What do World War I, anti-immigrant hysteria, and a vampire have in common? As strange as it sounds, they all converge in a forgotten cemetery in Park Hills, Missouri.
Tucked away beneath layers of dead leaves and tangled brush, Gibson Cemetery barely looks like a cemetery anymore. Most of the headstones have been broken or scattered, the names worn away by time and neglect. If you didn’t know better, you might not even realize you were standing among the dead.
And yet, there’s a story buried here—one that involves an accused vampire, an iron-barred grave, and a town gripped by fear.
A Cemetery Lost to Time
Gibson Cemetery dates back to the 1820s when the Gibson family first settled in the area. Originally a family burial ground, it eventually expanded to include others from nearby mining towns like Flat River, Rivermines, and Elvins. No one knows exactly how many people are buried here, but most of the graves date from the early 1900s—right around the time this part of Missouri became known as the Lead Belt.
Mining was the lifeblood of these small towns, and the industry drew a flood of immigrant workers, many from Hungary. These men took on the most grueling and dangerous jobs, often working as shovelers deep in the mines. Locals referred to them—derogatorily—as “hunkies,” and they were paid a measly thirty cents an hour for backbreaking labor.
Their presence in the Lead Belt wasn’t exactly welcomed.
The Lead Belt Riot of 1917: Fear Turns to Violence
By 1917, tensions between immigrant miners and local laborers had reached a boiling point. World War I had stoked a wave of xenophobia, and Hungarian miners—many of whom were perceived as foreign threats—became easy scapegoats.
Then came the riot.
On July 14, 1917, a mob of American miners, waving American flags, stormed the homes and boarding houses of Hungarian workers. They looted, beat, and chased them out of town.1Macon Chronicle-Herald – Fri, Jul 20, 1917 | Pg 1 Newspapers at the time described the event bluntly:
“Flat River Miners Eject Foreigners.”
But not all of those forced to flee were foreigners. Many were naturalized American citizens, legally entitled to live and work in the Lead Belt. In their desperate escape, some left behind everything—homes, businesses, even their wives and children. The violence was so extreme that Hungarian-American organizations called for a congressional investigation, demanding answers from Washington about how such an event could happen on U.S. soil.
The 1917 riot wasn’t an isolated event—it was the violent climax of years of tension. As early as 1913, Hungarian, Bohemian, and Italian miners were being targeted for their union activities. The situation turned deadly when mining company guards opened fire on striking workers, injuring two and escalating the conflict into a near-militarized standoff.
In response, 500 miners blockaded the mines, stopping and searching vehicles to prevent strikebreakers from getting through. What happened in the Lead Belt was part of a broader pattern of anti-immigrant violence across the country, but it left a lasting mark on the people—and the folklore—of Missouri. By 1917, these tensions had already boiled over once before. Just four years earlier, the Lead Belt saw gunfire, barricades, and a full-scale labor war.
The same fears that fueled those clashes—fears of foreign workers taking jobs and gaining power—boiled over into violence. Rioters didn’t stop at homes—they ransacked Hungarian-owned businesses, looting and destroying shops as part of their campaign to drive foreigners out of the region. By the time it was over, over 700 Hungarian miners had been herded onto trains, exiled from the very town they helped build. With violence spiraling out of control, state militia forces were deployed to the Lead Belt, tasked with restoring order. Armed soldiers patrolled the mining towns, ensuring the mass expulsion of foreign workers remained permanent.
Women weren’t just bystanders in these clashes—they fought, too. In one 1913 incident, a female striker nearly attacked a company lawyer with a rock, a visceral reminder that these weren’t just labor disputes; they were full-scale community struggles.
The High Cost of Striking
The strikes weren’t just violent—they were financially devastating. By 1913, the Lead Belt strike was costing over $100,000 a day in lost wages and damages. Some merchants even refused to extend credit to striking miners, effectively starving them out to force them back to work. Desperation, distrust, and fear of outsiders — the perfect storm for a legend to be born.
The Vampire of Elvins
Between 1910 and 1920, an unsettling number of children in the area died. In an era before vaccines and antibiotics, disease took many young lives, and in 1917, a diphtheria outbreak devastated the region. But medical explanations didn’t always satisfy a grieving community looking for someone—or something—to blame.
Soon, a rumor began to spread.
A Hungarian miner living in Elvins was accused of being a vampire. Locals whispered that he lured children to his home… and ate them. Depending on who told the story, the man was also said to be an albino, his skin deathly pale, his hair bone-white, and his eyes red as blood.2St. Louis Post-Dispatch – 14 Jul 1917, Sat | Pg 1
When he died, the townspeople refused to let him be buried among their dead—especially not near the children’s graves. Instead, his body was placed at the far edge of Gibson Cemetery, enclosed by a wrought iron fence lined with crosses. The belief? Even in death, the barrier would keep him from rising from the grave.3The Springfield News-Leader |15 Jul 1917|Pg 2
Unlike many urban legends, this one had a physical marker. The wrought iron fence was real. The crosses, placed to prevent his return, were real. And according to local records, his grave was surrounded by the small headstones of children—further fueling the belief that he had preyed upon them in life.4The Springfield News-Leader |15 Jul 1917|Pg 2
And from there, the legend of the Vampire of Gibson Cemetery was born.
Folklore, Fear, and the Power of Stories
Was there really a vampire buried in Gibson Cemetery? Of course not. The accused man was just another immigrant caught in the crossfire of prejudice and paranoia.
And the dead children? They died of disease, not supernatural horror.
But history has a way of shaping legends. In 1917—the same year the Lead Belt Riot erupted—the Washington Times ran a full serialization of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. In a town already primed with anti-immigrant fears and real-life violence, it’s not hard to imagine how the folklore took hold.
A foreigner. A pale-skinned outsider. A town full of frightened people looking for someone to blame.
A vampire was the perfect monster.
Gibson Cemetery Today
Today, Gibson Cemetery has been swallowed by time, its iron fences rusted and its gravestones shattered. No one knows exactly where the so-called vampire was buried. Maybe he’s still out there, hidden beneath the overgrowth, his grave forgotten.
Or maybe he was never there at all—just a name lost to history, twisted into a monster by fear.
Either way, the legend remains. And in a place like this, some stories never stay buried.
4 comments
What a great post. Thank you to whomever it was who send in the request for it.I have empathy both for the possibly-albino man who was ostracized and for all of the families who lost children without knowing why they died. Life was so hard back then.
Glad you liked it!