August 27, 2010

A Scary Place with A Silly Name

If you knew a place haunted by supernatural terror, you'd probably give it a scary name. Think of some of the well-known scary New England place names: Purgatory Chasm, Dungeon Rock or Misery Island. You'd want a demonic ghost-haunted locale to have a name like that, wouldn't you?.

Unless, of course, you were from Medway, Massachusetts. The townspeople there knew a place where Satan would gather with his witches, but they gave it a very unscary name: Dinglehole. It sounds like an insult from a second grader!

Dinglehole, which was a large swampy depression filled with fetid water of an unknown depth, was feared for three reasons:

1. A ghostly bell could be heard ringing on dark nights and misty evenings. Locals called it the "spirit bell", and the dingling of the bell gave the hole its name. (I guess the word "dingle" has gone out of fashion. Contemporary people would probably name it Jinglehole, which doesn't sound much better.)

2. A headless ghost haunted Dinglehole, and would lead unwary travelers astray with strange glowing lights. Locals claimed saying a prayer would banish the ghost, his lights and the bell, but only temporarily.

3. Even worse than a headless ghost, the Devil and his local witches met by night at Dinglehole near a large twisted pine tree. The witches came not in human form, but as weasels, raccoons and "other little odiferous animals."

A skeptic might say "Of course you'll find weasels and raccoons in the woods. How did people know they were witches?" Well, Mr. Smarty-Pants (to use another second grade insult), because they were invulnerable to normal weapons, as the following Dinglehole story illustrates.

One evening, a Medway hunter was making his way home when he noticed a large raccoon watching him from a tree. Unable to resist such an easy target, the hunter shot the raccoon and hit it squarely in the chest. Nothing happened to the raccoon. It sat there unharmed, but perhaps with a slight smirk on its face. The hunter fired several more shots, each time hitting the raccoon, which continued to ignore the bullets.

Finally, it dawned on the hunter that this was no ordinary animal. He plucked a branch from a nearby witch hazel shrub, a plant known for its magical powers, and fired it from his rifle like a small harpoon. It hit the raccoon, which vanished. Several days later, the hunter learned that Murky Mullen, a local woman suspected of witchcraft, had an unexplained injury on her face. Clearly, she (or her spirit) had been wandering the woods in the shape of a raccoon.

The accounts of the Dinglehole horrors come from Ephraim Orcutt Jameson and George James La Croix's The History of Medway, Mass. 1713-1885 (1886). Dinglehole is now located somewhere in Millis, though, which separated from Medway in the late 1800s. The Federal Writers' Project book Massachusetts: A Guide to Its Places and People (1937) claims Dinglehole is located somewhere north of Union Street, but has been filled in. Perhaps it should be renamed Dinglefield? Does that sound scarier?

21 comments:

  1. There is a cave in the Lynn Woods Reservation (Lynn, Massachusetts) called the Pirate Cave or Dungeon Rock. Sounds like a scarier cave name than "Dinglehole"

    ReplyDelete
  2. Heather - Yes, you're right! It's Dungeon Rock. I have some pictures and information about it here:

    http://newenglandfolklore.blogspot.com/2008/09/dungeon-rock-pirates-treasure-and.html

    It's definitely a freaky place. But I haven't been to Dinglehole - maybe it's scary too!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Facinating to read history of the Dinglehole. Is the area your describing north of Union St in Millis or on the north end of Union. I live in the neighborhood of what I thought was the Dinglehole, believing it's on Union St (the North end) - but it is not filled in. Like you state it's large, swampy, fetid and of unknown depth. The hole is close to the St (Union) and actually serves as front-yard property for two houses. I wonder if what I think of as the Dinglehole is what your describing - or if there was another that was covered up, now hidden. Next time I walk by, I look out for a large twisted pine. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Dingle-Neighbor!

