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In this episode we stop at the Old Tonopah Cemetery in Tonopah, Nevada — a tiny graveyard that only operated from 1901 to 1911 but somehow holds almost the whole tragic origin story of this mining town. A lot of the people buried here died in rough, fast, and sometimes mysterious ways: the 1905 pneumonia outbreak locals called the “Tonopah plague,” miners from the 1911 Belmont Mine Fire, lawmen, pioneers, and people who just ran out of luck in the desert. What makes this one extra eerie is the location — the cemetery sits right next to the world-famous Clown Motel, which has its own ghost stories tied to miners buried right here. A lot of visitors talk about weird energy in this spot, shadowy figures near the mine fire graves, and EVPs people swear they didn’t hear with their own ears while filming. 👻 What happened in our video While we were THERE, it was quiet. No pigs. No animals. No oinking. But when I got home and started editing, I heard these strange pig-like sounds in the background of the footage. I didn’t add it. It wasn’t in our memory of the day. So this video is part cemetery history, part paranormal question mark: did the mic pick up an animal we didn’t see… or did the audio grab something the human ear didn’t? 🏚 About the cemetery Founded: May 7, 1901 Closed: April 1911 when the town needed a bigger cemetery and the mine tailings started washing over the graves. Burials: about 300 people — miners, townspeople, victims of accidents, and the 1905 sickness wave. Notable graves: victims of the Belmont Mine Fire (14–17 miners are tied to it), Sheriff Thomas Logan, and local heroes who died rescuing others. The tragedies tied to this place 1905 “plague” – not really a supernatural disease, more like pneumonia + bad sanitation in a fast-growing mining camp, but it killed dozens in just a few months. That’s why you see so many headstones from the same year. 1911 Belmont Mine Fire – smoke, reversed airflow in the mine, men trapped, and several of the dead ended up right here. That fire is a big part of why people say Tonopah is “cursed.” 👁 Reported paranormal activity here Visitors have talked about: Soft voices or murmurs on audio but not in person Shadowy figures moving between the older wooden markers A heavy feeling near the mine-disaster graves Weird cross-talk on radios or cameras when the Clown Motel lot is totally empty next door So when OUR camera picked up something we didn’t… it fits right in. 🃏 Right next to the Clown Motel Yeah… the creepy clown motel right beside a 1900s cemetery is real, not Photoshop. It was opened in the 1980s to honor a miner buried here and now has thousands of clown figures and a full haunted reputation. Tons of paranormal shows have covered this spot, and a bunch of people think the spirits from the cemetery just kind of… wander. ⛏ Why Tonopah is so haunted Tonopah blew up fast because of silver, and whenever a town grows that fast you get accidents, fires, sickness, fights, and people far from home who never made it back. That’s why so many Nevada ghost stories cluster right here — Mizpah Hotel, the mines, and this cemetery all trade stories of footsteps, voices, and apparitions. 👍 If you like real locations, real history, and unexplained stuff that shows up ONLY in the edit, hit like and drop a comment telling me what YOU think that sound was. 📝 Question for the comments: If we didn’t hear it when we were there… but it’s clearly in the camera audio… does that count as an EVP? #Tonopah #TonopahCemetery #HauntedNevada #ClownMotel #GhostTown #Paranormal #TheMadNomadder Please like and subscribe to the following for more! Email: madnomadder@gmail.com Facebook: / madnomadder Twitter: @MadNomadder Instagram: / mad_nomadder See where we've been https://www.scribblemaps.com/maps/vie... Thanks! Look forward to hearing from you. Leave your comments down below.