Portland, Indiana·cemetery Finch Cemetery in Portland, Indiana, stands as a burial ground of considerable age and historical significance, preserving the remains of residents from the earliest periods of European settlement in the region. The cemetery's landscape, typical of rural Indiana burial grounds, contains modest grave markers representing generations of families whose lives unfolded in the agricultural and small-town contexts of the American Midwest. The cemetery's age and the passage of time have created a landscape where the boundaries between the established and the mysterious blur, where the simple act of maintaining and documenting burial records becomes complicated by phenomena that defy conventional explanation. Among the cemetery's graves exists a particular marker that has become the focus of paranormal investigation and local legend, the grave of Cinderella Steed, a child whose death in 1859 appears to have left spiritual ripples extending far beyond the ordinary dimensions of grief and loss. The cemetery represents a typical nineteenth and early twentieth-century burial ground, with grave markers ranging from simple fieldstones to more elaborate Victorian-era monuments.
Cinderella Steed, who died in 1859 at an unknown age, became the focus of unusual paranormal phenomena concentrated around her grave marker and the immediate cemetery environs. The name Cinderella suggests either parental romanticism or possibly a family nickname, a detail that humanizes the individual lost to mortality and transforms the grave from a statistical record into a testament to a specific person. The circumstances of the child's death remain poorly documented in available historical records, creating a historical obscurity that seems to mirror the mysterious nature of the paranormal phenomena associated with the grave. The grave has become the nexus point for paranormal activity that extends beyond normal expectations of haunted cemetery locations, suggesting an entity of unusual power or determination. The most remarkable phenomenon associated with Cinderella's grave involves the apparent autonomous movement and relocation of gravestones within the cemetery, with visitors and investigators reporting significant discrepancies between the number of visible grave markers observed during separate visits.
Multiple credible witnesses have documented entering Finch Cemetery and counting thirteen distinct gravestones, only to leave the cemetery grounds and return to discover that only eleven grave markers remain in their previous locations. This pattern of gravestones appearing and disappearing has been repeated multiple times across different investigations, suggesting a consistent paranormal phenomenon rather than a miscount or temporary misplacement caused by human activity. The mechanism by which gravestones shift position or vanish entirely remains unexplained, as the markers are substantially constructed monuments not easily displaced without significant physical effort. Electronic paranormal investigation equipment deployed at Finch Cemetery has confirmed the presence of unusually elevated electromagnetic field readings concentrated in the area surrounding Cinderella Steed's grave, with readings of 86.4 units far exceeding baseline electromagnetic levels typical of rural cemetery environments. Finch Cemetery remains today a location where the mundane reality of rural Indiana burial grounds intersects with documented paranormal phenomena that challenge conventional understanding of death, spiritual persistence, and the nature of consciousness.