Gurdon Light

Close-up picture of the Gurdon Light.

The Gurdon Light is an atmospheric ghost light located near railroad tracks in a wooded area of Gurdon, Arkansas. It is the subject of local folklore and has been featured in local media and on Unsolved Mysteries and Mysteries at the Museum. The tracks are no longer in use, and the rails at least partially removed/covered, but it remains one of the most popular Halloween attractions in the area.[1][2][3] The light has been described as blue, green, white or orange and appearing to have a "bobbing" movement.[4]

Folklore

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According to folklore, the light is the swinging lantern of a ghost brakeman accidentally beheaded by a passing train, searching for his disembodied head. Another variation of the legend holds that the light is a lantern carried by the ghost of a worker killed in a fight with another railroad employee on the tracks.[citation needed] According to skeptical writer Brian Dunning, very similar folklore exists for a number of such "ghost lights", and it's not likely "headless brakemen" could be such a common occurrence.[5]

Explanations

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The light has been proposed to be the reflection of passing cars on Interstate 30, however believers contend there have been reports of the lights since the 1930s, while the interstate was not built until the late 1950s.[1][2][3]

See also

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33°54′55″N 93°09′19″W / 33.91528°N 93.15528°W / 33.91528; -93.15528[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b Brown, Alan (2002) "Haunted Places in the American South", University Press of Mississippi, ISBN 1-57806-477-5
  2. ^ a b McNeil W. K, Clements William M. (1992) "An Arkansas Folklore Sourcebook" University of Arkansas Press, ISBN 1-55728-254-4
  3. ^ a b Unsolved Mysteries: Gurdon Light, NBC (December 1994)
  4. ^ "Arkansas Legend: The Gurdon Light". kark.com. KARK-TV. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  5. ^ Dunning, Brian. "The Marfa Lights: A Real American Mystery". skeptoid.com. Skeptoid. Retrieved 2 November 2023. A similar phenomenon in Arkansas called the Gurdon Light is said to be the swinging lantern of a brakeman accidentally beheaded by a passing train. Not surprisingly, the exact same explanation is put forth for the Big Thicket Ghost Light in Bragg, Texas. These ghost lights can't all be headless brakemen, so it's conceivable that the folk explanation is not true in every case.
  6. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: City of Gurdon
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