Texas is full of urban legends , but most are either completely fabricated or versions of truth stretched so far they might as well be fake. This story, however, is different. And then watch as Panic Attack: Scary Videos investigates the bridge at night and captures a real scream on tape! During these uncertain times, please keep safety in mind and consider adding destinations to your bucket list to visit at a later date.
One fall night more than 50 years ago, several teenagers were carpooling home after their high school football team defeated its opponents by a landslide. But, they say the dates and names of those who died can be seen glowing in the river late at night.
Shiver People have also witnessed lights on the bridge, as well as mystic fog and strange feelings. You can find an article about the car accident in the Arlington Daily News Texan from February 6, There is a trail at River Legacy that leads up to two old fence posts. It is said that the gate which used to stand there was the last thing captured soldiers saw before being hanged during the Civil War.
Others say you see a redheaded man in a uniform standing guard. Like the screaming bridge, people feel quite uneasy while visiting this spot and they also feel the sensation of someone watching them and hear weird sounds and voices. A ghostly child captured on film on an amateur photo from Six Flags Over Texas. Have you heard of Annie? According to legend, Annie lives in the Texas section of the park. The bridge had been previously burned and repaired two years before. Barricades had been positioned on both sides of the road approaching the railroad tracks but were mysteriously missing the night of the accident.
No answer was ever found regarding who might have removed the wooden barricades. They were installed after road flares smudge pots kept being extinguished or stolen. Newspaper articles detailed the funeral arrangements as well as the impact upon friends and fellow students at Arlington High School. The father of one of the girls who survived Donna Post was interviewed in a subsequent article expressing no malice toward those eventually connected with the burned bridge. This was the first news account that detailed Marilou Goldner was the driver.
One of the girls had never been down the undulating road and her friends were letting her experience the wavy road at speed before returning home from the movies. Ironically one of the girls who perished, Claudia Reeves was the daughter of a highway patrolman and investigating officers suspended their work to attend her funeral.
Upon returning to their inquiry they were able to determine the identities of those responsible for burning the bridge. One suggested setting fire to the bridge; some say in order to impede the travel of the predominantly black community of Mosier Valley into north Arlington. The grand jury asked the Tarrant County Commissioners Court to post rewards for information on the removal of the barricades from the bridge prior to the accident, which had occurred numerous times.
Further investigations never revealed who was responsible for removing the barricades and road flares from the burned out bridge.
No one ever stepped forward with information and the reward was never claimed. The wooden bridge was not replaced. Remnants of the bridge were bulldozed and then covered with large concrete drainage tunnels. These were covered in asphalt up to the level of the original span and this served to span the drainage ditch until another fatal accident involving two women and a train at the crossing.
On March 10 Rayelynn Jonston, and Tammy Lynn Dodson tried to outrace an oncoming train which impacted the passenger side of their truck. One of the occupants was knocked out of the vehicle while the other remained trapped in the burning vehicle.
Both women died at the scene of the accident.
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