Bill Sketoe’s Hole – Choctawhatchee Bridge
Bill Sketoe's Hole stands as one of the most unusual and enduring paranormal phenomena in the American South, a geographic anomaly centered at the base of the Choctawhatchee Bridge near Newton, Alabama that has confounded locals and investigators for generations. The hole owes its existence to a tragic event that occurred in 1864, when William Sketoe Sr., a prominent Methodist minister and community figure, was brutally lynched by a mob of vigilantes who sought to eliminate him from the local area. The circumstances of his death remain shrouded in the turbulence of the Reconstruction era, when racial and religious tensions gripped the region with violent intensity. Sketoe's body was interred beneath the bridge at the site of what would become the famous hole, and the burial seemed to mark the end of a dark chapter in the community's history. However, beginning in the decades immediately following his interment and continuing uninterrupted for approximately one hundred and twenty-five years, the earth at the burial site refused to remain solid, manifesting as a persistent and inexplicable depression that locals came to call Bill Sketoe's Hole.
The physical manifestation of the phenomenon grew increasingly documented as the nineteenth century gave way to the twentieth, with repeated and determined efforts by residents and authorities to fill the hole permanently proving futile. Landowners and county officials approached the problem with conventional solutions, depositing earth, rocks, and other materials into the depression, only to discover within weeks or months that the materials had disappeared or the ground had subsided once again. The hole would expand and contract seasonally, appearing deeper during wet periods and shallower during drought, yet never remaining truly filled regardless of the materials introduced or the methods employed. Neighbors reported witnessing the ground itself shift and move as if animated by some unseen force, and the area beneath the bridge began to acquire a reputation as a place where the natural order of the earth had been fundamentally disrupted. The inexplicable nature of the phenomenon attracted folklore experts and paranormal investigators throughout the twentieth century, all seeking to explain how a hole could resist being filled for over a century.
Paranormal activity surrounding the site has been documented extensively since the early twentieth century, with witnesses reporting phenomena that suggested the restless presence of William Sketoe himself actively preventing the burial of his past from being sealed beneath the earth. Visitors to the location reported experiencing sudden temperature fluctuations, particularly sudden cold spots in the area immediately above the hole regardless of seasonal temperature conditions. Disembodied voices have been heard emanating from the bridge and surrounding ground, with some accounts describing anguished cries and words spoken in anger or protest. Shadows and dark figures have been observed moving through the area at dusk and night, sometimes circling the hole in patterns that suggested intentionality rather than random movement. Photographs taken at the site frequently reveal anomalies and unexplained marks that were not visible to the naked eye, including orbs, mists, and streaks of light that converge toward the hole's location. The paranormal manifestations intensified during certain times of year, particularly around the anniversary of Sketoe's death in 1864, when witnesses reported experiencing heightened electromagnetic sensitivity, equipment malfunctions, and encounters with shadowy presences.
The hole finally ceased its persistent refusal to remain filled in the latter part of the twentieth century, approximately one hundred and twenty-five years after William Sketoe's burial, though the exact circumstances of this cessation remain unclear in local records. The site has since been incorporated into historical preservation efforts and paranormal tourism circuits, attracting visitors from across the region who seek to understand the nature of the phenomenon and pay respects to the memory of William Sketoe Sr. The bridge itself has undergone reconstruction and repair over the decades, yet the location where the hole persisted remains marked and documented, a permanent testament to the enduring mystery of how grief, injustice, and paranormal forces can conspire to reshape the very earth. The area continues to register unusual electromagnetic activity, and visitors report a pervasive sense of unease and sorrow that seems to emanate from the ground itself, as if the earth itself remembers and grieves the violence that occurred upon it.