

If you decide to get out of your car, you might see a decapitated man in the ditch searching for his head.

Other strange things that have been reported are tapping at the window and seeing a woman asking you where her baby is. You might also see a light when you look down the train tracks. Your windows will start to fog up very quickly and you can hear a train whistle in the background, getting louder and then stopping. Once you get to the railroad track you pull onto the tracks and shut off your car. About a mile after it turns gravel you come to a railroad crossing. If you go left the road at first is curvy and paved, but eventually it turns into gravel. About quarter of a mile down Wilcox Road it will fork. To find this location you start on Wilcox Road. Another man had become decapitated during the wreck but the police could never find his head. For example, a woman had been pregnant when she was killed in the wreck but when they found her body, the baby was missing from her womb. Once they started investigating the wreck, strange things were discovered. In the early 1900s, a train derailed killing most of its passengers. Upon not being understood, she becomes hysterical and runs away and jumps off the cliff. Some have even been approached by the princess, speaking in her own tongue. People have reported hearing sobbing or screams coming from the top of the cliff at Dripping Springs, and others say that if you go to the lake’s shore on a night when the moon is full, you can see her standing on the edge crying, and she has even been witnessed jumping. Dripping Springs, the falls that trickle down a ledge in the park also resemble small drops said to be the tears of the young maiden.

With a broken heart, she leapt from the cliffs overlooking the lake and as a result the lake reformed into the shape of a broken heart. The story is that a young Native American princess fell in love with a local French fur trader, but alas, that love was not returned by the trader. Charles County.Creve Coeur Park and the city of Creve Coeur are named after a French phrase "Creve Coeur," which translates to "burst heart" or "broken heart." Besides possibly being named for the lake being in the shape of a heart, there is an old legend that may bring more insight.

Hamburg, Howell, and Toonerville were all located in St.
