4. Boy Scout Lane — Wisconsin
On this lonely dirt road in Stevens Point, Wisconsin, urban legend has it that in the 1950s, a troop of Boy Scouts disappeared. Some versions of the story say they died in a forest fire after someone dropped a lantern during a camping trip. Others tell a tale of murder at the hands of a bus driver or troop leader.
Local lore has it that travelers on this road sometimes hear Boy Scouts laughing in the distance, perhaps sitting around a ghostly campfire off in the woods. There have also been reports of a ghost bus traveling the road and mysterious handprints appearing on car windows.
5. Route 44 — Massachusetts
A section of U.S. Route 44 near Rehoboth, Massachusetts, is reputed to be home to the Redheaded Hitchhiker of Route 44. This mysterious man is always looking for ride and has been described as a bearded redhead with vacant, black or creepy looking eyes wearing a flannel shirt, jeans and work boots.
He summons drivers — usually those traveling alone — with his thumb out, then gets into the vehicle and remains completely silent, even if the driver tries to engage in friendly conversation. At some point, the driver always looks over to find that he’s vanished.
If you can muster the courage to drive this twisty two-lane road in Montecito, California, you should know the legend of the three sisters. During the California Gold Rush in the mid-1800s, highway bandits murdered three nuns who had gone on a mission trip bearing candles, Bibles and food, according to local legend.
Today, the ghosts of the three nuns — known as Las Tres Hermanas — are said to appear along the side of this road in their black habits holding hands. Drivers report seeing the apparitions with glowing faces and bright blue eyes by the side of the road at night.
7. Dead Man’s Curve — Ohio
This stretch of road known as Dead Man’s Curve in Clermont County, Ohio, is not curved today. But the area where state routes 125 and 222 meet near Amelia, Ohio, was once the site of an infamously dangerous sharp curve atop a hill.
In the fall of 1969, the state widened and straightened the road. But according to local lore, the accidents didn’t stop. The following year, it’s reported that five teens in an Impala were hit by another driver going 100 mph. Tragically, there was only one survivor. The details of that crash are unclear, but since then, drivers have reported a faceless hitchhiker standing by the side of the road — and some have even seen a ghostly Impala with no driver.