Ross's Corners

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Ross's Corners (alternate spellings: Ross' Corners)

Origin: scenario Edge of Darkness (?)


In the Mythos

1880s - 1920s: Ross's Corners is a small, rural hamlet a few miles west of Arkham, home to fewer than 40 residents, mostly farmers. The town has long been in decline, and by the 1920s consists mainly of a number of family farms, a church, and the Ross's Corners General Store, which also serves as the Post Office and gas station under the proprietorship of "Ma" Peters and a large and simple but well-meaning boy named Chumley, who operates the gas pumps for Ma Peters and provide other basic service for cars, such as washing windows. A bus running daily between Arkham and Worcester stops at the General store, and a truck from a nearby dairy picks up milk from a depot attached to the general store on weekdays. The rural, Yankee townsfolk are generally reticent and stand-offish with strangers, and were especially so in the spring of 1882 when a group of strangers moved into a local farmhouse they claimed to be using as a "hunting lodge" until one of them got killed and another went stark shrieking mad, and again in the summer of 1928 when another group of strangers showed up in the same farmhouse, followed by a couple mysterious disappearances and other strange events. That farmhouse had long had a reputation for being "haunted", a reputation which grew especially evil after the events of 1882, followed by occasional disappearances associated with the woods and fields surrounding the house, sightings of ghostly apparitions, visits from the Beast of Ross's Corners (a local variation on Sasquatch, said to eat the hearts of its victims), and reports of strange lights in the skies and other bad omens, before that reputation escalated into local legend after the inexplicable events of 1928 as one of the county's most haunted places, with a number of peculiar investigations being launched into the Legend of Redgrave Hill Farmhouse in the decades since.

1980s - Present: Ross's Corners is still a small, rural area a few miles west of Arkham, where it serves as a sort of "bedroom community" for young and generally single people working in the city. The town had been in a long decline until it had virtually vanished by mid-century, but in the 1960s a small amount of land in the middle of Ross's Corners was purchased by investors and by the 1980s developed for a small apartment complex, a convenience store/gas station, a new brick church building, a small police station, a volunteer fire department, and a few modern homes, a partly empty two-story complex housing a couple small offices and shops, and in the surrounding area some restored and renovated old turn-of-the-century farmhouses. Several attempts since the 1940s have been made to renovate the infamous "haunted" Redgrave Hill Farmhouse, but none of the renovations were ever completed and the house has remained largely uninhabited for over a hundred years; most recently, the house was the subject of an infamous televised investigation by the Massachusetts Paranormal Investigation Group in cooperation with Carnacki Institute on their long-running Ghost Finders: International television program, which caused quite a stir for the area partly because of the sudden buzz of activity surrounding the production of the episode, partly because of the international publicity, partly because of the bizarre experiences and evidence caught on video, but mostly for the program's offensive portrayal of Ross's Corners as a "sleepy, Mayberry-like village" full of ignorant, rustic yokels and hayseeds....

Heresies and Controversies

Keeper Notes

Associated Mythos Elements

  • TO DO

Beast of Ross' Corners

See the scenario "Edge of Darkness" for more details.

Redgrave Hill Farm

A local "haunted house" which has enjoyed a sinister reputation for over 150 years. See the scenario "Edge of Darkness" for information about the farmhouse used by the "Dark Brotherhood" cult.


References