Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Peculiar Incident at Fort Ward Park




Yesterday, I was reading the Friday edition of the Potomac Free Press. I found a curious article in the paper. The article was short and held little detail. The title simply stated “Fort Ward Park Vandalized by Unknown Trespassers”. The article went on to state that the local police, while on patrol, responded to a 911 call of “human screams and other horrific noises” coming from the closed park very late in the evening. As the first patrol officer came upon the entrance of Fort Ward Park he observed three adults (sex and age unknown) in dark hooded robes fleeing the park and into the nearby woods. A subsequent search of the park and surrounding area did not locate these trespassers. While the police searched for the trespassers, they came across a smoldering fire pit in the middle of the park. In the ashes of the fire were found some burnt pages, now illegible from the flames and etched in the dirt near that small fire pit, was what appeared to be a large twisted, five-pointed star with an eye shape in the center. The article contained nothing else of interest. Some sort of pagan cult perhaps?

Since Fort Ward Park is located not too far from my home in Arlington, I resolved to drive there and investigate further the following day. I have never been to the park before; it is a small park which was a former civil war earthen fort. Many of these small earthen forts were built to serve as supply depots south of the District of Columbia during the war. From the City of Alexandria website:

Construction of Fort Ward began in July 1861, immediately after the Union Army's defeat at the Battle of First Bull Run (First Manassas). The fort was completed in September 1861 and was named for Commander James H. Ward, the first Union naval officer to die in the Civil War. The initial earthwork fort had a perimeter of 540 yards and 24 guns. After the Battle of Second Bull Run, Fort Ward was scheduled for rebuilding beginning in 1863. When the war ended in April 1865, the enlarged fort had a perimeter of 818 yards and emplacements for 36 guns. Throughout the Civil War Fort Ward served as a deterrent and never came under Confederate attack. It was abandoned in December 1865, and salvageable materials were sold at auction. Commander James H. Ward was well known as a scholar and an authority on tactics and gunnery. He was instrumental in establishing the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland. When Virginia seceded, a possible Confederate blockade of the Potomac River posed a serious threat to the main supply line for the capital city of Washington, D.C. Commander Ward was placed in command of a flotilla of seven ships charged with keeping the river open to shipping. While attempting to cover the withdrawal of a small Federal force at Mathias Point, Virginia, he was mortally wounded by gunfire from a Confederate sniper and died shortly thereafter.

http://oha.alexandriava.gov/fortward

I parked my vehicle in the first parking lot I came upon, a small gravel lot located just off of West Braddock Road on the right hand side. Not many people were in the park, just a few walkers and runners attempting to keep fit during this cold, windy dreary fall day. I did not know where to start so, with camera in hand; I strolled around the pretending to be a tourist interested in taking pictures of the local history. I took a few cursory shots of the museum and entrance to the park. As I walked over to the magazine storage and gun embankment, I noticed a few curiosities. The doors on the magazine storage doors were roped off, at closer inspection, there appeared to be tool marks around the edge of the door and the lock on the door appeared brand new. Had the vandals gone into the underground magazine?

After inspecting the outside of the magazine, it was then I noticed another roped off area to my left. I walked over to this area and as I did so, I took out my camera to snap a picture. The area looked as if fresh sod had been laid down very recently. A park ranger had noticed my camera and had walked to me from across the park. Before I could take the picture, he asked me why I wanted to take a picture of that particular area. He was very stern and perhaps a little frightened. He warned me not to disturb the roped off area. Feigning ignorance, I asked him what had happened. He simply stated that the area had to be repaired due to unspecified damage to the grass and soil. I walked around the park some more, searching for clues...feeling the watchful eyes of the park ranger on me at all times. That is all I could discover from my time at Fort Ward Park in Alexandria. If you have more information, I beg of you to email me!

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Introduction

I am not sure how to begin…I am writing this blog in order to keep myself sane. I have begun to experience strange occurrences and what I thought at first were mere peculiar coincidences, I now believe are much more sinister in nature. I have now begun to do more research into these strange events, I fear I have stumbled upon a conspiracy that has been eons in the making. At times, I see strange shapes from the periphery of my vision, as if someone (something?) were watching me and waiting.

Many will read this blog and believe I am psychotic or suffered from some apoplexy of the brain. The signs and portents I believe are real, some depraved, stygian nightmare is coming. Is 2012 truly the end of human civilization? I don’t know. However, I am getting ahead of myself. Allow me to introduce myself first. I came to the Washington, D.C. area several years ago after graduating from law school. I was offered a position at a small law firm specializing in insurance law in the Dupont area of Northwest D.C. Since that time I have lived in Arlington, VA a suburb of the District of Columbia and best know as the location of the National Cemetery, a place where the dead and living exist side by side.

Approximately six months ago I began having terrible dreams. During these dreams, I traveled to strange and horrifying places; one was inhabited by race of monstrous looking men who called their home Leng. Other dreams were even more disturbing which I cannot repeat at the moment, due to the amount of anxiety and panic I feel when I think about them. Nevertheless, I knew them to be mere dreams and not real…then I began to hear the music.

Although ‘hear’ and ‘music’ are probably not the best descriptors but they are the only descriptors I can use to articulate the occurrence. This first occurred during an evening out with my wife in the city of Alexandria. We were walking together after dinner in the ‘Old Town’ section of the city that has many of its original colonial row houses. As were walking near the Potomac River at the port, I began to feel a vibration within my body. These pulsating sensations were unlike anything I have ever experienced. No migraine can compare to the experience I felt as the vibrations began buzzing within my mind. My body started to sway to this strange ‘music.’ It only lasted a few scant moments. My wife assuming I drunk too much wine at dinner thought it amusing, I knew then that she had not experienced what I had I felt. Since that time, whenever I am walking along the Potomac River at night, the ‘music’ returns. My physician believes I am suffering from work stress and simply need a vacation but I know better…

Since the music and dreams began I have come across various weird occurrences around the Washington, D.C. area and I am going to make an effort to document these eerie events for I believe they are all connected somehow. A word of WARNING, if you value your sanity, DO NOT read any further and forget that you ever came across this blog. I am not responsible for what you discover for yourself.