Bennington Triangle — Vermont's Vanishing Zone

Overview
Between 1945 and 1950, five people vanished in the mountains of southwestern Vermont. A 75-year-old hunting guide who knew the terrain better than anyone alive. An 18-year-old college student who walked up a trail and never came back. A war veteran who apparently disappeared from a moving bus. An eight-year-old boy who was gone in the time it took his mother to feed the pigs. An experienced hiker whose body was found months later in a place that search teams had already combed.
None of these cases were connected at the time. They were individual tragedies in a remote corner of New England, logged and largely forgotten. It was not until 1992 that Vermont author Joseph A. Citro drew them together, named the area the “Bennington Triangle,” and suggested that something about this particular stretch of mountain wilderness was, for want of a better word, hungry.
The name stuck. The area — centered on the brooding mass of Glastenbury Mountain, an all-but-abandoned peak that once hosted a logging town, a trolley line, and a hotel, all of which had failed — has since accumulated layers of additional lore: Bigfoot sightings, strange lights, Abenaki warnings about cursed ground, and the persistent, unsettling fact that the Green Mountains swallow people more often than they should.
Origins & History
The Geography
Glastenbury Mountain rises to 3,748 feet in the Green Mountains of southwestern Vermont. Today it is one of the most remote and least-visited areas in the state. The town of Glastenbury, once home to a logging community, a charcoal-burning operation, and an ill-fated mountain resort, was essentially abandoned by the early twentieth century. By 2010, the US Census recorded a population of eight.
The mountain is covered in dense, often impenetrable forest. Bogs and swamps dot the lower elevations. Fog is common. The terrain is disorienting — thick canopy blocks GPS signals and sight lines, and the mountain’s multiple ridges and hollows can confuse even experienced hikers. The Long Trail, Vermont’s oldest long-distance hiking path, crosses the area, but much of the surrounding landscape is trackless.
The Abenaki, the indigenous people of the region, reportedly considered Glastenbury an uneasy place. While specific accounts vary and are sometimes embellished in retelling, the consistent theme is avoidance — the mountain was said to be a place where the winds behaved strangely, where spirits were restless, and where a large stone existed that could swallow people who stepped on it. Whether these legends reflect genuine indigenous tradition or later reconstruction is debated.
The Five Disappearances
Middie Rivers — November 12, 1945
Middie Rivers was a 75-year-old hunting and fishing guide with decades of experience in the Glastenbury area. He was leading a group of four hunters near the Long Trail when he got ahead of the group on the return trip. His companions expected to find him waiting at camp. He was never seen again. Despite extensive searches, the only trace found was a single rifle cartridge in a stream. Rivers knew this terrain intimately — locals said he could navigate it blindfolded.
Paula Jean Welden — December 1, 1946
Paula Welden was an 18-year-old sophomore at Bennington College. On a Sunday afternoon, she told her roommate she was going for a walk and set out on the Long Trail. Multiple witnesses saw her on the trail — an elderly couple watched her round a bend about 100 yards ahead of them. When they reached the bend seconds later, she was gone. The subsequent search was massive but disorganized; it would later be credited with motivating the creation of the Vermont State Police, which did not exist at the time. Welden’s body was never found.
The Welden case drew national attention and became Vermont’s most famous missing persons case. Some investigators suspected foul play. Others believed she had deliberately disappeared. No explanation has been confirmed.
James E. Tedford — December 1, 1949
Exactly three years after Welden’s disappearance, James Tedford — a veteran living at the Bennington Soldiers’ Home — vanished under circumstances that strain credulity. Tedford had been visiting relatives in St. Albans, Vermont, and was seen on the bus returning to Bennington. Fellow passengers reported he was on the bus during the trip. When the bus arrived in Bennington, Tedford was not on it. His luggage was still in the overhead rack. His open bus timetable was still on his seat.
This is the most bizarre of the five cases, and skeptics have questioned whether the witness accounts are reliable or have been embellished over time. If taken at face value, Tedford apparently vanished from a moving bus without anyone noticing.
Paul Jepson — October 12, 1950
Paul Jepson was an eight-year-old boy whose mother left him playing near the family’s truck while she went to feed pigs at their farm near the Bennington-Glastenbury area. When she returned a short time later — accounts vary from minutes to perhaps an hour — the boy was gone. Bloodhounds tracked his scent to a highway intersection and lost it, suggesting he may have gotten into a vehicle.
