Showing posts with label Pawleys Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pawleys Island. Show all posts

Thursday, May 9, 2019

The Hurricane Harbinger: The Gray Man of Pawley’s Island

Author: Petra Van Houtte

Pawley’s Island, located just off the coast of South Carolina, has been plagued by hurricanes for centuries. These storms tear apart whatever their winds can pick up, ranging from beach umbrellas on the strand to houses belonging to the island’s residents. If the storm is believed to be
strong enough to do the latter,islanders are told to leave by their local weatherman. That might not seem unusual, until you hear the weatherman is a ghost.

Pawleys Island Pier, Foggy Morning. Photo by Mark Hillard.
The ghost in question, called the Gray Man,is said to appear as a stranger clad in all gray to one or more lucky people before a big storm hits. He has been described as standing far away and waving his arms in warning as well as speaking to people. Though he keeps his distance from large groups and tends only to speak to those alone, all accounts report a strange foreboding at his appearance as well as the need to heed his warning to leave, which is always understood, regardless of how the spirit communicates his warning. Those to whom the Gray Man shows himself often return to their houses after the storm to find them untouched, even when the rest of the island’s buildings have been blown away. A few notable Gray Man sightings, noted by Christie Gordon in her article titled “The Gray Man of Pawleys Island”,include a young couple who saw him on their honeymoon in 1954, just days before Hurricane Hazel.Another older couple saw him on the beach several years later and left the island just before Hurricane Hugo hit Pawley’s Island. They returned after the storm to find their house was one of few intact. There have been several less well-known sightings  of the Gray Man that date back over 200 years. Many believe the latest sighting of the Gray Man was on a livestream recorded by Jim and Billy McClency during Hurricane Florence, as shown below.

Gray Man caught on livestream during Hurricane Florence

The Gray Man’s origin story has several variations. These include the idea that Gray Man was originally George Pawley the original owner of Pawley’s Island,who lived in the eighteenth century. Another story claims the ghost was a sailor who himself was a victim to a storm, and him being a man who drowned himself after finding out the woman he loved had married his best friend while he had been away at sea. The most commonly known origin story for this legendary ghost is written out in detail by Ashley Hall in their article The Gray Man of Pawleys Island. In this tale, the Gray Man was returning to his lover to ask her to marry him when both he and his horse drowned in the island’s marshes. Several months later, his lover saw a strangely familiar man on the beach who warned her that a storm was coming and that she needed to get off the island, which she did after convincing her family to come with her. After the storm, they returned to find their house untouched while the rest of the island lay in devastation.

Regardless of whether the legend of the Gray Man of Pawley’s Island is real or not, his story enthralls tourists and locals alike as he continues to protect his fellow islanders from storms.


Sources used:
“Pawleys Island Ghost –The Gray Man.” Real paranormal experiences, 24 March. 2018https://realparanormalexperiences.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/1125034-e1521898525467.jpg. Accessed 24 March. 2019.

“The Gray Man Ghost of Pawleys Island Real Footage During Hurricane Florence.” Jim McClency and Billy McClency, YouTube, posted by ghost guys go, 16 Sep. 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nl7oZEuYb8M. accessed 24 March. 2019.

Fleming, Tyler. “Who was the Hurricane-Predicting Ghost of Pawleys Island?” TheSun News, 11 Sept.2018, https://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/article215990455.html. Accessed 25 March. 2019

Gordon, Christie “The Gray Man of Pawleys Island,” Mysterious Universe, 27June, 2013https://mysteriousuniverse.org/2013/06/the-gray-man-of-pawleys-island/. Accessed 25 March. 2019.

Hall, Ashley. “The Gray Man of Pawleys Island” theparanormalguide.com, 21 Apr. 2015, http://www.theparanormalguide.com/blog/the-gray-man-of-pawleys-island. Accessed 25 March. 2019.

Hillard, Mark. Pawleys Island Pier, Foggy Morning. X-E2 with 10 stops of ND, 30 seconds. https://markhilliardatelier.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/x-e2-30s-pi-pier-in-the-fog-0186-2013.jpg. Accessed 26 March. 2019.

Links for further research:
Myrtle Beach Online
https://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/local/article215990455.html.
Tyler Fleming compiles a list of possible origin stories for the Gray Man of Pawleys Island. Stories claim he is either the victim of a hurricane himself, a scorned lover or the original owner of the island.

Southern Living
https://www.southernliving.com/news/the-gray-man-hurricane-florence-pawleys-island.
This article delves into how South Carolina residents experience the island ghost and how he has been integrated into the culture. It includes stories depictions of several tweets of local eyewitness accounts as well as an informational video.

