The Ozark Witches Who Lured Men Travelers—What They Did To Them Will Terrify You… (1876)-crisss - US Social News

The Ozark Witches Who Lured Men Travelers—What They Did To Them Will Terrify You… (1876)-crisss

The Ozark Witches Who Lured Men Travelers—What They Did To Them Will Terrify You… (1876)-nghia

Posted March 31, 2026

Part 1

In the Missouri Ozarks, there were roads that belonged to maps and roads that belonged to memory.

Devil’s Fork Road belonged to the second kind.

It wound through the deepest part of Oregon County like something laid down by hesitation rather than plan, a rutted strip of earth and stone threading between hardwood ridges, creek bottoms, and hollows where the light fell wrong even at noon. Travelers used it because they had to. It connected settlements too scattered to be called towns to mills, trading posts, and ferry points farther off. But nobody called it safe, and nobody with any sense rode it after dusk unless weather or necessity had cornered him first.

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The crows there had a reputation.

People said they followed lone riders in the trees and kept pace too long for comfort, calling overhead as though handing news from one dark branch to the next. Men laughed when they repeated that story in daylight. They laughed less after a cold ride under the canopy, when the road narrowed and the forest began pressing in from both sides like listeners.

In 1876, the Penllo sisters lived fifteen miles from the nearest neighbor on a rise above Devil’s Fork Road in a weather-sunk cabin with a smokehouse, herb garden, and a barn too large for the little patch of cleared land surrounding it. Martha Penllo was thirty-seven that year. Eliza, five years younger, still had a softness about her face that made strangers mistake silence for gentleness. They were daughters of Reverend Silas Penllo, a preacher cast out of two churches in the late 1850s for doctrines the official records called heresy and the old people of the county called something worse.

Silas had died years before, but his shadow never quite left the property.

Locals remembered him as a man of scripture turned in the wrong direction, forever lecturing on purity, corruption, divine favor, and blood. The girls had grown up under him far from company, and by the time they were women, people had become used to the oddity of them. In isolated country, strangeness that remains useful is often tolerated longer than it should be.

And the sisters were useful.

They delivered babies when roads were too poor or husbands too frightened to fetch doctors from farther off. They knew herbs for fevers, poultices for infected cuts, teas for women’s troubles, salves for swollen joints, roots that settled the belly and flowers that softened a cough. Mothers trusted them. Farmers’ wives sent for them in childbirth. Men who would not have welcomed them to a supper table still let them kneel at the bedsides of sick children. Their cabin smelled always of drying leaves, old smoke, clean linen, and something beneath that visitors could never quite identify. Sulfur, some said. Others said only that the place smelled “burnt.”

Around the house, bunches of medicinal plants hung from lines strung under the porch eaves and inside the smokehouse. Animal bones were wired into patterns at the edge of the garden, which the sisters explained as old mountain warding against crop blight and foxes. People disliked the sight of them and then, after a hard birth went well or a baby’s fever broke under Eliza’s cooling hands, decided not to dislike them too much.

That was how trust took root.

Not in one grand act, but in years of accepted usefulness.

By the spring of 1876, men traveling Devil’s Fork Road knew the Penllo place by reputation. A rider caught by rain could ask shelter there. A tinker or mule driver could trade news for a hot meal. If a man came with an injured horse or swollen hand, one of the sisters might know how to set him right enough to continue. The cabin sat lonely but respectable in its way. Odd women, yes. Religious. Grave. A bit touched perhaps by too much isolation and too many sermons from a dead father. But healers. Midwives. God-fearing in their own severe fashion.

That summer a tinker named Eli Braden stopped there.

He was twenty-nine, broad-faced, German-born, known across his route for mending pans, sharpening tools, and singing while he worked even when no one paid him much mind. He had a wife waiting in Arkansas and wrote faithfully enough that when his letters stopped, she noticed before anyone else. The last record of him alive appeared in the store ledger at Greer’s Mill on June 17, 1876: nails, flour, salt, lamp wick. He told the proprietor he meant to push on before rain if the horse held.

He did not arrive at the next stop.

Three days later his horse was found wandering near Eleven Point River, bit rein cut clean through, saddlebags still attached. Nothing had been stolen. No body was found. No clear sign of struggle marked the roadside. Men assumed bandits at first, because the Ozarks in those years still held plenty of drifting violence left over from war, bushwhackers, and men who never learned how to stop living by the gun once peace declared itself official.

Sheriff James Holloway noted the disappearance in his field book and kept riding.

Holloway was forty-four, a Union veteran with the habit of listening longer than other men spoke. He believed in paper. In dates, names, weather conditions, witness phrasing, distances between events. He understood that most mysteries, given enough patient writing, eventually revealed themselves as patterns. But one missing tinker in the Ozarks was not yet a pattern. It was just another man the road had swallowed.

Then in August a mule driver named Josiah Maris failed to reach Alton after leaving the western ridge.

A clerk at a trading post remembered Maris saying he might take supper at the Penllo place if the weather worsened. That same week, Daniel Hayes at the general store recorded the sisters buying an unusual quantity of lye and lamp oil. Enough, he wrote in a margin note, “to preserve meat for a hard season or strip the hide off a horse.” He asked no questions at the time. Country merchants survive by selling without wonder too often.

Josiah did not reappear.

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