Jepson was wearing a red jacket, which should have been visible against the autumn landscape. He was never found.
Frieda Langer — October 28, 1950
Frieda Langer, 53, was an experienced outdoorswoman hiking near the Somerset Reservoir with her cousin. She slipped and fell into a stream, told her cousin she would return to camp to change clothes, and started back alone. She never arrived. Her cousin waited, then alerted others.
The search for Langer was one of the most thorough in Vermont history at that time — five searches involving hundreds of people, aircraft, and dogs. Nothing was found.
Seven months later, on May 12, 1951, Langer’s body was discovered in an open area near Somerset Reservoir that had been thoroughly searched multiple times. Due to decomposition, no cause of death could be determined. She is the only one of the five whose body was recovered, and the circumstances of its discovery — in a location that had already been searched — deepened rather than resolved the mystery.
Key Claims
- The area around Glastenbury Mountain is the site of an abnormal concentration of disappearances that cannot be fully explained by the terrain alone
- The Abenaki recognized the area as dangerous or cursed, suggesting the phenomenon predates European settlement
- The disappearances share common features: sudden vanishing, failure to recover bodies, proximity to the Long Trail and Glastenbury Mountain
- Paranormal explanations proposed include UFO abduction, Bigfoot activity, interdimensional portals, and cursed ground
- Natural explanations proposed include predatory animals (catamounts), exposure and hypothermia leading to “paradoxical undressing” and disorientation, bogs that can swallow bodies, and serial predators
- The Langer case is particularly unsettling because her body appeared in a previously searched area, suggesting either extreme search failure or something stranger
Evidence
Statistical Analysis
Skeptics have argued that five disappearances over five years in a large area of rugged wilderness may not be statistically anomalous. The Green Mountains are challenging terrain; people do disappear in backcountry areas. Vermont’s winters are severe, bogs can trap and conceal bodies, and the forests are dense enough to hide remains indefinitely. David Paulides’ work cataloging wilderness disappearances (the “Missing 411” phenomenon) suggests that unexplained backcountry disappearances are more common nationally than most people realize.
However, the clustering — five disappearances in five years in a relatively circumscribed area, after which the phenomenon largely ceased — is noteworthy. Before 1945 and after 1950, the area does not show the same pattern.
The Terrain Factor
Glastenbury Mountain’s terrain does offer some explanatory power:
- Bogs and wetlands can trap and conceal a person who steps through a thin crust of surface vegetation
- Dense forest makes aerial searching ineffective and ground searching extremely difficult
- Hypothermia can cause disorientation, paradoxical undressing, and terminal burrowing behavior, leading victims to crawl into concealed spaces
- The Long Trail passes through exposed ridgelines where sudden weather changes can disorient even experienced hikers
The Limitations of Natural Explanations
That said, natural explanations strain in several cases:
- Rivers was an experienced guide in familiar territory, disappearing on a routine return trip in good conditions
- Welden vanished within sight of other hikers on a well-marked trail
- Tedford apparently disappeared from a bus, which no natural terrain feature can explain
- Jepson was eight years old, close to his home, and wearing a bright red jacket
- Langer’s body appeared in a searched area months later
No single natural explanation accounts for all five cases.
Paranormal Claims
The area has generated additional strange reports over the years, including:
- Bigfoot/wildman sightings reported on Glastenbury Mountain in multiple decades
- Strange lights observed on the mountain
- Reports of unusual sounds — screaming, disembodied voices
- Compass anomalies reported by hikers (though these could be caused by magnetic minerals in the mountain’s geology)
- The area’s reputation in indigenous oral tradition as a place to be avoided
None of these claims have been substantiated with physical evidence.
Debunking / Verification
This case remains unresolved. None of the five core disappearances has been explained. Four of the five victims have never been found. The one body that was recovered provided no cause of death.
What’s likely: Some or all of the disappearances have mundane explanations — wilderness accidents, foul play, voluntary disappearance — that are simply undiscoverable given the terrain and the passage of time.
What’s unclear: Whether the clustering of five disappearances in five years in this specific area represents a genuine anomaly or a coincidence amplified by narrative framing.