The Paranormal Guide
http://www.theparanormalguide.com/blog/the-gray-man-of-pawleys-island.
In her article, Ashley Hall tells a version of the most well-known origin story of the Gray Man wherein he is depicted as a young man drowned with his horse in the marshes before he could make it home to his lover, who he later tells to get off the island right before a storm hits. Hall also explains the nature of Gray Man sightings, wherein he is dressed in gray and often waves in warning, and his storm-predicting abilities.

Weathertrends360
https://www.weathertrends360.com/Blog/Post/The-Legend-of-the-Hurricane-Forecasting-Ghost-The-Gray-Man-4262.
This article uses these features to link hurricanes with Gray Man appearances from as far back as 1893. It uses maps showing hurricane paths and its analytical approach to the link between Gray Man sightings and hurricanes.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The Gray Man of Pawley’s Island

Author: Randall Sullivan


Image from hauntedlowcountry.com

The
gray man of Pawley’s Island in South Carolina has hiked the shoreline for nearly 200 years. In addition, a lot like the Gray man of Hatteras, his existence predicts approaching jeopardy for the tiny island and the community that reside there. It appears that although he is accountable for saving people’s lives, he was incapable of saving his own life. There are few stories concerning the origin of the Gray Man. One of the stories illustrate that, in 1822, a youthful woman was living on the island with her relatives. One day she received information that her fiancée was going to unite her on the island subsequent to going to see his relatives.

Overjoyed with the message, she told the servants to cook all his preferred dishes and embellish the house in expectation for his coming. A time came for him to turn up, but no one showed. She waited for her fiancée for hours and only the fiancées servant visited with heartbreaking news.

As
the two were roving down the path, her fiancée was in tremendous spirits and confronted his servant to a contest on their horses. They contested down the strand, and when he spotted a shortcut through a swamp, he determined to take it. Providence got involved and caused his horse to trip up, throwing him off. When he struggled to stand, he found himself
plummeting in quicksand. Regardless of his best attempts, neither he nor his servant was competent to free him, and the man submerged underneath the sand.

The
reports nearly drove the girl crazy. She depleted hours hiking down the Pawley’s Island coastline. One day she was not at home on foot when she noticed a man paying attention over the ocean water. While she got nearer, she sensed that her stomach was tightening. She could not believe what she saw. When she got closer to the man, she was in no doubt that it was her fiancée. All of a sudden, a wave ruptured from the ocean, encompassing him. When the wave diminished, the man was not there. The girl told her relatives of what she had observed. Her family, certainly, thought that losing her fiancée started to take her mentality. That night, she had a terrible nightmare of being in a tiny boat in the ocean hurled by the ocean waves causing wreckage everywhere around her. All that time, her fiancée stood on a sandbank trying to signal her to him. The nightmare really frightened her. Hence, her dad took her and the entire family to Charleston to see a medical doctor.

That
was providential. In hours of their departure, a typhoon smacked the coastline. When it ended, nearly all the residents of the North Inlet died. Becoming conscious that her fiancée had come back to save her from a horrific destiny, the girl returned to her ordinary self. Inhabitants of the Pawley’s Island assert that they still see the Gray Man. In 1954, a grandmother on holiday with her family noticed a man fully clad totally in gray fade to a twist before vanishing. The following day hurricanes shred through the region. One individual attempted to pursue the Gray Man barely to have him vanish before their eyes. Often when people see the Gray Man, the hurricanes leave their homes completely without a scratch whereas it decimates
the nearby homes. For natives who have spotted the Gray Man it is certainly that he came to caution them. 


Works Cited

Clary, Margie. The Gray Man of Pawley’s Island. Orangeburg: Written in Stone. 2004. Print.

            Katie, Harrison. “Haunted Low country: The Gray Man – Pawley’s Island, South Carolina.” Haunted             Lowcountry: Haunted Legends and Ghost Stories from Coastal South Carolina. Lowcountry    Paranormal, 18 June 2010. Web. 19 Oct. 2013.
            
Links for Further Research:

The Gray Man
http://themoonlitroad.com/the-gray-man/
Gives a small summary on a famed story of The Gray Man

Pawley’s Islands Ghosts
http://hauntedstories.net/ghost-stories/south-carolina/gray-man-pawleys-island
Gives one of the myths about The Gray Man

Ghost stories
http://southcarolinaghost.tripod.com/GhostStories/id27.html
Gives an example of The Gray Man story


Friday, October 19, 2012

The Gray Man of Pawleys Island

Author: Hannah Grace McIver


Right off the coast of South Carolina is an “arrogantly shabby” barrier island, which has been visited for generations. Pawleys Island  is approximately 70 miles north of Charleston and about 25 miles south of Myrtle Beach. The Civil War and several major hurricanes have changed the face of the island but it still retains the nickname “arrogantly shabby.” Pawleys is still well known as the town that loves to tell ghost stories and enjoys laid back living.

