robert Heinlein reported that while traveling in the USSR, he met Red Army cadets who told him that there had recently been a manned space launch. This launch capsule, the Korabl-Sputnik 1, experienced a mechanical failure when the guidance system steered it in the wrong direction. This made retrieval of the capsule impossible, and the Korabl-Sputnik 1 was stranded in orbit around the Earth.

The Soviets officially claimed the launch was an unmanned test flight, but according to Heinlein, there might have been a cosmonaut inside. To lend some evidence to Heinlein’s theory, two Italian amateur radio operators allegedly picked up a number of radio transmissions that they claimed were from doomed Soviet space launches.

Achille and Giovanni Judica-Cordiglia, a pair of brothers from Turin, claimed that they began monitoring Soviet space program transmissions in 1957, and that these transmissions prove Yuri Gagarin wasn’t actually the first man in space.

In November of 1960, the brothers claimed to pick up an S.O.S. transmission in Morse code coming from a Soviet spacecraft. Based on the transmissions, they determined that the craft was moving away from Earth instead of orbiting it, which meant that the Soviets had accidentally launched their cosmonauts deep into space. The brothers eventually made nine such recordings they claimed were emergency transmissions from Soviet cosmonauts being launched away from Earth.

In one of the recordings, a woman’s voice can be heard saying in Russian that she can see flames and asking mission control if her ship is about to explode. If the recordings are real, then it means that the first woman in Space was actually launched by the Soviets, and apparently died there. And if you believe other rumors, then Soviet cosmonauts were also technically the first on the Moon after a group of cosmonauts volunteered to be launched directly into it in the Soviet Luna Probe.

The Soviets denied all of these allegations, and while they were always eager to cover up any embarrassing incidents behind the Iron Curtain, there are a few good reasons to believe them in this case. For instance, the Luna Probes had no room to fit the cosmonauts who supposedly asked to be fired into the Moon’s surface. The Korabl-Sputnik 1 had no re-entry shield, which suggests that there were never any plans for the capsule to survive the trip.

The Judica-Cordiglia recordings are widely dismissed as forgeries these days. In his biography, Gagarin suggested that most of the lost cosmonaut theories could be explained by accidents that happened in low orbit, not actually in space.

Even in declassified Soviet documents about the space program, there’s no mention of any missing cosmonauts. So, most of the evidence suggests that the story of the lost cosmonauts is probably just another of the many myths of the Cold War.

Check out this video for the full story, various theories and the actual audio the brother’s recorded of the supposed lost cosmonauts!

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