
Some Say This Island in Orono, Maine, is The Most Cursed in the State
With a rich, long history like the state of Maine has, there is bound to be plenty of rousing ghost stories and urban legends that permeate Maine communities.
Many of those stories seem to be isolated instances, a one-off moment that has been passed from person to person like a schoolyard rumor.
But there's others where the tall tale seems more rooted in reality. One of those stories that continues to be told today is about an island along the Penobscot River in Orono, Maine, that may have been to unspeakable acts and burdened with a curse that still stands.
Ayers Island in Orono, Maine, Considered One of the Most Cursed Places in State
According to the Gardiner Public Library, Ayers Island is a 62-acre island that played a key role in Maine's lumber industry more than a century ago. Ayers Island is likely familiar to current and former students of the University of Maine Orono, as the campus is only two miles away.
Why Ayers Island is believed to be cursed is centered around three different stories. The most notorious of the urban legends is the story about "Wooden Lucy".
She was a folklore villain the likes of Medusa, and tall tales told of how she inhabited the island and could cast death upon anyone with a simple gaze into her eyes. Boaters have spoken at length about seeing a petite, blond-haired girl roaming the island.
If that seems a little too far-fetched, there's a pair of far more realistic tales about the island. One of them is the story of John Tanner. Tanner was once a foreman at a mill operating on the island. After he perished in a mysterious accident, his soul haunts the island seeking revenge for his untimely passing.
From Ghost Stores to a Grisly Murder on Ayers Island
The final tale is a morbid story between a father and daughter. Samual Hawthorne worked the mill on the island where his daughter, Margaret Hawthorne, would often visit him to bring him lunch.
Margaret also enjoyed playing practical jokes on her father, and one afternoon, she planned to sneak up and scare him. Samuel was familiar with the ghosts of the island and, believing he was being followed by a spirit, swung a weapon and fatally injured his own daughter.
Margaret's spirit is believed to have remained on the island.
Ayers Island received some national attention in the mid-2000s. VH-1 shot episodes of Celebrity Paranormal Project there. These days, the island is privatized, and there is a firm no-trespassing policy. The access bridge to the island is reportedly still out of commission. But for those that still boat by, the cursed island feels all too real.
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