You hear a moan, and realize that it's not the wind or your imagination. So who or what was it? Throughout the years, ghost stories have persisted on U.S. military bases in the Pacific.
Yongsan Garrison (Dragon Hill Garrison), South Korea
The garrison served as headquarters for the Imperial Japanese Army in Korea from 1910 to 1945. U.S. military forces were stationed there until 2018.
Dan Harary is best known for his 40-plus years of work in Hollywood as an entertainment industry publicist, and as the owner of the Asbury PR Agency in Beverly Hills. Dan has worked with hundreds of famous celebrities from movies, TV, music, and pop culture including a pre-fame Bruce Springsteen, KISS, and Fleetwood Mac. A longtime UFO researcher, Dan has been a member of the Southern California Chapter of MUFON since 2007. He is also the creator and host of the podcast: Live From Hollywood…It’s Paranormal Tonight!
Sitting off the northwest coast of Martha's Vineyard in Buzzard's Bay is a small island that was probably visited by Vikings around 1,000 A.D.
In 1873, the Anderson School of Natural History was built on Penikese Island by John Anderson, a tobacco merchant. He had originally constructed his summer home on the south end of the island, on a hill overlooking the sea. He donated Anderson Mansion to be part of the campus, which included a laboratory, a dorm and a dining hall. In addition, Anderson had given an endowment of $50,000 for the school, which was to hold classes for teachers. Anderson hired Alexander Agassiz who at that time was publicly recognized as America's leading scientist, to run the school.
Maxim W. Furek's background includes aspects of psychology, addictions, and rock journalism. He has written numerous articles for both addictions and rock publications. His books include: The Death Proclamation of Generation X: A Self-Fulfilling Prophesy of Goth, Grunge and Heroin, which traces the origins of the current opiate epidemic, Sheppton: The Myth, Miracle, and Music, Flying Saucer Esoteric: The Altered States of Ufology and Coal Region Hoodoo: Paranormal Tales from Inside the Pit.
John Olsen was raised in Cache Valley. As a child he began to realize that the old farmhouse he lived in was peculiar. Built in the mid-1880s, the family had strange experiences such as phantom knocks, loud boots running up the stairs, and missing objects became commonplace. With each run-in with what he called the “man in the hat,” John’s interest in the paranormal grew. He has spent the last 30 years documenting first-hand accounts of those who have witnessed all kinds of strange and unusual phenomena in the western United States, which contain firsthand accounts of ghosts, monsters, hauntings, glitches in the matrix, Sasquatch, and UFOs.
Stories of the Supernatural explores a long used crossroads in Central Florida known as Yeehaw Junction, where for over a 100 years, gunfights, murder, suicides and sightings of ghosts are just the beginning of the supernatural events that have been witnessed by travelers where these two roads meet. | Host - Marlene Pardo Pellicer
The colonial cemetery of Christ Church on Barbados was witness to violent poltergeist activity over 200 years ago. Till this day it remains a mystery as well as another paranormal event that haunted a restaurant in 1930s Peking.
De Mello house sits abandoned somewhere on Goa, approximately 180 miles south of Bombay. The dark folklore surrounding the house stems from a dispute that supposedly led to murder between family members.
At the end of the 15th century Vasco Da Gama discovered the maritime route to Asia via the Cape of Good Hope. In a dozen years Portugal possessed Mangalore, Cochin, Ceylon, Ormuz, Diu, Goa and Negapatam.