CASE FILE 002 — POINT PLEASANT INCIDENT — MOTHMAN METAL PRINT
CASE FILE 002 — POINT PLEASANT INCIDENT — MOTHMAN METAL PRINT
Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia. November 15, 1966 — December 15, 1967.
For thirteen months, the town of Point Pleasant became the most concentrated site of documented unexplained encounters in American history. It began at the old TNT munitions plant north of town — two young couples, a dark road, and something standing at the roadside that should not have been there. Seven feet tall. Wings folded. Eyes burning red in the dark. It pursued their car at speeds witnesses estimated over 100 miles per hour before lifting into a nearby field and vanishing.
Over the following thirteen months more than 100 documented sightings were reported. Volunteer firefighters saw it. Strange men in dark suits visited witnesses shortly after their reports were filed. Then on December 15, 1967 — exactly thirteen months after the first sighting — the Silver Bridge collapsed into the Ohio River during rush hour. Forty-six people died. Two bodies were never recovered. Multiple witnesses reported seeing the creature above the bridge in the moments before the collapse.
After that day the sightings stopped. Completely. As if whatever it had come to witness, it had witnessed.
This Mothman metal print captures the bridge, the rain-soaked road, the vintage muscle car with headlights cutting through the dark, and the thing hovering above it all — red eyes fixed on the river below. The Silver Bridge no longer stands. The Memorial Bridge was built in its place in 1969. But the sky over Point Pleasant has never quite looked the same.
This is not a Mothman poster. This is not cryptid fan art. This is a permanent metal artifact documenting one of the most thoroughly reported paranormal incidents in American history — forged on industrial aluminum at 400 degrees, built to outlast every reasonable explanation that has been offered and failed.
THE EVIDENCE — 12 x 18 inch aluminum panel — Dye sublimation process — vivid, permanent, fade-resistant — Gloss finish — deep blues and fire orange achieve exceptional depth on metal — Ready to hang — hardware included — Lightweight — approximately 1.5 lbs — Wipe clean with dry cloth
THE COORDINATES 38.8473° N, 82.1349° W — Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia
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