Just south of Mexico City, you’ll find la Isla de las Muñecas, a haunted island where countless decaying dolls hang in the trees.

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1 of 28Some visitors claim they can hear the dolls whispering in the trees.Flickr 2 of 28The island’s longtime caretaker Don Julián Santana Barrera began hanging dolls around the island in the 1950s.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 28Barrera would pick dolls out of the trash or collect those entangled in the canal’s lilies, and hang them without cleaning or fixing them.Isla de las Muñecas 4 of 28The Island of the Dolls is accessible from one of the Xochimilco channels that leads to it. Used as a chinampa, or arable land in Mexican culture, the island was once used for farming.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 28There are potentially thousands of dolls on the island, though no one knows the actual number. Wikimedia Commons 6 of 28Three dolls adorn the branches of a tree on Isla de las Muñecas. As the headless doll and its dirt-covered neighbor show, they’re all in varying stages of decay.Wikimedia Commons 7 of 28The oldest out of all the dolls on the island, which is tucked away about 11 miles from Mexico City’s center.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 28For $75, visitors can go on a four-hour round-trip that includes a trip to the island and local hotspots.Facebook 9 of 28Professional photographer Cindy Vasko called the island “the creepiest place I’ve ever visited.“YouTube 10 of 28Locals have insisted the dolls come alive at night — whispering to each other and opening their eyes.Flickr 11 of 28The Island of the Dolls has a gift shop and makeshift museum showcasing newspaper clippings about Barrera.Isla de las Muñecas 12 of 28A beautiful patch of land by day, the Island of the Dolls purportedly haunted Barrera until he died.Isla de las Muñecas 13 of 28Barrera was a Mexican family man abandoned his wife and kids in the 1950s — to live like a hermit on the uninhabited island he would later cover with dolls. Isla de las Muñecas 14 of 28As legend has it, Barrera found a dead girl and her doll floating in the canals. To appease her spirit, he hung up her doll — the first doll of countless others.Isla de las Muñecas 15 of 28Another doll-saturated area of trees on the Island of the Dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 16 of 28Continuous isolation and ominous sights like these, particularly by moonlight, may have made Barrera an unreliable witness.Flickr 17 of 28A rare mannequin amidst the ubiquitous dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 18 of 28Barrera’s eerie death in 2001 led some skeptics to reconsider the stories about the supposedly haunted island. He was found drowned in the same spot where he claimed to have found the young girl whose doll spurred his creepy collection.Isla de las Muñecas 19 of 28As if decapitated dolls hanging from the trees weren’t spooky enough, this one is covered in simulated blood.Flickr 20 of 28The Island of the Doll’s inanimate inhabitants vary in all shapes, sizes, and number of limbs.Flickr 21 of 28Barrera maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would adorn with headdresses or sunglasses in his spare time.Flickr 22 of 28Dolls cling to the island’s shack, as if they were protecting its contents. Flickr 23 of 28This doll should feel lucky she’s only missing one limb, as many of her peers lost much more. Flickr 24 of 28A 1987 eco-tourist trip initially brought the island’s strange decorations into the public eye.Flickr 25 of 28Barrera would show curious visitors around the island for a small fee.Flickr 26 of 28While the dolls themselves are certainly an eerie sight to behold, the facts surrounding Barrera’s death are far more ominous.Flickr 27 of 28According to local legends, Barrera’s spirit remains on the island among the many dolls he collected.Flickr 28 of 28Like this gallery?Share it:

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27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams View Gallery

Just a few miles south from the center of Mexico City lies La Isla de las Muñecas, the Island of the Dolls. The island is filled with hundreds — possibly thousands — of hanging, decomposing, and decapitated dolls.

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25 Paintings By Serial Killer John Wayne Gacy That Will Haunt Your Dreams

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Haunting Photos Of Nagoro, The Japanese Village Where The Dead Are Replaced With Life-Size Dolls

