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February 2, 2025 17 mins

Deep in the shadowed hills of Kentucky, there's a town that don't show up on no map-a place some folks say vanished from history, leavin' behind nothin' but whispers and warnin's. They call it Elsewhere, Kentucky - a forgotten town where tragedy took root, where the dead refused to stay buried, and where those who go searchin' for it… don't always come back. Legends tell of an eerie one-room schoolhouse, where an unspeakable horror took place one autumn day in 1934. After that, the town began to wither, cursed by the ghosts of its past. The people fled, their homes left to rot, the school bell still ringin' in the dead of night. Some say if you wander too deep into the woods near Kentucky Lake, you might stumble upon a road that shouldn't exist-a road that wasn't there yesterday, but is today. But the worst part? Once you leave, you might never find it again. Is Elsewhere real, or is it just another ghost story? Maybe it don't matter. Some places are best left forgotten…

Find the YouTube video here: https://youtu.be/iDSkOCWEvik?si=L66gEchwrWfCPAeJ

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Now, there's places on this earth that just don't belong.

(00:04):
Towns swallowed by shadow, where the land itself seems to turn against those who settle
there.
One such place is whispered about in hushed tones.
A town that don't show up on maps no more.
A place some folks say vanished right out of history.
Elsewhere, Kentucky.
A town where tragedy took root, where the dead refuse to stay buried, and where those

(00:30):
who go searching for it don't always come back.
Welcome to Kentucky Melody's Scary Stories from Kentucky, where we spin yarns about ghostly
haunts, creepy hollers, and spine-chilling legends from deep in the hills.
So grab a chair, dim them lights, and let's dig into something spooky.

(00:54):
They say there's a place hidden deep in the hills of Kentucky, a town that don't appear
on no map.
A place folks barely dare whisper about, as if speaking its name might call something
back from the dark.
This place ain't like other ghost towns left to rot with time.
It's been swallowed whole by the land itself, buried under shadow and silence, as if the

(01:20):
earth was trying to erase what happened there.
They call it elsewhere, Kentucky, a town cursed from the moment it was founded, a place where
the dead outnumbered the living long, for the last soul packed up and left.
No one rightly knows when the town disappeared or why no record of it remains, but the stories

(01:43):
linger like a cold draft through a broken window.
Some say the people of elsewhere just up and vanished, leaving behind empty homes and rotten
streets, their fate sealed by something unnatural.
Others claim those who do manage to find it don't never make it back to tell the tale.

(02:07):
Little is known comes from whispers, from old timers who shake their heads when asked,
from travelers who swear they stumbled upon a place that shouldn't be there, an abandoned
town choked by vines with a schoolhouse where the windows are always watching and a bell
that rings even when the wind don't blow.

(02:29):
This ain't just a ghost story, this is the legend of elsewhere.
Way down in the southeastern corner of Callaway County, right near where Kentucky Lake stretches
out like a dark, restless thing, there used to be a little town called Elsewhere.
It weren't much, just a handful of weather-worn homes, a couple of dusty gravel roads, and

(02:55):
folks who kept to themselves.
Elsewhere was the kind of place where everybody knew everybody, where secrets were few but
rumors ran deep.
Surrounded on all sides by thick, tangled forest, it was cut off from the world in more
ways than one.

(03:15):
Some folks came there looking for a fresh start, a place where nobody asked too many questions.
Others?
Well, maybe they were hiding from something.
By the time the 1930s rolled in, Elsewhere was barely holding on.
The Great Depression had wrapped its cold fingers around the town, making hard times

(03:38):
even harder.
But the people endured like they always had.
They had their general store, a one-room schoolhouse sitting just at the edge of the
woods, a tiny whitewashed church, and a few farms that scraped what they could from the
stubborn land.
It was quiet.
Too quiet, some folks might say.

(03:59):
See, there was always something off about Elsewhere.
The trees pressed in a little too close, their gnarled branches twisting like hands reaching
for the town.
The wind carried voices that weren't always there.
The air had a weight to it.
Thick was something no one could quite name.

(04:21):
Even in the dead heat of summer, the woods held a chill, and folks who wandered too far
past the tree-line swore they felt eyes watching, not the kind of eyes that belonged to no deer
or panther, but something older, something that had been there long before the first
house was ever built.
The people of Elsewhere tried to ignore it, act like it weren't there, but deep down,

(04:47):
they knew, and this town had a darkness to it, something buried just beneath the surface,
waiting to be unearthed.
The uneasy quiet of Elsewhere was torn apart on a crisp autumn day in 1934, leaving behind
a stain on the town's soul that would never wash away.

