On a lonely stretch of road in western New York, a name has survived in whispers for generations: the Pigman of Angola.
Holland Road, near Angola, New York, has long been tied to one of the region's darker legends. Some tell of a strange figure glimpsed in the trees. Others speak of a masked recluse, a butcher, a man changed by violence, or something that appears near the road after nightfall. Like many enduring American legends, the story has shifted over time, gathering new details while refusing to disappear.
But beneath the folklore lies a place with a real and tragic past.
In December 1867, the Angola Horror became one of the most devastating railway disasters of its age, leaving a scar on the community and drawing national attention. Over time, documented history and roadside legend began to share the same haunted landscape: railway lines, wooded roads, bridges, creek beds, and the unease that settles over places where tragedy has never entirely faded.
The Pigman of Angola explores the legend with a careful nonfiction approach, separating recorded history from later folklore while examining why the story continues to disturb those who hear it. This is not a sensational monster tale, but a study of a local legend rooted in fear, memory, place, and the strange power of stories passed from one generation to the next.
From the Angola Horror to Holland Road, from rural isolation to teenage dares and whispered warnings, this book follows the Pigman legend through its historical background, its many versions, and its lasting place in Western New York folklore.
Dark, atmospheric, and grounded in real-world context, The Pigman of Angola is a serious investigation into one of America's lesser-known roadside legends - and the haunted history that helped give it life.