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Sara Jane Road Legend Pretty creepy Rate Topic: -----

#16 User is offline   Jaguat 


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Posted 01 September 2008 - 02:50 AM

Well done Veliska. BTW, did anyone notice the baby car seat ads at the bottom of this page? And the special "Help put Baby to sleep."? Ironic to say the least lol. ( The ads were all Google Australia ads so maybe no-one else saw them)

This post has been edited by Jaguat: 01 September 2008 - 02:52 AM

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#17 User is offline   zlabarge 


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Posted 09 November 2008 - 03:23 AM

I grew up in Port Neches, Tx where this story originated. The road I lived on actually connected to "Sara Jane Road" which is actually East Port Neches Road. I was just telling my neighbor about this legend, we now live in Bridge City, Tx and he didn't know about it. So we started looking it up on the net, I had heard several different versions. I am 27 and still can't drive down this road thru the woods without getting chill bumps, even though the woods have been cleared away from the road and there are no trees hanging over anymore. I was very disappointed to learn the truth tonight. Follows is a clipping from the MidCounty Chronicle, which is our local news paper.

Quote

October 28, 1998
Midcounty Chronicle

Spooky legend lives on
By CARL CUNNINGHAM, JR.
Managing Editor


PORT NECHES Most any person living in Mid County the last 40 years has heard the legend of Sarah Jane Road.

It is a winding wooded road that more closely resembles Deep East Texas than a road you would travel in East Port Neches. Barbed wire fences line the old road that is surrounded by thick groves of cypress trees and swamp.

As one version of the tale goes, when the moon shines bright in the heart of old Port Neches, it is said the ghostly figure of Sarah Jane searches the marsh and thicket of East Port Neches Avenue to find her infant child who drowned in the river.

Another more gruesome telling of the legend has the creepy character of Sarah Jane being hanged from one of the many cypress trees near the rickety old bridge that marks the center of the Sarah Jane Road legend.

Neither version of the local Halloween haunting story is true. Not the ghostly apparition, not the drowning or hanging. Only one part of the old legend is true.

There was a woman named Sarah Jane who, contrary to popular lore, was not hanged at a young age and did not lose an infant to the dirty water that flows under the bridge.

Her name was Sarah Jane Sweeney Block and she has three children that are alive and well today. She passed .away in 1983 at the age of 99. Sarah Jane was born in Grand Chenier, LA in 1884 and moved to Nederland in 1906. She married Will Block, one of the founding fathers of Port Neches, in 1919.

Besides marrying into the family that owned all the surrounding marsh and prairie land that is now Huntsman Chemical, the Port Neches City Park and Oak Bluff Memorial Cemetery, the only connection between Sarah Jane and her namesake stretch of road was a work of fiction perpetuated by a Port Arthur News writer years ago.

W. T. Block, one of Sarah Jane Sweeney Block's alive-and-well children, is still puzzled as to why the myth has lasted as long as it has.

"About 30 years ago, a newspaper reporter made the connection between the family land and my mother's name," said Block. "I told them she bad lived to be 99-years-old and that she certainly was never hanged, let alone having a baby drown in the river out there."

In the mid 1940's, Jefferson Chemical (now Huntsman) bought hundreds of acres surrounding Highway 366 and East Port Neches Ave. The Keith family graveyard and the Gentz family cemetery that were on the property were moved. The Gentz family burial ground was moved to Block Cemetery, now Oak Bluff Memorial.

Block says the original chemical plant located there, had trenches that ran along the side road leading into the river. The evaporating waste fuel and chemical mixture flowing in the trenches emitted an ethereal, creepy looking fog.

That along with the ominous trees, intense darkness and remote location all combined with a shred of truth, a "Sleepy Hollow'' type tall tale and Halloween tricksterism to form the decades-old basis of the legend of Sarah Jane Road.

As the years went on, the legend only grew. Families handed down the scary stories of the haunting figure searching the swamp and surrounding woods for her long lost baby.

Garland Allison, a chemical plant retiree and Groves resident, lives right in the thick of the wilderness area that comprises the heart of the Sarah Jane Road area.

"I've heard it told that a lady once threw her baby in the river to drown her," said Allison. "She was hanged in the same spot and supposedly haunts the road."

In his 16 years of living on Coke Road, he says he has never seen anything too spooky out there, save for the occasional gang of hungry raccoons.

When I was a kid, we used to ride in trucks out here on Halloween," said Allison. "We'd scare the girls and have a blast. It is pretty scary at night out here with the tall trees and darkness, but that's about all there is to be scared of."

Art Williams lives just down the road from the infamous bridge that crosses Sarah Jane Road. The scariest thing he has seen out there at night is a roving alligator looking for a meal.

"People bring their kids out here on Halloween night to scare them," said Williams. "I guess that is how it has been passed through the years."

W. T. Block has been both annoyed and amused by the story over the years.

"My mother worked dawn to dusk for 99 years," said Block. "She was a sweet lady and was the hardest working person I've ever known. She's certainly not a restless spirit."



Sorry to be the one to end this legend for everyone on this site, its sad but true, all the things I thought I had seen as a kid were just my imagination.

#18 User is offline   Crai 


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Posted 09 November 2008 - 04:06 AM

i doubt she'd stop if you called out to her with that..it's probably like the 'old mary' thing kids do in front of a dark mirror

but it is a sad sad story:(

#19 User is offline   Lord Umbarger 


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Posted 05 December 2008 - 10:15 AM

It's a fairly common story of a woman killing her baby in a creek ro near a bridge for one reason or another. I assume that it is because in many towns, the first bridges that were built were built near where the water was shallow enough for poeple to wade across and would occasionally slip and be carried away by the current. Hence, it would make for a place that the locals would consider a prime candidate for a haunting. Later, when the bridges were built, the legends of people dying there would be carried on as a haunted bridge.

It could also be that many of our mentaly disturbed and antisocial citizenery would often find shelter under these bridges and would make them a rather dangerous place to hang around. This could give rise to parents telling the kids that that are haunted to keep the kids away from them. As the kids grew up, they never realized that it was just a tale to keep them safe and passed the "Haunted Bridge" stories alive by retelling them.

I could be wrong though.
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#20 User is offline   vintagewyld 


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Posted 29 October 2009 - 04:14 AM

View PostHollyDolly, on 23 May 2008 - 11:33 AM, said:

<img src="http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/innocent.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":innocent:" border="0" alt="innocent.gif" /> I'm curious,just where is Sarah Jane Road? I'll have to try to look up the neches River maybe to find it.
I'm curious, as we have in the past driven all over south Texas and been to places like Yoakum,Cuero,Goliad,Victoria,Shiner,
Castroville, Quihi,Kyote,etc. A few places like Hackberry, Zunkerville,El Oso, Verdi and others are ghost towns.
Maybe I've been on Sarah Jane Road and didn't know it.




Sara Jane Road is in Port Neches, Texas. When I was little this story was legendary and still is to this day. It only took one reporter to write up and story and it was born from there as an urban legend. But it is still fun to go out there at night and listen to the story told.
I grew up in Port Neches/Groves. This story will never get old and never die.

#21 User is online   Ryinrea 


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Posted 04 November 2009 - 08:46 PM

My link



I found this site, that has the legend. ^^
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#22 User is offline   catutie 


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Posted 06 November 2009 - 04:38 AM

View PostThe Ancient, on 26 May 2008 - 04:18 PM, said:

Reminds me of La Llorona.

*shudders* *looks behind him*

dont say that name...i read that story and it scared the hell out of me lol

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