Dewittville Cemetery – Poor House Cemetery
Outside Dewittville, New York·cemetery Dewittville Cemetery, commonly referred to as the Poor House Cemetery, occupies a secluded site outside Dewittville in rural New York, serving as a burial ground for some of the region's most vulnerable populations across nearly a century of operation. The cemetery was formally established in the early nineteenth century as a pauper's burial ground, with documented internments spanning from 1833 through 1918, marking a period of significant poverty and public health challenges in the rural communities surrounding the Buffalo and Niagara region. The land originally served as the cemetery for the adjacent Poor Farm Alms House, an institution designed to provide relief and minimal shelter for indigent individuals, the elderly, and the destitute who had no family means of support. The site reflects the grim realities of nineteenth and early twentieth century poverty management in upstate New York, with the understated cemetery serving as a silent testament to lives lived in institutional circumstances and buried with minimal ceremony or family involvement. The older section of the cemetery, which lies deeper within the surrounding woods and near the remnants of the barn structure, contains graves of residents who died under circumstances ranging from natural causes exacerbated by poverty to disease and malnutrition endemic to poorly maintained almshouses of the era. The institutional context of the cemetery's purpose created a distinctive spiritual and historical environment, where vulnerability, deprivation, and often-truncated lifespans characterize the human experience recorded in the burial records. Over decades, the site developed a reputation within local paranormal circles as one of the more active haunted locations in the Buffalo and Niagara paranormal database, with documented reports and investigations suggesting significant spiritual restlessness in specific areas of the property. Visitors and paranormal researchers have reported recurring phenomena concentrated primarily in and around the old barn structure, which is believed by investigators to harbor the most intense manifestations of paranormal energy and possibly served during the almshouse era as a multipurpose facility. Glowing orbs have been photographed with consistent frequency in the barn's interior and surrounding areas, suggesting possible manifestations of residual spiritual energy or conscious apparitions of former residents whose lives intersected with the institution. Unexplained sounds permeate the property, including disembodied voices, footsteps in areas with no living visitors, and what investigators describe as sounds of anguish or calls for help emanating from the wooded sections and the barn itself, suggesting unresolved distress or spiritual confusion among the haunting entities. Misty apparitions have been reported, particularly in the older cemetery section, often appearing as shadowy figures moving through the burial grounds and occasionally congregating near specific grave sites, as if recreating patterns of movement or interaction from their living years. Witnesses and researchers working in the older cemetery section report experiencing profound emotional impressions of sadness, loss, and desperation, sensations that many attribute to sympathetic resonance with the spiritual presences inhabiting the location. The combination of the site's tragic historical purpose, the documented deaths of institutionalized individuals, and the consistency of paranormal reports have established Dewittville Cemetery as a significant location for paranormal researchers investigating the spiritual aftermath of historical institutional poverty and neglect.
Light Anomalies
Unexplained Sounds