    Unfortunately, I don't know exactly where the Dinglehole is. To me, it's one of the interesting but frustrating things about the legend. The WPA book says it was filled in, but this Town of Millis Web site (http://millis.org/index.cfm?pid=12334)does not say that, and instead states the hole was believed to be bottomless. And after all, how can you fill in a bottomless pit? If you do go investigate, be careful of headless ghosts and eerie raccoons.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The Dingle Hole is indeed at the end of Union Street, at the corner of Union and Ridge. It is not filled in, depsite now having suburban houses near it. Uncanny things continue to happen around it. There was the incident of the deer heads a few years ago. Some say that the whole town of Millis is rotten with witches and witchcraft and that this explains the well known corruption in that town's government and police force. It is because of said corruption and witchcraft that this writer must remain anonymous!

    ReplyDelete
  6. They even have a little picnic area just off a trail there. I think it's a nice area actually.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I grew up in millis on ridge st.We moved in 1989.My freinds had a house next to the dinglehole on union st.We skated on it in winter and all thought it was bottomless.I do remember big pines on the slope going up to union st.nothing to freaky happened there although we all knew about the witchcraft.Dinglehole is still there on the east side of union st just south from the intersection with ridge st.My dad said dinglehole used to be on both sides of union st but development filled in some of it in the west side of union.My house abutted the westerly side.Dinglehole is the front yard to 2 houses.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thanks for filling in the details about the location. Very cool! I'm glad that Dinglehole is not filled in.

    ReplyDelete
  9. As others have pointed out, Dinglehole is now in the front yard of houses, and just looks like nothing more than a little swampy dark pond surrounded by trees and bushes. Nothing unusual or creepy about it. As for the person who claims Millis is "rotten with witches and witchcraft", being that I am from Millis I have to humor this kind of statement in a big way. The only thing that Millis might be rotten with is uppity better than thou snobs, but not the fake folklore kind of witches, nor people who identify as witches.

    ReplyDelete
  10. We owned the house on Union Street that had Dinglehole in the front yard. We lived there in 1975 and part of 1976. When we bought the house it had a mural on the dining room wall that was based on the legend, complete with the headless ghost. I was in my late 20's at the time and would invite friends over in the winter time for hockey games on Dinglehole. In 1976 I took a new job out of state and we sold the house.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Casey.
      My friends and i, when we were 7-9 years old would hang out and play board games in that house at the dingle hole.we were the neighbor kids at that time.
      I remember it was a cool younger couple that lived there for a short period.
      I was just curious if that was you and if you remember us rugrats.4 boys
      To funny

      Delete
  11. Hi Casey! Thanks for the comment. You were lucky to live in such a special place. Do you have any photos of the mural? I would love to see them if you.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Maybe the raccoon was actually a Skinwalker.

    ReplyDelete
  13. They should have named this place something scarier like the demon pond or something.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Millis was once part of Medway until 1885, so though the Dinglehole is now in Millis, I can see how it could get confused in historical accounts.

    ReplyDelete
  15. There is a Dingle Hole somewhere in New York. The first Governor Cuomo ordered all the offensive place names taken off the official state maps. Dingle Hole got caught up in this, but I think it survives. Syracuse U. geographer Mark Monmonnier wrote this up in Drawing the Line.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I live a street down from it. It’s at the intersection of Union Street and Ridge Street.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Great story Peter and in my neck of the woods too!

    ReplyDelete
  18. The Dinglehole was literally our front yard growing up. We spent our winters skating on the pond. We played pickup hockey most days after school. We spent our summers catching frogs around it's edge. People used to joke that I was the witch of Dinglehole in school. The only lights I ever saw come out of the water were from a neighbor who attempted to drive home drunk and missed his driveway by about 600 feet. I had to wake my parents to tell them there was a car in the pond. The neighbor stumbled home and we watched them pull the car up the hill the next day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's so funny.
      I remember that car accident
      We grew up on ridge street.

      Delete
  19. Grew up in Millis with lots of family growing up before me for generations. On our tour of Millis in school, they told us about the legend of Dinglehole. We were also told this was spread around to keep kids away because this was where the milk man put his milk to keep it cool on nights before delivery.

    ReplyDelete