1 of 28Some visitors claim they can hear the dolls whispering in the trees.Flickr 2 of 28The island’s longtime caretaker Don Julián Santana Barrera began hanging dolls around the island in the 1950s.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 28Barrera would pick dolls out of the trash or collect those entangled in the canal’s lilies, and hang them without cleaning or fixing them.Isla de las Muñecas 4 of 28The Island of the Dolls is accessible from one of the Xochimilco channels that leads to it. Used as a chinampa, or arable land in Mexican culture, the island was once used for farming.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 28There are potentially thousands of dolls on the island, though no one knows the actual number. Wikimedia Commons 6 of 28Three dolls adorn the branches of a tree on Isla de las Muñecas. As the headless doll and its dirt-covered neighbor show, they’re all in varying stages of decay.Wikimedia Commons 7 of 28The oldest out of all the dolls on the island, which is tucked away about 11 miles from Mexico City’s center.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 28For $75, visitors can go on a four-hour round-trip that includes a trip to the island and local hotspots.Facebook 9 of 28Professional photographer Cindy Vasko called the island “the creepiest place I’ve ever visited.“YouTube 10 of 28Locals have insisted the dolls come alive at night — whispering to each other and opening their eyes.Flickr 11 of 28The Island of the Dolls has a gift shop and makeshift museum showcasing newspaper clippings about Barrera.Isla de las Muñecas 12 of 28A beautiful patch of land by day, the Island of the Dolls purportedly haunted Barrera until he died.Isla de las Muñecas 13 of 28Barrera was a Mexican family man abandoned his wife and kids in the 1950s — to live like a hermit on the uninhabited island he would later cover with dolls. Isla de las Muñecas 14 of 28As legend has it, Barrera found a dead girl and her doll floating in the canals. To appease her spirit, he hung up her doll — the first doll of countless others.Isla de las Muñecas 15 of 28Another doll-saturated area of trees on the Island of the Dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 16 of 28Continuous isolation and ominous sights like these, particularly by moonlight, may have made Barrera an unreliable witness.Flickr 17 of 28A rare mannequin amidst the ubiquitous dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 18 of 28Barrera’s eerie death in 2001 led some skeptics to reconsider the stories about the supposedly haunted island. He was found drowned in the same spot where he claimed to have found the young girl whose doll spurred his creepy collection.Isla de las Muñecas 19 of 28As if decapitated dolls hanging from the trees weren’t spooky enough, this one is covered in simulated blood.Flickr 20 of 28The Island of the Doll’s inanimate inhabitants vary in all shapes, sizes, and number of limbs.Flickr 21 of 28Barrera maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would adorn with headdresses or sunglasses in his spare time.Flickr 22 of 28Dolls cling to the island’s shack, as if they were protecting its contents. Flickr 23 of 28This doll should feel lucky she’s only missing one limb, as many of her peers lost much more. Flickr 24 of 28A 1987 eco-tourist trip initially brought the island’s strange decorations into the public eye.Flickr 25 of 28Barrera would show curious visitors around the island for a small fee.Flickr 26 of 28While the dolls themselves are certainly an eerie sight to behold, the facts surrounding Barrera’s death are far more ominous.Flickr 27 of 28According to local legends, Barrera’s spirit remains on the island among the many dolls he collected.Flickr 28 of 28Like this gallery?Share it:

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25 Paintings By Serial Killer John Wayne Gacy That Will Haunt Your Dreams

Vintage Photos Of Creepy Dolls And The Factories That Made Them

Haunting Photos Of Nagoro, The Japanese Village Where The Dead Are Replaced With Life-Size Dolls

1 of 28Some visitors claim they can hear the dolls whispering in the trees.Flickr 2 of 28The island’s longtime caretaker Don Julián Santana Barrera began hanging dolls around the island in the 1950s.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 28Barrera would pick dolls out of the trash or collect those entangled in the canal’s lilies, and hang them without cleaning or fixing them.Isla de las Muñecas 4 of 28The Island of the Dolls is accessible from one of the Xochimilco channels that leads to it. Used as a chinampa, or arable land in Mexican culture, the island was once used for farming.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 28There are potentially thousands of dolls on the island, though no one knows the actual number. Wikimedia Commons 6 of 28Three dolls adorn the branches of a tree on Isla de las Muñecas. As the headless doll and its dirt-covered neighbor show, they’re all in varying stages of decay.Wikimedia Commons 7 of 28The oldest out of all the dolls on the island, which is tucked away about 11 miles from Mexico City’s center.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 28For $75, visitors can go on a four-hour round-trip that includes a trip to the island and local hotspots.Facebook 9 of 28Professional photographer Cindy Vasko called the island “the creepiest place I’ve ever visited.“YouTube 10 of 28Locals have insisted the dolls come alive at night — whispering to each other and opening their eyes.Flickr 11 of 28The Island of the Dolls has a gift shop and makeshift museum showcasing newspaper clippings about Barrera.Isla de las Muñecas 12 of 28A beautiful patch of land by day, the Island of the Dolls purportedly haunted Barrera until he died.Isla de las Muñecas 13 of 28Barrera was a Mexican family man abandoned his wife and kids in the 1950s — to live like a hermit on the uninhabited island he would later cover with dolls. Isla de las Muñecas 14 of 28As legend has it, Barrera found a dead girl and her doll floating in the canals. To appease her spirit, he hung up her doll — the first doll of countless others.Isla de las Muñecas 15 of 28Another doll-saturated area of trees on the Island of the Dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 16 of 28Continuous isolation and ominous sights like these, particularly by moonlight, may have made Barrera an unreliable witness.Flickr 17 of 28A rare mannequin amidst the ubiquitous dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 18 of 28Barrera’s eerie death in 2001 led some skeptics to reconsider the stories about the supposedly haunted island. He was found drowned in the same spot where he claimed to have found the young girl whose doll spurred his creepy collection.Isla de las Muñecas 19 of 28As if decapitated dolls hanging from the trees weren’t spooky enough, this one is covered in simulated blood.Flickr 20 of 28The Island of the Doll’s inanimate inhabitants vary in all shapes, sizes, and number of limbs.Flickr 21 of 28Barrera maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would adorn with headdresses or sunglasses in his spare time.Flickr 22 of 28Dolls cling to the island’s shack, as if they were protecting its contents. Flickr 23 of 28This doll should feel lucky she’s only missing one limb, as many of her peers lost much more. Flickr 24 of 28A 1987 eco-tourist trip initially brought the island’s strange decorations into the public eye.Flickr 25 of 28Barrera would show curious visitors around the island for a small fee.Flickr 26 of 28While the dolls themselves are certainly an eerie sight to behold, the facts surrounding Barrera’s death are far more ominous.Flickr 27 of 28According to local legends, Barrera’s spirit remains on the island among the many dolls he collected.Flickr 28 of 28Like this gallery?Share it:

