This image is the cover for the book Ghosts Along the Navesink and Shrewsbury Rivers, Haunted America

Ghosts Along the Navesink and Shrewsbury Rivers, Haunted America

The historic region between the Navesink and Shrewsbury Rivers has formed the basis for countless accounts of apparitions, hauntings and unexplained phenomena. For more than one hundred years, reports have circulated that the ghost of merciless slave master Lewis Morris can be seen scouring Passage Point Plantation in Rumson, with a gaping hole where his heart should be. The frozen waters of the Navesink were a popular destination for iceboat sailing, and many still claim to see the face of a drowned teen in the ice after a tragic incident in 1906. The native Lenapes and colonial Dutch told eerie tales of the ancient forest of Ole Balm Hollow in Middletown, including phantom riders and the echoes of crying children. Local author Patricia Heyer recounts haunted tales of the two rivers peninsula.

Patricia Heyer

Patricia Martz Heyer, a longtime history buff and local resident, has written extensively for both children and adults over her career. Most recently, she is the author of Shark Attacks of the Jersey Shore: A History (The History Press, April 2020), and another shark attacks project in New York is coming in 2021. She lives on the Narvarumsunk peninsula with her husband and a rescued black cat named Gracie.

The History Press