Come on boys and ghouls!  It's time to hop on Route 666 for a spooktacular 
Paranormal Road Trip.  This week's stop is Boston, Massachusetts and our special guide is Skylar Dorset, author of the Otherworld young adult paranormal series.
The Otherworld series is set in Boston so it seems fitting that our guide for this week's Paranormal Road Trip be author Skylar Dorset.  Let's see what terrifying places Skylar has planned for our tour.
Boston's Top 5 Spooky Places
North Grove Street
North Grove Street is spooky for what used to be there: Harvard Medical 
College. The school has since relocated, although North Grove Street is 
still the home of Massachusetts General Hospital. But why is this place 
spooky? Because it was the site of one of the most high-profile murders 
in history, which led to the so-called trial of the nineteenth century. 
The murder was so famous that the crime scene was the first place 
Charles Dickens asked to be brought when he came to Boston. But we don’t
 talk about it much anymore, so here’s the super-grisly story: 
George Parkman was a wealthy Boston Brahmin (as Boston aristocrats were 
known). He actually donated the land on North Grove Street that Harvard 
Medical College was built on, and the street adjacent is still called 
Parkman Street. Later, it would supposedly become the scene of his 
death. 
Parkman was known for lending money around town (a character right out 
of Dickens!). He was a well-known figure in Boston, where he was often 
seen walking the streets, collecting his debts (he was too cheap to own a
 horse!). The last time he was ever seen, it was going into Harvard 
Medical College, where one of his debtors, Harvard Med School Professor 
John Webster, had arranged a meeting with him. 
Parkman’s worried, wealthy family reported him missing and launched a 
citywide hunt for him, papering the city with “missing” posters, 
dragging the Harbor and the Charles River, etc. The police also searched
 Harvard Medical College, but found nothing. 
In the meantime, though, Ephraim Littlefield, a janitor at Harvard 
Medical College, decided to take matters into his own hand (there was a 
large reward being offered for information about Parkman’s 
disappearance). Littlefield knew that Webster had been in debt to 
Parkman, had met with him on the day of his disappearance, and had been 
questioned by the police. Webster, according to Littlefield, had a 
suspicious conversation with Littlefield about what Littlefield had 
witnessed, and later presented Littlefield with…a Thanksgiving turkey. 
(It was that time of year.)
Littlefield took the turkey home to his wife and they enjoyed a pleasant
 Thanksgiving dinner while Littlefield mused upon Webster’s odd 
behavior. But what could he be hiding? The police had searched the 
school building and turned up nothing. Littlefield remembered that the 
day before, though, Webster’s furnace in his laboratory had been burning
 all day. Curiouser and curiouser, Littlefield persuaded his wife to go 
to the school with him on Thanksgiving and keep watch while he broke 
into Webster’s lab. The privy in Webster’s suite of rooms emptied into a
 pit that hadn’t been searched by the police, and Littlefield focused 
his actions there, chiseling away at the brick wall (it was a time of 
strongly built buildings!). It was tough going, as you can imagine, and 
it was a holiday, so Littlefield gave up after a couple of hours and 
went to a dance. (True story.)
The next day, however, was no Black Friday shopping as we would have 
today. Littlefield went back to work, resumed his chiseling, broke 
through to the pit, and spotted human remains. He called for the police,
 who in turn arrested Webster, who in turn tried to commit suicide 
almost immediately. The police resumed their searching of Webster’s lab,
 which apparently had been totally half-hearted before, because now they
 found body parts, partially burned, in the furnace as well as in other 
hiding places around the lab. (Amazing detail: Parkman’s wife identified
 his body based on very personal parts of his body.)
There was a trial, so well attended that they had to hand out tickets 
and cycle groups of people in and out of the courtroom, and Webster was 
found guilty and sentenced to death. He later wrote a confession, 
claiming to have killed Parkman in self-defense. Webster was hanged…or 
so some people say. Others say he was never killed and was instead 
smuggled out of Boston. Still others thought Parkman himself hadn’t died
 and had simply fled the city. Sightings of both men happened all over 
the world for years afterwards. To this day, the whereabouts of 
Webster’s body is mere conjecture, because it was kept secret for fear 
of grave-robbing. (Or because he hadn’t died, if you believe the 
rumors.)
