Damn Hill Farm In Wisconsin - Alternative View

Damn Hill Farm In Wisconsin - Alternative View
Damn Hill Farm In Wisconsin - Alternative View

Video: Damn Hill Farm In Wisconsin - Alternative View

Video: Damn Hill Farm In Wisconsin - Alternative View
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In the rural area of Waukesha, Wisconsin (USA), there is an old Hille Farm with a mysterious curse.

Because of this curse, since the late 19th century, people living on this farm have either committed suicide or died due to unusual accidents.

At the end of the 19th century, a certain John Hill bought 250 acres of land in these places and built his farm on it. At first everything was fine with him, he was happily married and they had six children, but in 1898 his wife Magdalena fell ill with a mysterious disease.

The woman was examined by several doctors, but no one could give her an accurate diagnosis, and when one of the doctors decided to try to cure her, he, by an incomprehensible mistake, gave Magdalena not medicine, but a strong poison. The woman died in agony.

It was this that gave rise to the subsequent series of mysterious deaths that overtook the people living on this farm. Soon after the death of Magdalena, her husband also died of grief, and their six children began to work alone on the farm.

But the curse also touched them. One of the sons, who was born with physical disabilities, but somehow managed to survive, died shortly after his father. And then another son named Oscar was gored to death and trampled by a bull. Then, due to accidents, two more children died.

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By the time World War I broke out, local Elder Krause was spreading rumors that the Hills who came here from Germany were German spies and their children were spies too. Neighbor boyfriend Enest Feltz helped Krause to blackmail and mock the remaining two Hill children - William and his sister Hulda.

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Once Krause and Feltz came to the Hills and began to demand a large amount of money from them, otherwise they would hand over the Hills to the authorities. William Hill ran out of patience and took the gun and blew off half of Feltz's head, but Krause managed to escape. And then William, who could no longer stop, went into the barn, shot his horses, the dog, and then shot himself.

William Hulda's sister followed suit and took poison and then cut her wrists.

Hill Farm remained empty for the next two decades. Nobody wanted to live where so many people died.

However, the farm then found a way to kill people. In 1932, a man named Pratt decided, for some reason, to destroy a large stone standing on the Hill lot with dynamite. As you may have guessed, he blew up not a stone, but himself.

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Another 16 years passed and the farm was suddenly bought by the Ranson couple, Ralph and Dorothy. And five years later, their daughter Anita moved to their farm with her freshly baked husband Andrew Kennedy. At first, the Ransons and Kennedy were doing well, Anita and Andrew had children and were happily growing up on the farm.

In 1963, seven-year-old Philip Kennedy drowned in Mondola Lake, and in 1972, 5-year-old Rance Kennedy was killed when a heavy engine of a disassembled tractor fell on him in a barn. In the same shed where William Hill once killed the animals and himself with a gun.

It is not known whether the Khilov farm later had other owners. And did the curse actually exist or were all these deaths just a frightening coincidence?