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La Carreta Chillona: The Weeping Wagon of El Salvador

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La Carreta Chillona: The Weeping Wagon of El Salvador.

La Carreta Chillona is a ghostly unmanned wagon that drives through the streets at night, collecting the soul of anyone who lays eyes upon it.

The Legend of La Carreta Chillona

At night, in certain towns in El Salvador, a cart can be heard squeaking as it moves along the streets. It is named after the creepy, high-pitched sound it emits when it crawls.

Others claim to hear the rattling of chains and bones as the cart approaches, and say that the ground shakes as it passes by. There are even rumors that those who dare to look at the cart will meet a mysterious and deadly fate.

The cart, known as “La Carreta Chillona,” is said to carry human skulls and move without the guidance of oxen. It appears to be propelled forward by some unseen force, leading some to believe it is a spirit collecting the souls of the deceased and guiding them into the afterlife. Others claim that a headless ghost is behind the wheel.

Inside the cart, many believe there are bones and corpses of those who died without their heads. At midnight, these spirits are said to emerge from cemeteries and wander the streets with the souls of the suffering, calling out the names of deceitful and hypocritical people as a warning of their own potential fate.

The Origin of The Legend of La Carreta Chillona

A video telling the story of La Carreta Chillona

Several years after the arrival of the Spaniards, a man named Terencio Pérez made his way to El Salvador. He had been educated by Fray Antolin Oviedo, a priest who taught him about the country. When the priest passed away, Terencio relocated to a different town where he met a friend of the priest – an apothecary who had a pharmacy where he learned how to treat various illnesses.

Terencio met a Native man named Juan Tepa, and they eventually became good friends. Unfortunately, Terencio’s intention from the beginning was to learn about the native secrets of plant-based medicine and use the knowledge to benefit himself. To further enhance his reputation, he even changed his name to Terencio Pérez of the Trocadera.

The Spanish took advantage of Terencio’s knowledge, using it to become wealthy by curing diseases among the Spanish population. Unbeknownst to the Spanish, all of Terencio’s knowledge came from the Natives.

When a plague broke out among the Native population, Terencio refused to help because they could not afford to pay him. He also did not want the Spanish to know about his friendship with the Natives.

Terencio was visited one night by the ghost of Fray Antolín. Fray told terencio that he had no place in this world due to the numerous deaths caused by his guilt and the fact that he had not used his knowledge to aid people.

The ghost instructed Terencio to construct a cart out of the bones of those who had perished as a result of his actions. The ghost informed him that he would become a restless spirit, forever searching for a cemetery to bury those whom he had failed to help.

Terencio vanished and was never seen again, but sometimes at night you can hear his creaky cart making its way through the streets of El Salvador.

One Woman’s Experience with La Carreta Chillona

A middle-aged woman, hailing from El Salvador,claims the story of La Carreta Chillona was passed down to her by her mother, who likely shared it, along with other tales, as a means of discouraging her from venturing out into the streets during the nighttime.

When interviewed by USC Digital Folklore Archives she said that on certain nights, she and her sister thought they heard the wagon passing through their town. She even knew people who claimed to have seen the wagon with their own eyes.

Have you every seen La Carreta Chillona? Let us know in the comments.

If you enjoyed learning about La Carreta Chillona you might also be interested in the story of Jenny Greenteeth or the legend of El Sibon.

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Ghosts

Mysterious Voice Calls Officers to Rescue Baby Trapped Inside Car

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Lily Groesbeck is rescued from a car wreck in an icy Utah river after officers hear a strange voice alerting them to her presence.

Four police officers hurried to an overturned car in an icy river in Utah and all heard the same thing: a mysterious woman’s voice calling “Help” from inside the car. When they reached the car, they found that the driver was dead, and her 18-month-old daughter, though alive, couldn’t have been the one speaking.

Police Rescue Lily Groesback

Raw: Body-cam Footage of Utah Toddler Rescue.

Officer Jared Warner from the Spanish Fork Police Department was among the first responders to rescue little Lily Groesbeck. She was strapped into her car seat in the back of her mother’s car, which was hanging upside down in freezing water.

“We’ve talked about it, and all four of us are sure we heard someone inside the car calling ‘Help,’” Warner told Deseret News.

When they managed to flip the car over, they found a 25-year-old woman dead in the front seat and Lily unconscious in her car seat.

“The only people in there were the dead mother and the child,” Officer Bryan Dewitt explained.

Officer Tyler Beddoes added that they all clearly heard the voice, but have no explanation for it.

“It wasn’t just in our heads. To me, it was as clear as day. I remember hearing a voice,” Beddoes said. “I think it was Dewitt who said, ‘We’re trying. We’re trying our best to get in there.’ How do you explain that? I don’t know.”

No one knows how Lily managed to survive hanging upside down for almost 14 hours without food or water. The car was balanced on the bank and rocks, with icy water flowing just below Lily’s head through the broken windows. The temperatures were close to freezing all night and into the morning.