What’s important to note: The “Bennington Triangle” as a concept was created in 1992, 42 years after the last disappearance. Joseph Citro’s naming and framing of the phenomenon may have retroactively imposed a pattern on events that were, at the time, treated as separate and unrelated.
Cultural Impact
The Bennington Triangle has become one of the most well-known paranormal locations in New England, contributing to a broader cultural fascination with mysterious disappearances in wilderness areas. It helped inspire David Paulides’ “Missing 411” project, which cataloged hundreds of unexplained disappearances in national parks and wilderness areas across North America.
The Paula Welden case had a direct impact on Vermont governance: the disorganized response to her disappearance was a primary catalyst for the creation of the Vermont State Police in 1947.
The Bennington Triangle also demonstrates how naming creates narrative. Before Citro coined the term, there were five separate missing persons cases. After he named the area, there was a mystery — a location with properties, a pattern, a possible explanation. The power of the name itself transformed disconnected tragedies into a phenomenon.
In Popular Culture
- Joseph A. Citro, Green Mountains, Dark Tales (1999) — The author who named the Bennington Triangle and brought it to widespread attention
- David Paulides, Missing 411 series — Broader investigation of wilderness disappearances that includes discussion of the Bennington cases
- Numerous paranormal television programs — Featured in Unsolved Mysteries, Destination Truth, and various podcast series
- Bennington College — The disappearance of student Paula Welden remains part of the college’s informal institutional memory
- The Bennington Triangle (2024) — Horror film inspired by the disappearances
Key Figures
- Paula Jean Welden (1928-1946?) — Bennington College student whose disappearance is the most famous of the five cases and led to the creation of the Vermont State Police
- Middie Rivers (1870-1945?) — Experienced hunting guide who vanished on terrain he knew intimately
- James E. Tedford (?-1949?) — War veteran who allegedly disappeared from a moving bus
- Paul Jepson (1942-1950?) — Eight-year-old boy who vanished near his family’s farm
- Frieda Langer (1897-1950) — Experienced hiker whose body was found months later in a previously searched area
- Joseph A. Citro — Vermont author and folklorist who coined the term “Bennington Triangle” in 1992
Timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Pre-colonial | Abenaki reportedly consider Glastenbury Mountain an area to be avoided |
| 1800s | Glastenbury hosts logging community and short-lived mountain resort |
| Early 1900s | Glastenbury town population declines; mountain becomes increasingly remote |
| November 12, 1945 | Middie Rivers, 75, vanishes while leading a hunting party |
| December 1, 1946 | Paula Welden, 18, disappears on the Long Trail |
| 1947 | Vermont State Police created, partly in response to the Welden case |
| December 1, 1949 | James Tedford reportedly vanishes from a moving bus |
| October 12, 1950 | Paul Jepson, 8, disappears near his family’s farm |
| October 28, 1950 | Frieda Langer, 53, vanishes while hiking near Somerset Reservoir |
| May 12, 1951 | Langer’s body found in an area previously searched; no cause of death determined |
| 1992 | Joseph A. Citro coins the term “Bennington Triangle” in a radio broadcast |
| 1999 | Citro publishes Green Mountains, Dark Tales, bringing wider attention to the cases |
| 2010s-present | The Bennington Triangle becomes a popular subject in paranormal media and podcasts |
Sources & Further Reading
- Citro, Joseph A. Green Mountains, Dark Tales. University Press of New England, 1999.
- Citro, Joseph A. Weird New England. Sterling Publishing, 2005.
- Paulides, David. Missing 411 - Eastern United States. CreateSpace, 2012.
- Robinson, Marjorie B. “The Paula Welden Case.” Bennington Banner, various articles, 1946-1947.
- Vermont State Police Archives. Case files related to the Welden, Jepson, and Langer disappearances.
- “Green Mountain Mysteries.” Yankee Magazine, various issues.
Related Theories
- Bridgewater Triangle — A similar paranormal zone in southeastern Massachusetts with overlapping phenomena
- Bermuda Triangle — The most famous “triangle” of mysterious disappearances
- Bigfoot / Sasquatch — Sightings of large bipedal creatures reported in the Glastenbury Mountain area
Frequently Asked Questions
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