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The Vanishing Hitchhiker of the Glens Falls-Lake George Road


A man and woman hitchhiking near Vicksburg, Mississippi in 1936, photograph by Walker EvansA man and woman hitchhiking near Vicksburg, Mississippi in 1936, photograph by Walker EvansOver the decades, one of the worldwide urban legends has been that of the vanishing hitchhiker. The stories go somewhat like this. A driver of a vehicle offers a ride to a person hitchhiking. After spending time in the car, the stranger seemingly vanishes without any logical explanation. There are numerous versions of this unbelievable story, too. One of those is the traveler is someone who before disappearing offers the motorist a prophecy.

In 1933, the Glens Falls-Lake George Road (Route 9 in Warren County, NY) had its own variant of the vanishing hitchhiker tale.

During the 1930s, hitchhiking was rather common as many people during the Great Depression could not afford to buy a car or truck. So, they often tried to “thumb a ride” to get around.

On January 26, 1933, a short story was published in the Glens Falls Post-Star newspaper about a “mystery man” who frequented the Glens Falls-Lake George Road securing free-vehicular trips.

The news article reported the hitchhiker “suddenly disappeared after telling the driver” that the economic depression would soon end. Because other people in Warren County reported similar encounters, it finally was reported in the local news.

However, the phantom hitchhiker’s revelation of forthcoming prosperity was wrong. It took several years for the global-economic downturn to end.

Postcard Approaching Lake George from the South showing Route 9 and the Delaware and Hudson RailroadPostcard Approaching Lake George from the South showing Route 9 and the Delaware and Hudson RailroadThe so-called “mystery man” was also said to have frequented the Hudson Falls to Whitehall highway (Route 4). Then suddenly these tales of the puzzling rover also apparently disappeared from the record.

Nonetheless, there was a growing concern about hitchhikers on Warren County roads. In May 1933, the Adirondack Motor Club asked the State Police to crack down on “bumming a ride” considering it dangerous and an impediment to traffic.

The following month, a motorist reported he observed 41 hitchhikers on the heavily traveled roadway from Glens Falls to Lake George and on to Warrensburg. A few days later, Corporal J. V. Minnicki, a State Police trooper stationed in Lake George, arrested three people in a single day for “bumming a ride” on Route 9.

Paranormal enthusiasts who have examined the phantom-hitchhiker phenomenon have offered several possibilities for these peculiarities. One scenario is the wanderer is an apparition who periodically travels along the same road where he or she was killed years earlier.

Believers might cite the proximity of Route 9 to the colonial-era military trail, the latter with its history of bloody warfare, as the reason for the vanishing hitchhiker.

Read more about hitchhiking in the 1930s.

A version of this article first appeared on the Lake George Mirror, America’s oldest resort paper, covering Lake George and its surrounding environs. You can subscribe to the Mirror HERE.

Illustrations, from above: Walker Evans’ photograph of a man and woman hitchhiking near Vicksburg, Mississippi in March, 1936; and a postcard “Approaching Lake George from the South” showing Route 9.



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