“It’s heartbreaking. Was she crying most of the night?” Beddoes, a 30-year-old father of two, wondered. “It’s a miracle. She was meant to be here.”

Police think the crash happened when Lily’s mother, 25-year-old Lynn Groesbeck, hit a cement barrier on a bridge and ended up in the river late Friday night. This was in Spanish Fork, about 50 miles south of Salt Lake City. She was driving home to Springville after visiting her parents in Salem, explained Spanish Fork police Lt. Matt Johnson. The exact cause of the crash is unknown. There were no skid marks or signs of mechanical failure.

Drugs and alcohol are not suspected, but toxicology tests are pending. Lt. Johnson suggested that maybe Lynn was tired or distracted, but nothing is being ruled out yet.

Beddoes said the family has expressed their gratitude to him and the other officers for saving Lily. Reflecting on that chaotic, cold day, Beddoes still finds it hard to believe that Lily survived. And he’s still puzzled by the voice they all heard coming from the car.

“We all heard the same thing,” Beddoes said. “We just can’t make sense of what we heard.”

Are you interested in Ghost Hunting? Try our AI powered Spirit Box app!

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Ghosts

A Harbinger of Death in Wyoming

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An artist’s impression of the ghostly ship that appears on the Platte River in Wyoming.

For more than a hundred years, a ghostly ship has appeared on the Platte River roughly every 25 years. Each sighting has been said to predict the death of someone known to the witness who spotted the eerie vessel.

A Warning on the Platte River

Wyoming has its fair share of ghost stories and phantom tales, but one lesser-known legend is not only terrifying but also carries a reputation as an omen of death.

The mist rising from the water pouring from the Pathfinder Dam on the North Platte River might explain some things, but it doesn’t account for the chilling sightings reported for over a century.

Sightings of the Wyoming Ghost Ship

In 1862, a trapper named Leon Webber had the first documented encounter with the death ship. Initially, he spotted a massive ball of fog near the river. Curious, he approached and even threw a stone at the swirling mass. To his astonishment, it transformed into a sailing ship, its mast and sails glistening with frost.

On board, frost-covered sailors surrounded something on the deck. As they moved aside, Webber saw it was the body of a girl, whom he recognized as his fiancée. His shock deepened when he later discovered she had passed away on the very day he witnessed the haunting spectacle.

Another sighting occurred along the North Platte River in 1887. As the mist thickened on the river, cattleman Gene Wilson was rounding up his herd nearby when his dog suddenly began barking frantically. Startled, his horse refused to approach the riverbank and attempted to flee. After securing his horse to a scrub pine, Wilson cautiously approached the river on foot. He later described the sight as profoundly unsettling, saying it “sent shivers down my spine.”

There, almost motionless on the swiftly flowing river, was a fully-rigged sailing vessel seemingly crafted from the frozen, glimmering mist that enveloped it. Once again, a crew stood on deck, and this time the captain gestured for them to lower a frost-covered canvas suspended by ropes at its corners. As the bundle reached the deck and a sailor unveiled it, Wilson was chilled to the bone to see his wife’s face on the lifeless body.

The Platte River

The ship vanished when Wilson screamed in terror. He hurried home only to find his house reduced to ashes and his wife’s lifeless body lying about 100 yards away from the smoldering remains.

It took another 25 years before the death ship reappeared. The third witness, Victor Hiebe, had no prior knowledge of the earlier sightings. While taking a smoke break from chopping firewood near the North Platte River, he struck a match to light his pipe and noticed a sudden bank of fog moving downstream towards him. As the fog neared, it gradually transformed into a sailing ship encased in icy mist, a chilling sight.

A sail initially obstructed Hiebe’s view, but he could discern a crew on the deck and hear voices. One voice claimed innocence while another asserted they were merely carrying out their duty. When the sail was finally raised, Hiebe was horrified to see a gallows on the ship’s deck with a man hanging from it. It was his best friend, whom he believed had been unjustly convicted of murder and escaped from prison. Later, Hiebe learned that his friend had been captured and executed on the very day he saw the death ship.

The Cheyenne Bureau of Psychological Research monitors reported sightings, and a few books have documented these accounts of the Death Ship on the North Platte River. Some suggest keeping watch for this eerie vessel during autumn, when it tends to appear. If you spot what looks like a ship in the mist on the North Platte River, it might be best to look away—you may not want to witness what’s aboard.

ENIGMA VIntage Narratives covers the story of the Wyoming Death Ship

Have you ever had a premonition of death, like the ones in the article? Tell us about it in the comments!

If you enjoyed learning about the Wyoming Ghost Ship you might alsoe be interested in
2026 Doomsday Predictions or how Katherine Hobbs predicted her own death.

Are you interested in Ghost Hunting? Try our AI powered Spirit Box app!

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