The Bridgewater Triangle, a 200-square-mile area in southeastern Massachusetts, is a landscape dense with ancient history and high-strangeness phenomena. Reports are of a diverse range of cryptids, UFOs, and spectral entities.
Within the triangle, the Freetown-Fall River State Forest serves as a secondary, darker vortex often referred to as the Cursed Forest. This area is notorious for its history of cult activity, ritualistic murders, and high-frequency sightings of the Pukwudgie—a mischievous, troll-like being from Wampanoag folklore. Central to the area is Hockomock Swamp, which means “the place where spirits dwell”.
Other significant nodes within the triangle include Profile Rock, a natural granite formation resembling a human face, and the mysterious Dighton Rock, a 40-ton boulder covered in cryptic petroglyphs.
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08 June 2023 – Bridgewater triangle not sure what this is.

18 December 2015 – I am glad I found your website because it shed some light on something that happened to me a couple months ago. I was driving from Maine to Cn. To visit a friend and I thought I was almost there, when I realized I was driving North on the same interstate, which I had been traveling South on and I had backtracked to within 70 miles of Boston!!! I have absolutely no recollection of exiting the freeway and getting back on again in the wrong direction. After looking at your map, I realized I was in the Bridgewater Triangle when it happened. Also, vortexes do move, or at least the healing part can and will move if it is contaminated with too much sick energy. The first time I went to Sedona I arrived at 2am and did not have a map of the vortexes. I was guided to a healing Vortex and advised to sleep in it, which I did. My guide identified herself as the White Buffalo Psychic and she told me the vortexes had moved. The next day I got a map of the vortexes and discovered I had slept near bell rock, but not where the Vortex was on the map. There was much sick energy on Bell Rock. I walked down the trail and reached out and touched a tree – big mistake!! The jolt I received felt like hitting a metal filling with a fork!! Very unpleasant!! – Mary Ann
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Image By uploaded by Kimon Berlin, user:Gribeco [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Note: There is currently no scientific method to prove that vortexes exist. Just because a location is on the vortex map, does not prove there is a vortex there. What it means, is that someone suggested the location and provided evidence or a personal account, and/or we found corroborating evidence from other sources. We do this so other visitors to the site can send us their opinion on the validity of the vortex claim, to build a consensus.
Have you visited this location? If so, let us know if you think this place is a vortex or not. We will post your comments here.