At any rate, who knows if either one of those tragically linked men ever left the spot of their final altercation? 
(This story owes a debt to Cleveland Amory’s The Proper Bostonians, which was the first time I had ever heard of it.)
Langone Park in the North End 
You might think that this is just a normal park, but, before it was a 
park, it was the site of a huge tank that stored molasses. Yes. 
Molasses. Which are basically a thick byproduct of the refining of sugar
 that you can use for a lot of stuff, and that was heavily used back in 
the beginning of the twentieth century. At that time also the North End 
was said to be the most densely populated area of the entire country, 
heavily packed with people. 
In January 1919, the molasses storage tank, which had been poorly 
maintained by its owners, cracked open, possibly spurred by the stress 
of a sudden rise in temperature in the city’s weather. Molasses spilled 
into the North End at a speed of 35 miles per hour. A car can’t even 
reach 35 miles per hours these days in the narrow, clogged North End 
streets. The molasses plowed over crowds of people who couldn’t get out 
of the way quickly enough, killing 21 of them. 
There are lots of historical ghosts in the North End, a very old part of
 the city that holds the famous Old North Church. But the molasses spill
 haunts more than anything else. On very hot days, the story goes, you 
can still smell the sticky sweet scent in the air. 
Boston Massacre location outside the Old State House
In March 1770, a group of British soldiers fired into a crowd of 
Bostonians that had gathered in protest outside of the Old State House, 
killing five of them. Later, John Adams defended the soldiers and 
actually won acquittals for almost all of them, but the event was seared
 in the colonial memory as the Boston Massacre and helped spur the 
revolution that would come a few years later. 
The victims are buried in the nearby Granary Burying Ground. The Granary
 Burying Ground and the Kings Chapel Burying Ground, also nearby, are 
both said to be haunted by plenty of unknown groups, but it’s the site 
of the Massacre itself that I find creepiest. It’s a round circle of 
bricks in front of the Old State House, now surrounded on all sides by 
very busy streets. In the midst of all the cars whizzing past, you can 
hear the chaos of that winter night that caused the frightened soldiers 
to fire into the crowd, and you can stand on the spot where the first 
five casualties of the American Revolution lost their lives. 
Boston Common
Boston Common is the huge public park in the middle of Boston. In the 
beginning of Boston’s life, it was used for grazing cows. And for 
hanging people who upset the populace. These days, it’s just a park, but
 it’s said to be haunted by ghosts, both of those who lost their lives 
there and those who just loved the place and hate to leave it. You never
 know which kind you’ll meet!
Salem
This might be cheating, because it’s technically outside Boston, but 
it’s not very far, and no discussion of creepy goings-on in Boston is 
complete without remember the Salem Witch Trials of the late seventeenth
 century, in which an entire town was seized with panic and ended up 
gruesomely killing some twenty people accused of nothing more than being
 witches. Salem is full of witch trial linked attractions, but there is 
an official Witch Trials Memorial, adjacent to an old burying ground, 
that can raise chills as you read the words the poor victims pleaded in 
their defense. 
Bonus Outside Boston Trip!
Medfield State Hospital: Formerly an asylum, this now-vacant hospital 
campus is open to the public daily for them to wander, but not many of 
them ever go. On the day we went, we were alone among the empty 
buildings where so many unfortunate, unhappy patients lived. Spooky and 
sad. And, if you want to see it, you should go now, because apparently 
they have begun demolishing the buildings 
Thank you Skylar for giving us such a haunting tour of Boston!  
To learn more about 
Skylar Dorset and her books, please visit her website.  You can 
add the Otherworld series here on Goodreads.
Have you visited Boston, Massachusetts?  Ever experience anything of the supernatural kind in and around Boston? 
What did you think of Skylar's picks for spooky places? 
Last week on Paranormal Road Trip we visited 
Dublin, Ireland with Ruth Frances Long.  Next week we'll be doing a six month Paranormal Road Trip recap. Has it really been six months?  Wow!  The following week we'll be traveling to Banff with Nancy Baker.
Join us for another spine-tingling Paranormal Road Trip...
if you dare!