Read about the photos below in the Lakeview Cemetery section of: Long Island's Most Haunted: A Ghost Hunter's Guide Available for purchase on this website. Buy Book
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Long Island's Most Haunted A Ghost Hunter's Guide
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Lakeview Cemetery Photos
Photo by Karen Isaksen
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Photograph 1 of 2 - discussed in book, but not shown in book.
Notice the light rods over the graves of the sailors who died aboard
the Louis V. Place shipwreck. Also, one of the boomerang-shaped
anomalies covers the side of the woman's face, indicating the anomaly
appeared between the photographer and the woman, and thus was not
caused by a light from the street or by something else manmade.
Photo 2 of 2 - discussed in the book, but not shown in the book.
Light rods appear in the area of the graves of the sailors from the
doomed Louis V. Place.
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Face In The Mist - Photo by Joseph Flammer
Ghost Face Watching - Photo by Joseph Flammer
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Photo by Joseph Flammerr
Photos by Joseph Flammer
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Photo by Karen Isaksen
Captain William Squires of the
Louis V. Place, shipwrecked off
Fire Island across from Patchogue.
Orb looms over grave of sailor
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Spirits in the Night - Three light anomalies shoot
behind a statue while mist collects at bottom right of
photo. What's going on here?
Photo by Joseph Flammer
Take note of the way
the boomerang-like
light anomalies radiate
sparkles above the
graves of the sailors
of the Louis V. Place
shipwreck.
Ghost in the Rigging -
Back in 1895 many
people saw Capt.
Squires aboard the
ship, even after he
died and washed away
in the frozen waves.
The photo above is
part of the Louis V.
Place exhibit at the
Long Island Maritime
Museum in West
Sayville.
------>>
The blue lights of Lakeview Cemetery. It was said by witnesses that
the large black ghost carried a lantern with a blue flame.
Original Photograph
Captain's Ghost in the Rigging?
Read about Captain Squire's body drifting 30
miles against the ocean's current to get back
home to his family in Hampton Bays, then
known as Good Ground. Story was written by
The Paranormal Adventurers and published in
Dan's Papers, the premier magazine of the
Hamptons in February, 2008.
Read about how the Louis V. Place
shipwrecked in a fierce winter storm in 1895
in an article written by The Paranormal
Adventurers and published in The Long Island
Advance Newspaper in Patchogue in January,
2008. The story is titled, Who's Buried In
John J. Horton's Grave?
Published Articles about the Louis V. Place Shipwreck
written by
Joseph Flammer & Diane Hill
The Paranormal Adventurers
Dan's Papers - The Hamptons
Long Island Advance - Patchogue
Retouched photo of the Louis V. Place foundering on a sandbar
off Fire Island across from Patchogue in a terrible winter storm
in 1895. The temperature was zero, the frozen winds blew as
fierce as 72 miles per hour. The sails froze and the ship could
not be steered. The sailors froze to death in the rigging. Two
men survived. One died a month later and the other went mad
and died years later in a mental ward in Central Islip. Photo by
Martin Anderson, courtesy of the Long Island Maritime
Museum in West Sayville.