This site uses cookies to improve your experience and to provide services and advertising.
By continuing to browse, you agree to the use of cookies described in our Cookies Policy.
You may change your settings at any time but this may impact on the functionality of the site.
To learn more see our
Cookies Policy.
Download our app
11 super creepy Wikipedia pages that will keep you up tonight
BACK IN 2014, we shared 13 Wikipedia pages that would put the yips up you. But we’re not finished. Here are 11 more. Have fun sleeping later!
1. Slender Man
wordpress wordpress
Slender Man is a creation of the internet that has had some very real life consequences. In 2014, two 12-year-old girls stabbed their classmate in the hopes of becoming ‘proxies for Slender Man’, and the character has been linked to various other incidents.
2. Johnny Gosch
JohnnyGosch.com JohnnyGosch.com
In 1982, 12-year-old Johnny Gosch vanished on his paper delivery route. His mother claims that in 1997, a 27-year-old Johnny visited her accompanied by a strange man, talked with her for an hour, then left again. She hasn’t seen him since.
3. Toynbee tiles
Wikipedia Wikipedia
This isn’t so much scary as it is unsettling. Toynbee tiles are mysterious messages inlaid into the ground in dozens of US cities, many referencing Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and British historian Arnold J Toynbee. Who is making them? What are they trying to tell us?
4. Aokigahara
Wikipedia Wikipedia
This forest in Japan is thought to be the most haunted in the world, owing to the large number of people who have taken their own lives there. Chilling.
5. Roanoke Colony
Wikipedia Wikipedia
The story of the Roanoke colony inspired the sixth season of American Horror Story, and you can see why – it’s weird AF. The colony was established in North Carolina in 1586, and the whole lot of them disappeared about three years later. It’s never been explained.
6. The Zodiac Killer
Wikipedia Wikipedia
Everyone knows the broad outline of this story, but the details are still fascinating decades on. After a spate of murders in San Francisco in the 1960s and 70s, local newspapers received taunting letters from someone who claimed to be the killer. The letters contained four codes, only one of which has been solved.
7. The Max Headroom Signal Intrusion
In November of 1987, two Chicago television stations were interrupted by a man dressed up as Max Headroom, a computer-generated TV character. The video is distorted, he’s mostly screaming and singing and laughing, and it’s just… creepy.
8. The ‘From Hell’ letter
Wikipedia Wikipedia
This page concerns a letter sent from a person who claimed to be Jack the Ripper to a member of a Whitechapel neighbourhood watch committee, along with half a human kidney. Shudder.
9. The Kelly-Hopkinsville Encounter
An artist's impression of the encounter. Noooope! Wikipedia Wikipedia
Five adults and seven children claimed to have seen 12-15 small alien creatures attacking their Kentucky farmhouse one night in 1955. The adults shot at the short dark figures, who popped up at the doorway and peered in the windows. Hell no.
10. Idilia Dubb
Wikipedia Wikipedia
Dubb was a 17-year-old Scottish girl who, while visiting the abandoned Lahneck Castle in Germany in the 1850s, fell through rotted floorboards and was trapped. She recorded her final days in her diary, which was discovered nine years later along with her remains.
11. Carl Tanzler
Wikipedia Wikipedia
This guy fell in love with a tuberculosis patient, and when she died, he just… took her body and kept it in his home, using all sorts of methods to forestall decomposition. Nope. NOPE.
DailyEdge is on Instagram!
11 spot on responses to those annoying Liberian scam calls Irish people keep getting>
13 photos of the Leinster rugby team getting the shite scared out of them at the Nightmare Realm>
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Creepy team no sleep Wikipedia