Blackstone Road stretches about a mile long and runs along a lake on Tuscarora Indian reservation. The area is very dark at night even with a full moon since its surrounded by woodland. The lake that runs along part of the road is said to have had bodies washing up. Why? Well very simple maybe 500 years ago it was a burial ground and the waters flooded or perhaps there was a improper burial and they were thrown into the water. 

Over the last 20 years and probably much longer many folks have reporting seeing apparitions as you look in your rear view mirror and ghost on this road. Many of the Indians drive on this road 80 miles an hour this I put in theory is out of fear. Knowing what is on that road knowing what roams in those woods. Something is very different about this road you can feel it as you walk up it late at night. Strange mist, branches breaking, odd noises, weird smells and much more as you will see in the photography on the road itself. 

Based on the fact that I photographed an Indian, another Indian in a ceremonial mask, ghost totem poles, a man holding a gun protecting a long haired lady, and 2 female ghost steering towards us and the road tells me something tragic happened where this road was built. But this land is over 500 years old and one of the oldest reservation areas around the Buffalo Area. 

I believe as much history as there is on this road I believe there is also something of a higher power existing on it something even we have yet to learn. The pictures are like stories they hold the key to what happened on this road all in all you will have to decipher them yourself. Ever get the feeling that you were being watched? Well this is that type of area you step foot on it you are surrounded from all ends by ghost, legends, and history.  

Copyright By

Rick-AngelOfThyNight

Please go to part 1 honestly I can say the only photos I got of this place were paranormal only!

Folklore gives us an explanation for the haunting of Black Nose Springs Road on the Tuscarora Reservation: that the Iroquois occupants of the land - almost certainly Seneca in those days - killed some White settlers and threw them into the nearby pond. Their pale faces kept appearing just under the surface even years after the event. Massacres keep coming up in the folkloric explanations for Hauntings, but real massacres aren't that common or that easy for the historians to forget. If there's any truth to the background of this tale, the event had to happen in the very-late 1700s or early 1800s, unless it was some offshoot of the War of 1812. (Both sides in the war had Native American allies.) As for the ghost stories, though: living witnesses tell us that on certain nights when people drive down the road, unsettling faces appear in their mirrors. Sometimes there are funny sounds on the outside of the car, as if something is either running alongside it and tapping it, or has hitched an unlikely ride.