There are many haunted stories and wicked tales told all over the Palmetto State, one of the most prominent being, “The Gray Man of Pawleys Island.” Just like every story, there are always many different versions of it. In the South, it is tradition to tell stories orally, so they may be passed down from generation to generation. Whether it is a bed time story, a love story or a ghost story, everyone tells it differently and it is interpreted differently as well.

The most popular version tells us that the “Gray Man” was coming to see his long lost lover. He was engaged to be married to her and was anxious to see his beautiful, soon to be bride. As mode of transportation, he was on horseback. Unfortunately, in the middle of his trek, he got stuck in quick sand and began to sink. The horse and rider were later found dead.  His lover, who was mourning over her late fiancé took a stroll on the beach. As she was collecting her thoughts and emotions on the Carolina coast, a man in a gray suit came up to her, suddenly. She was taken back because he resembled her fiancé! He told her to get off the island and to flee from the coast. She obeyed and that night, a level 3 hurricane ripped through the island demolishing every house in the town sparing her home.

In the Statesville: Record and Landmark, It tells us many different stories about sightings of the “Gray Man.”
A couple of newlyweds on Pawleys Island were supposedly warned by a "man in rumpled gray clothing" who awakened them when he knocked on their door early in the morning before the storm's arrival They prudently left the area as soon as they were able. That night, most homes on the island were obliterated. However, the couples’ honeymoon spot was left untouched.

In Unsolved Mysteries: "The Grey Man Friendly Ghost Spirit," Genevieve Peterkin, a Georgetown resident gives some insight on what she knows about the legend.




She tells us that everyone who the “Gray Man” comes in contact with will be spared from all danger. She said that if you see the “Gray Man” you should consider yourself blessed. Peterkins reports that in 1954, before Hurricane Hazel that a man spotted the “Gray Man”. This Pawleys Island resident’s home was so protected that beach towels left on the railing from the previous day were left untouched. Peterkins witnessed Hurricane Hazel and she said that story made her a believer of the “Gray Man”.

Even though there are many accounts of people spotting him, there is no idea of who the “Gray Man” is or his fiancé. This story is so well known through out South Carolina but its one that’s harder to believe if unseen because the “Gray Man” has no identity. An alternative to the common myth, in
Ghosts of the Carolina Coast the “Gray Man” is portrayed differently. He writes that a woman and man had already been married and they owned a large estate on Pawleys Island.  According to Alan Brown, the husband rode off to join the forces with Francis Marion, the “Swamp Fox.” That Summer, there was a shipwreck on the island and there was only one survivor. The survivor was pulled to safety and it was her husband. The wives cousin as also on Francis Marion’s team and he died. Brown goes on to say that the “Gray Man” is the cousin who lost his life shipwrecked on the shore. Even though this is a very different version of the story, what we have heard about the ghost is unchanging. He is still a friendly ghost who warns people about hurricanes.
Growing up in South Carolina, it’s easy to see why old men shoot the bull and talk about the “Gray Man.” It’s also interesting when northerners come to visit our Carolina beaches that they actually come out at night to see this phenomenon. 

Works Cited:

Brown, Alan. Haunted South Carolina. Mechanicsburg: Stackpole Books, 2010. Print.

Zepke, Terrance. Ghosts of the Carolina Coasts. Sarasota: Pineapple Press, 1999. Print.

Stonestreet, O.C. “Pawleys Island and the Ghostly Legend of the Gray Man.” Statesville: Record and Landmark, 18 Jul, 212. Web. 11 Oct, 2012.


Rachel Tipton. “Gray Man.” YouTube. Web. 26 October 2011. 12 October 2012.


Bolick, Julian.
The Return of the Gray Man. Clinton: Jacobs Brothers, 1956. Print.


markmauvis. “Unsolved Mysteries: The Grey Man Friendly Ghost Spirit.” YouTube. Web. 24 August 2012. 18 October 2012.


Links for Further Research:

YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5znomxJMuVc

This video is a quick re-cap on what the “Gray Man” is up to today and what he has done in history.

Haunted Lowcountry

http://www.hauntedlowcountry.com/index.php?/hauntlow/south_carolina/the_gray_man/
This website is great to further research not only just the “Gray Man” but other haunted places in South Carolina.


The Moonlit Road
http://themoonlitroad.com/the-gray-man/
This website offers cool audio and a lot of information on the “Gray Man” and a lot of other ghost legends.