The Face in the Window on Carter's Hill
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In this episode, we unravel the strange history and enduring folklore behind a ghostly face staring out from the attic window of an 18th-century brick farmhouse in Peach Bottom, Pennsylvania. For generations, locals have whispered chilling explanations—some claim it’s the haunted visage of a Civil War widow, others insist it’s a death mask placed there in vengeance.
The truth, however, is no less fascinating. The face is a plaster teaching model once owned by 19th-century phrenologist Henry Carter. His daughter reportedly positioned it in the window as a prank to startle passersby, never imagining it would remain there for more than a century. Over time, the eerie sight became a roadside curiosity, even earning a mention in National Geographic.
Today’s homeowners continue the tradition—partly out of respect for local history, and partly due to a lingering superstition that removing the head brings bad luck, a belief reinforced by a structural collapse that occurred during a previous attempt to take it down. Known as the “Face on Carter’s Hill,” the object now stands as a shared cultural icon, where documented history and supernatural legend blur into one enduring mystery.
To learn more, visit UnchartedLancaster.com.
Learn about other unique people and places like this when you step off the beaten path with Uncharted Lancaster: Field Guide to the Strange, Storied, and Hidden Places of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania by Adam Zurn. This one-of-a-kind 239-page guidebook uncovers 56 fascinating sites, from the county’s very own fountain of youth to the oldest continuously operating short-line railroad in the western hemisphere. Order your copy here.
