The Forest That Eats People: Inside the Bennington Triangle’s Strange Vanishings A peaceful Vermont forest where five people walked in and never came back. The Bennington Triangle looks like any peaceful Vermont forest—green trails, quiet trees, gentle light—but its history carries a strange heaviness. Between 1945 and 1950, five people entered these woods and never came back. No bodies, no evidence, not even a scrap of clothing. It began with 74-year-old guide Middie Rivers. He walked ahead of a hunting group on a familiar trail, rounded a bend, and simply vanished. Search teams covered the entire area, finding nothing. A year later, 18-year-old Paula Welden went for a walk on the Long Trail wearing a red coat witnesses easily remembered. Somewhere along the path she disappeared, triggering Vermont’s largest search operation—but the forest stayed silent. Things grew stranger in 1948 when veteran James Tedford vanished from a moving bus. Passengers saw him during the ride, but when the bus reached Bennington, his seat held only his belongings. Then came the case of eight-year-old Paul Jepson, whose scent trail ended abruptly on a hillside, and experienced hiker Frieda Langer, who left to change clothes and never returned. Her body surfaced months later in an area previously combed by search teams, with no clear cause of death. Five unexplained vanishings in five years—different ages, different situations, no common thread. And then, just as suddenly, it all stopped. Theories range from hidden terrain and wildlife to human foul play or something more uncanny. None explain everything. Today the forest stands calm again. Hikers pass through unaware, while those who know the stories feel a shift in the air. The Bennington Triangle remains a quiet reminder that even in a mapped world, some places hold on to their mysteries. #benningtontriangle#unsolved#forestmysteries#truecrime#missingpersons https://vocal.media/criminal/the-digital-ghost-of-tokyo-tracking-the