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Ada Witch
Ada Cemetery - Ada witch - Sometimes you can see
a misty blue figure floating within a 3-mile radius
of the Ada Cemetery on 2 Mile between Egypt Valley
and Honey Creek. The story of her origin is as follows:
A man suspected his wife of having an affair, so he
followed her late one night when she thought he was
asleep. Sure enough, she went to a field near their
property where she met her lover. The husband was
enraged and killed his wife, which resulted in a
struggle with the other man. Both men died from their
injuries. It is said that late at night (especially
during the night of and the nights preceding a full moon)
people driving by the field can see her ghost, searching
for her lover. Some people have reported stopping to try
to communicate with her, but she always disappears or runs
into the woods where she cannot be followed (due to the
thick brambles that inhabit the area). She is said to dress
in a long white gown which authorities say dates her to the
turn of the 20th century. Usually she is seen alone, but sometimes witnesses report seeing a ghostly death scene
re-enacted... Others report seeing nothing at all but
hearing the killer's shouts of rage followed by the
victims' screams of agony... Although it is said she
haunts the field on Honeycreek Road where she died, other witnesses have reported her in nearby Seidman Park, and
in nearby Findlay Cemetery, where she is supposedly buried.
This story was actually featured in the book "Ghosts of
Grand Rapids."
a misty blue figure floating within a 3-mile radius
of the Ada Cemetery on 2 Mile between Egypt Valley
and Honey Creek. The story of her origin is as follows:
A man suspected his wife of having an affair, so he
followed her late one night when she thought he was
asleep. Sure enough, she went to a field near their
property where she met her lover. The husband was
enraged and killed his wife, which resulted in a
struggle with the other man. Both men died from their
injuries. It is said that late at night (especially
during the night of and the nights preceding a full moon)
people driving by the field can see her ghost, searching
for her lover. Some people have reported stopping to try
to communicate with her, but she always disappears or runs
into the woods where she cannot be followed (due to the
thick brambles that inhabit the area). She is said to dress
in a long white gown which authorities say dates her to the
turn of the 20th century. Usually she is seen alone, but sometimes witnesses report seeing a ghostly death scene
re-enacted... Others report seeing nothing at all but
hearing the killer's shouts of rage followed by the
victims' screams of agony... Although it is said she
haunts the field on Honeycreek Road where she died, other witnesses have reported her in nearby Seidman Park, and
in nearby Findlay Cemetery, where she is supposedly buried.
This story was actually featured in the book "Ghosts of
Grand Rapids."
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