(05:08):
The tragedy took place in the one-room schoolhouse, a place that should have been filled with
the chatter and laughter of children, but instead it became the side of something so
unnatural, so wicked, that folks refused to speak of it for years to come.
At the center of it all was the school's teacher, a woman whose name has long since

(05:31):
been lost to time.
When she first arrived in town, folks took to her well enough.
She was polite, soft-spoken, the kind of woman who always had a kind word for the little
ones who filled her classroom each day, but something began to change in her, slow at
first, like a sickness taken hold.

(05:55):
She grew distant, her once bright eyes going dark and hollow.
She started muttering to herself, scribbling strange symbols in the margins of her lesson
books, staring out the window with a look that set folks on edge, like she was watching
something in them woods that no one else could see.

(06:15):
Then came the day that broke Elsewhere.
The story goes that the teacher did something special for her students that morning, preparing
lunch for them, a rare kindness in such hard times.
The children, hungry and unsuspecting, ate what she put before them, never knowing death
had been mixed into their food.

(06:38):
One by one, their tiny bodies writhed and twisted on the schoolhouse floor, their faces
contorted in agony, their cries echoing through the wooden walls, and through it all the teacher
just watched.
Didn't move, didn't speak, didn't lift a finger to help.

(07:00):
By the time the townsfolk heard the screams and came running, the deed was done.
All but one of the children lay dead, their small bodies cold and still, the lone survivor,
a boy no older than ten, had refused to eat that day.
Learned about the food not smelling right, setting off an instinct deep in his gut.

(07:24):
He was the one who raised the alarm, running barefoot and wild-eyed through the streets,
screaming of murder.
When the townspeople stormed the schoolhouse, they found her sitting calm as can be, still
at her desk, surrounded by the lifeless bodies of the young one she was supposed to protect.

(07:44):
She never fought back, never begged.
First let them drag her out into the streets, silent as a grave.
That night they locked her up in a cell, waiting for justice to be done.
But justice never came, not the kind they expected anyway.
When they went to fetch her the next morning, they found her dead.

(08:09):
Not a mark on her, not a wound nor a rope nor a bruise, just gone, and the look on her
face.
They say her mouth was stretched open, her eyes bulging with the terror so deep it seeped
into the walls of that tiny jailhouse, like she'd seen something, something worse than
death itself, but no one ever figured out what.

(08:33):
The town of Elsewhere never recovered.
The dead children were laid to rest in a mass grave behind the schoolhouse.
Their tiny bodies buried together beneath the shadow of the very place that had betrayed
them.
The townsfolk, marked it with a simple wooden cross, hastily carved, the names of the little

(08:54):
ones etched into the wood like a desperate plea for remembrance.
But peace never came.
Not for the children, not for Elsewhere.
It started with the sounds.
That night, parents who had lost their young ones claimed they could still hear them.

(09:15):
Laughter drifted from the woods, light and playful at first, until you listened too long.
Then it turned wrong, twisted, the kind of laughter that don't belong to no living soul.
Some swore they heard the school bell ring, though the schoolhouse doors had been nailed
shut.

(09:35):
Shadows woke to whispers, soft voices calling their names from the darkness just beyond
their windows.
Then came the shadows.
Figures, small and dartin', just at the edge of sight.
Shapes movin' between the trees, too fast to be children, too quiet to be animals.

(09:57):
Livestock disappeared, crops withered, and one by one, folks packed up and left, leaving
behind the homes their families had lived in for generations.
But not everyone could leave.
Some stayed behind, too stubborn or too afraid to run, claiming this was their home and no
ghost was gonna chase them out.

(10:19):
But those who stayed, they changed.
They spoke of doors slammin' in the dead of night, of windows shatterin' though the
air outside was still.
A fog rolled in, thick and suffocatin', wrappin' itself around the town like it had a mind
of its own.

(10:40):
It weren't long before even the bravest gave up.
Within a year, every last family was gone.
The streets fell silent, the houses rotted, their wooden bones splinterin' under the weight
of something unseen.
And the schoolhouse?
It still stood, empty but not abandoned.

(11:01):
The town of Elsewhere didn't just die, it was devoured.
Elsewhere slipped from memory like a dream that turns to dust come mornin'.
As the years passed, the town vanished from maps, its name erased from records like it
had never been there at all.

