Cry Baby Bridge & Kali Oka
Saraland, Alabama
By Robin Wright
Take a turn off of Kali Oka Road in Saraland, Alabama, go carefully around Dead Man’s Curve (so named for the numerous fatal car accidents) and you will be heading towards Cry Baby Bridge and the Kali Oka Plantation. The plantation may look familiar to independent film buffs as it was used as the location for the horror film “Dead Birds,” where a mix of demonology and voodoo create a horrible place to stay the night in post-Civil War Alabama. There is an eerie aura around the plantation house and the smaller house that was once the slaves’ quarters. Some have said they have seen a woman in white lighting candles in a window. Others have spotted a hulking African American man, believed to have once been a slave on the plantation, walking the Kali Oka Road. These two ghosts, it has been said, are the reason you can hear a baby cry at night on the bridge just down the road.
The woman was the mistress of the plantation house, and her husband was an abusive, cold-hearted master. The giant was a slave and the Mistress’s lover. One night, the master of the house followed his wife as she entered the slaves’ quarters just behind the plantation house. He caught them in a lovers’ embrace, pulled them apart and at knife-point, forced the slave to a tree where he was chained up. Both of his hands were cut off for daring to touch the master’s wife, and he was left to die as a warning to others. Afterwards, the mistress of the house discovered she was pregnant. According to local tradition, she delivered a baby boy in the woods and drowned him in the nearby creek, where Cry Baby Bridge crosses today. Now, they say, one can hear the baby cry as his poor, innocent body touches the cold, running water in a constant repetition of his mother’s desperate betrayal. The slave still walks the road, looking for the son he’ll never know on the mortal plane.
But there is another version of the story, too…
Some believe the Master actually showed favoritism towards his behemoth slave. After the master’s death, however, the wife was the one who tied him up to the tree because she hated him so much. Insanely jealous, she supposedly left him tied to the tree in front of the house so that she could watch as he died a slow death.
Cry Baby Bridge also has multiple legends as to why one can hear a baby cry when you cross it at night. Some say a bunch of kids were playing on the bridge when they knocked a boy into the creek, where he downed. There are a few versions that a woman and her baby had a tragic accident. In some versions, she escapes and doesn’t even try to save the baby, in others, both she and the baby die. Those who follow logic claim that the sound is actually the wind blowing across the pipes that lay beneath the bridge, but that does not explain why cars have so much trouble crossing the bridge at night. Cars will stall, lights will go haywire, and some have even reported that their cars have moved from one end of the bridge to the other without any earthly aid.
Some have tried to get physical proof of the bridge’s haunting by sprinkling baby powder on a car from bumper to bumper. Wait inside the car for a few minutes, then go out and look. Some say that you will see a toddler’s hand and footprints. Another, much more satisfying twist on this (some have suggested) is to send a passenger out to sprinkle the car with baby powder. When they get out, drive away, leaving them alone in the dark to experience the bridge for themselves for a few frightening minutes. But we would never suggest such shenanigans….
No one knows which, if any, of the stories are true. Everyone does agree, however, that there is something definitely otherworldly in this area of Alabama. The plantation house has been relatively recently purchased and renovated by a family who do not seem bothered by the ghosts that haunt Kali Oka Road.
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332 Comments |
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amber hartley says: |
April 12, 2011, 1:18 pm |
when i trun 16 i me and my friends are going there to see if it is real i hope it is
Jordan Branham says: |
April 15, 2011, 6:55 pm |
i have heard of this place, and some of my friends have been on and said they have seen i man standing in the middle of the bridge, they were taking a hay ride through there years ago. but whatever it was standing there that bridge is haunted!!
naughtynurse says: |
April 15, 2011, 9:07 pm |
i have heard alot about the cry baby bridge and i want to go just to see if it is true…i think it would be a nice scare if it is….i do know there is a church in munford al were if u drove around it three times park infront if the church and turn ur lights off you can people look though the blinds…which yes you would think that a person is doing it but yet it is in the middle of the night and no one satys at the church at night. then the cematery there u can also turn ur lights off and hear people walking around and see gray mist moving around then out of no were its gone
A.P.Society says: |
May 19, 2011, 9:59 pm |
I live in saraland off celeste road and i plan to do a couple evp sessions around the bridge after i get back from sloss furnice. Just to lay it to rest but in my opinion it could possibly be the pipes under the actual renovated bridge itself making the “crying baby” noise. Gotta investigate all angles when it comes to lore around these parts…Though the plantation on kali oka has alot of history behind it as did sloss so if its anything of that caliber it will be most interesting to get some evidence there for kicks…
milo says: |
June 9, 2011, 3:55 pm |
um….not ! i’ve lived here my entire 54 years and have taken nieces, nephews and others to cry baby bridge and have never seen, heard or felt anything unusual. i did however write and record a song with my uncles experiance on the bridge. it can be heard on myspace under Milo Brown: Kalioka Road on the Straight from the heart cd1999 .anyone living near kalioka would like it im sure.
nirah and tikkii says: |
October 18, 2011, 6:31 pm |
We went on a senior trip to cry baby bridge in Kali Oka. The baby powder thing is NOT a joke! We left the bottle of baby powder like weve heard to do and NO joke there were baby footprints of ALL over! Believe us or not just go see for yourself its fricken scary!!!!
sherri says: |
October 28, 2011, 12:48 am |
I still want to know what Billi jo threw off the Tallahachee Bridge. If it’s what I think it was then maybe you can add another “crybaby bridge” to the list! OMG the echo of all the little crying babies is defening!
If I were a baby I would cry my little heart out too. Excellent writeup. Thanks for the info.
Bobby says: |
October 31, 2011, 10:07 pm |
OK, this should clear everything up! Outside Saraland Alabama is the one true Cry Baby Bridge. There is the plantation home nearby where you can usually hear the chains rattling. There is always a heavy mist on the ground for this is a low lying area. The baby powder is real. It only happens though when you bring someone who has been there before and knows how to summon the baby! haha…in other words its a trick. You can use the side of your hand to place fake baby footprints in advance, especially using the night dew. Then with baby powder it will stick just right to make them show up. Sorry but call me teller. This place really is one of the scariest places I’v ever been before and I think if you want to see it, you just have to find it without help.
Lane says: |
November 8, 2011, 7:23 pm |
It’s not the University of South Alabama. It’s a smaller college called the University of Mobile. I live 2 minutes away from the bridge.
Bethany Brooke says: |
March 17, 2012, 11:41 pm |
Went to Cry Baby bridge did not hear anything. Went down the dirt road though, and up near the church. I was taking pictures with my phone and I liked up into the flash and saw s white figure. I ran, and fell and my step dad claimed that something touched him. On the rude home something hit the side of my door. We later liked at the pictures, and the last picture taken before I got scared and ran there were for figures in that picture. I also took a picture of my step dads shoulder, where he claimed to be touched… There was a blatant hand print, right where he said something touched him. It’s really freaky.
janet beck says: |
May 12, 2012, 9:47 pm |
I grew up going to the bridge all hours of the day and night with my friends. When i was in my twenties some twenty years ago you could stand on the bridge and see the original wooden bridge that was left. The mistress of the plantation was crossing this wooden bridge in a covered wagon during a rain storm with her infant child. She tried to go through the rushing waters to get home and her child was washed away. I have heard the baby…seen the slaves…seen apparitions walking down the road and wondering through the cemetary. By the way Im a Smith
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DJ Mike says:
March 29, 2011, 12:41 pm
did anybody die while visiting the bridge