Devil’s Bridge – haunted bridge

    Devil’s Bridge

    Bridge·Status Unknown·Public Access·Demonic·Updated April 22, 2026
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    Background & History

    Historical context and known paranormal claims surrounding Devil’s Bridge.

    On the south side of San Antonio, where the city thins out into scrubby ranchland and the San Antonio River bends through old mission territory, a small bridge on East Ashley Road crosses a ravine deep enough that locals say if you drop a rock from the railing, you'll never hear it land. The bridge sits near 2454 East Ashley Road, not far from Mission San Juan Capistrano—one of the chain of eighteenth-century Spanish missions that line the river and now form a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The area has been continuously inhabited for thousands of years. Native Americans camped along this stretch of river long before the Spanish arrived. The missions themselves, established in the 1730s, were built with Indigenous labor and sustained by an elaborate acequia system that still carries water through the surrounding farmland today. The ground here is layered with centuries of human presence, conflict, disease, conversion, and death. It is old land, even by Texas standards.

    Devil's Bridge is not an ancient structure. It is a modest roadway bridge, unremarkable in engineering, crossing a steep ravine in an area that goes very dark after sundown. The name belongs to a global tradition—there are dozens of Devil's Bridges across Europe, most of them medieval, each carrying its own legend about a pact with Satan in exchange for construction. San Antonio's version doesn't have a clear origin story for the name itself. Some say it refers to supernatural happenings at the site. Others suggest it simply describes the danger of crossing the ravine at night on an unlit road, in an era before guardrails and headlights made such crossings routine. The bridge did claim at least one documented life: on March 7, 1965, shortly after midnight, a forty-one-year-old woman named Victoria Ann Broussard was fatally injured when the car her husband was driving struck the bridge's guardrail head-on. He told the responding patrolman he hadn't seen the bridge. She was pronounced dead at Baptist Memorial Hospital and buried at San Fernando Cemetery No. 2.

    The paranormal claims at Devil's Bridge draw from multiple threads, none of them cleanly verifiable but all of them persistent. One account ties the haunting to the Spanish colonial period, claiming a priest whose parishioners were killed during the Inquisition hanged himself from a tree near the bridge. Visitors have reported hearing the sound of a creaking rope in the surrounding trees—rhythmic, deliberate, like a body swinging from a noose. A priest at the nearby San Juan Church reportedly warned a young man in the early 1970s to be careful exploring the riverbank near the bridge, telling him he had personally seen spirits walking the grounds where Native Americans once camped. The young man had found pottery shards and square nails in the area, artifacts consistent with centuries of habitation along the river.

    A paranormal investigator named Joe recorded EVP sessions at the bridge and claimed to capture a voice responding to the question "Who are you?" with the name "Melvin," along with a separate recording of a voice saying "I'm here." No historical records have been found for anyone named Melvin connected to the site. Visitors have also reported the apparition of a headless woman who approaches from behind, white smoke-like figures, and the smell of sulfur—rotten eggs—hanging in the air around the bridge at night. The claim about the impenetrable darkness is among the most frequently repeated: that after sundown, the area around the ravine becomes so dark that headlights and flashlights seem to penetrate only a few feet, as if the light itself is being absorbed.

    The most unsettling recurring detail involves the ravine itself.

    Multiple accounts describe throwing rocks off the bridge and never hearing them hit water or ground—as though something catches them, or the ravine simply has no bottom. One version of the legend attributes this to the spirit of a little girl. The depth of the ravine is real and measurable, but the acoustic effect in a steep, vegetation-choked gully at night, combined with ambient insect noise and the psychology of expectation, could plausibly account for the phenomenon. Or it couldn't. The people who've stood on that bridge in the dark tend to find the explanation less comforting than the mystery.

    Today Devil's Bridge remains a functioning road bridge on East Ashley Road, accessible by car, with no signage or formal acknowledgment of its reputation. Mission San Juan sits nearby, its stone walls and flowing acequias drawing tourists and pilgrims. The San Antonio Food Bank farms the old mission fields just down the road. It is a landscape where the sacred, the agricultural, and the spectral exist in close proximity—where a UNESCO site and a haunted bridge share the same stretch of river, and where the oldest water rights in Texas still flow through ditches dug by hands that have been gone for three hundred years.

    Type

    bridge

    Location

    San Antonio, Texas

    County

    Bexar County

    Coordinates

    29.334614, -98.45593

    Added to Archive

    February 26, 2026

    Current Status

    Status Unknown

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    Activity Breakdown
    6

    Types of documented activity recorded at Devil’s Bridge, organized by category.

    Visual Activity

    2
    Light Anomalies
    Shadow Figures

    Audio Activity

    1
    EVPs

    Sensory & Environmental

    1
    Phantom Smells

    Behavioral & Interactive

    2
    Demonic
    Senses of Presence

    Reported Areas
    0

    Specific areas within Devil’s Bridge where activity has been documented.

    No specific areas of activity have been reported for Devil’s Bridge yet.

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    Known Entities
    1

    Entities, spirits, and figures that have been identified or reported at Devil’s Bridge.

    Victoria Ann Broussard (woman who died in 1965 car crash)

    Photos
    1

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    Devil’s Bridge - Photo 1

    Investigator Reviews
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    Contact Information

    2454 E Ashley Rd, San Antonio, Texas 78223

    29.334614, -98.45593

    Access

    Public Access

    Status

    Status Unknown

    Documented Experiences
    0

    Paranormal reports and documented occurrences compiled for Devil’s Bridge from archived sources and community investigators.

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    Best Times to Visit

    Peak hours and months reported by investigators at Devil’s Bridge.

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    Equipment & Methods
    1

    Equipment and investigation methods reported by community investigators at Devil’s Bridge.

    Audio Equipment

    Digital EVP Recorder

    Know Before You Go
    0

    Important details to help plan your visit or investigation of Devil’s Bridge.

    Access Level

    Public Access

    Status

    Status Unknown

    Environment

    Not specified

    Sources & References
    4

    Referenced materials and documentation supporting the Devil’s Bridge case file.

    Experience Glossary
    6

    Detailed descriptions of each type of activity documented at Devil’s Bridge.

    Phantom Smells

    sensory anomaly

    Definition

    Unexplained scents detected without a physical source.

    What People Report

    Witnesses report brief appearances of perfume, smoke, sulfur, decay, or other distinct odors that dissipate quickly and cannot be traced to environmental causes.

    Browse all locations with phantom smells

    Light Anomalies

    visual phenomenon

    EVPs

    audio evidence

    Shadow Figures

    visual anomaly

    Demonic

    entity claim

    Senses of Presence

    psychic perception

    Important Notices

    Information in this case file is compiled from public sources and community reports. Accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Always verify details before visiting, and check with property owners and local or state authorities to confirm access is permitted.