(11:21):
Even folks who'd lived nearby for generations struggled to recall exactly where it had been.
It was as if the land itself had swallowed it whole, pullin' it down into the roots
and dirt, refusing to let it be found.
But the stories?
The stories wouldn't die.

(11:41):
Whispers carried through the hollers, passed from one wary mouth to another over cracklin'
campfires.
They spoke of a road that shouldn't exist, a narrow gravel path windin' through the
trees near Kentucky Lake, a path that weren't there one day but was the next.
Travelers who wandered too far into them woods told of comin' upon something strange, a cluster

(12:06):
of rotten buildings choked by vines and heavy was silence, like the very air was holdin'
its breath, and at the center of it all, still standin' after all these years was the schoolhouse.
This window shattered, its roof collapsing, but its presence unchanged.
The wooden cross, old and splintered, still leaned against them warped boards like a warnin'

(12:32):
left by hands long gone.
But it's what people hear that chills the blood the most.
Disembodied laughter, light and airy, until it ain't.
Some swear they've heard the distant clang of the school bell, though there ain't no
reason it should be ringin'.
Others have claimed to see small figures movin' inside, flittin' past broken windows like

(12:56):
shadows that don't belong to no livin' thing.
And a few unlucky souls say they felt somethin', hands small and cold, tuggin' at their clothes,
pullin' at their arms, like somethin' beggin' not to be left behind, but the most bonechillin'
part.
Ain't no one ever found the place twice.

(13:20):
Those who've stumbled upon elsewhere say that once they leave, they can never find their
way back.
That road, the one that led them there, gone, swallowed up by the woods, like the town itself
only lets certain folks in, and makes damn sure they don't return with proof.

(13:41):
That's as if elsewhere decides who finds it, and worse yet, who stays.
But the most bonechillin' part?
Ain't no one ever found the place twice.
Those who've stumbled upon elsewhere say that once they leave, they can never find their
way back.

(14:01):
That road, the one that led them there, gone, swallowed up by the woods, like the town itself
only lets certain folks in, and makes damn sure they don't return with proof.
That's as if elsewhere decides who finds it, and worse yet, who stays.
So is elsewhere real?

(14:23):
Or is it just another tale meant to keep folks from wanderin' too far into places they ain't
got no business goin'?
Maybe it don't matter, none.
What lingers ain't just the story.
It's the feelin' it leaves behind.
That deep, unsettlin' chill that creeps up your spine when you hear the name.

(14:44):
That instinct buried in your bones that tells you some places just ain't meant to be found.
Maybe elsewhere is a reflection of our worst fears, a town lost to its own darkness, where
tragedy and grief festered so long they took on a life of their own.
Or maybe it's somethin' worse.

(15:08):
Maybe it ain't just a forgotten place, but a place that don't let go.
A place where the dead outnumber the livin', where time don't move right, and where the
line between this world and the next has been worn so thin a person could slip right through
and never come back.
So if you're one of the curious, one of them that feels the pull of place is best left

(15:33):
alone, heed the warnings passed down by them who claim to have been there.
Don't linger too long at the schoolhouse, where the air is too still and the shadows
move even when there ain't no lot.
Don't follow the sound of children's laughter.
No matter how sweet, no matter how familiar, and if you ever feel the woods watchin' you,

(15:58):
turn back.
There ain't a place for the livin', and if you stay too long, you just might never leave.
So tell me, what do y'all reckon?
Is elsewhere a real town lost to time, or just a story meant to keep folks from wanderin'
too deep into the woods?

(16:18):
Have you ever heard tales of places like this, towns that up and vanished, leaving nothin'
but shadows and stories behind?
Or maybe, just maybe.
You've been somewhere that felt like it didn't want you to leave.
If you have, drop your story in the comments.

(16:40):
Let's see if we can piece together the truth.
If stories like this send a shiver down your spine, don't stop here.
Kentucky's got more hauntings, more lost legends, and more places that make your skin
crawl, and we're tellin' them all on Kentucky Melody's America's Scariest Stories.

(17:01):
Check the description below for more eerie tales, and if you like what we're doin',
hit that subscribe button.
You don't want to miss what's comin' next.
But a word of warnin'.
If you ever do find yourself near Kentucky Lake, if you see an overgrown road that wasn't

(17:21):
there before, if you hear the distant sound of a school bell ringin' when there ain't
no school nearby, turn back.
Elsewhere, don't take Conley to visitors.
And if you ignore the warnings and step onto that gravel path, just remember one thing.
Some roads don't lead home.
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