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25 Paintings By Serial Killer John Wayne Gacy That Will Haunt Your Dreams

Vintage Photos Of Creepy Dolls And The Factories That Made Them

Haunting Photos Of Nagoro, The Japanese Village Where The Dead Are Replaced With Life-Size Dolls

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1 of 28Some visitors claim they can hear the dolls whispering in the trees.Flickr 2 of 28The island’s longtime caretaker Don Julián Santana Barrera began hanging dolls around the island in the 1950s.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 28Barrera would pick dolls out of the trash or collect those entangled in the canal’s lilies, and hang them without cleaning or fixing them.Isla de las Muñecas 4 of 28The Island of the Dolls is accessible from one of the Xochimilco channels that leads to it. Used as a chinampa, or arable land in Mexican culture, the island was once used for farming.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 28There are potentially thousands of dolls on the island, though no one knows the actual number. Wikimedia Commons 6 of 28Three dolls adorn the branches of a tree on Isla de las Muñecas. As the headless doll and its dirt-covered neighbor show, they’re all in varying stages of decay.Wikimedia Commons 7 of 28The oldest out of all the dolls on the island, which is tucked away about 11 miles from Mexico City’s center.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 28For $75, visitors can go on a four-hour round-trip that includes a trip to the island and local hotspots.Facebook 9 of 28Professional photographer Cindy Vasko called the island “the creepiest place I’ve ever visited.“YouTube 10 of 28Locals have insisted the dolls come alive at night — whispering to each other and opening their eyes.Flickr 11 of 28The Island of the Dolls has a gift shop and makeshift museum showcasing newspaper clippings about Barrera.Isla de las Muñecas 12 of 28A beautiful patch of land by day, the Island of the Dolls purportedly haunted Barrera until he died.Isla de las Muñecas 13 of 28Barrera was a Mexican family man abandoned his wife and kids in the 1950s — to live like a hermit on the uninhabited island he would later cover with dolls. Isla de las Muñecas 14 of 28As legend has it, Barrera found a dead girl and her doll floating in the canals. To appease her spirit, he hung up her doll — the first doll of countless others.Isla de las Muñecas 15 of 28Another doll-saturated area of trees on the Island of the Dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 16 of 28Continuous isolation and ominous sights like these, particularly by moonlight, may have made Barrera an unreliable witness.Flickr 17 of 28A rare mannequin amidst the ubiquitous dolls.Isla de las Muñecas 18 of 28Barrera’s eerie death in 2001 led some skeptics to reconsider the stories about the supposedly haunted island. He was found drowned in the same spot where he claimed to have found the young girl whose doll spurred his creepy collection.Isla de las Muñecas 19 of 28As if decapitated dolls hanging from the trees weren’t spooky enough, this one is covered in simulated blood.Flickr 20 of 28The Island of the Doll’s inanimate inhabitants vary in all shapes, sizes, and number of limbs.Flickr 21 of 28Barrera maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would adorn with headdresses or sunglasses in his spare time.Flickr 22 of 28Dolls cling to the island’s shack, as if they were protecting its contents. Flickr 23 of 28This doll should feel lucky she’s only missing one limb, as many of her peers lost much more. Flickr 24 of 28A 1987 eco-tourist trip initially brought the island’s strange decorations into the public eye.Flickr 25 of 28Barrera would show curious visitors around the island for a small fee.Flickr 26 of 28While the dolls themselves are certainly an eerie sight to behold, the facts surrounding Barrera’s death are far more ominous.Flickr 27 of 28According to local legends, Barrera’s spirit remains on the island among the many dolls he collected.Flickr 28 of 28Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 28Some visitors claim they can hear the dolls whispering in the trees.Flickr

2 of 28The island’s longtime caretaker Don Julián Santana Barrera began hanging dolls around the island in the 1950s.Wikimedia Commons

3 of 28Barrera would pick dolls out of the trash or collect those entangled in the canal’s lilies, and hang them without cleaning or fixing them.Isla de las Muñecas

4 of 28The Island of the Dolls is accessible from one of the Xochimilco channels that leads to it. Used as a chinampa, or arable land in Mexican culture, the island was once used for farming.Wikimedia Commons

5 of 28There are potentially thousands of dolls on the island, though no one knows the actual number. Wikimedia Commons

6 of 28Three dolls adorn the branches of a tree on Isla de las Muñecas. As the headless doll and its dirt-covered neighbor show, they’re all in varying stages of decay.Wikimedia Commons

7 of 28The oldest out of all the dolls on the island, which is tucked away about 11 miles from Mexico City’s center.Wikimedia Commons

8 of 28For $75, visitors can go on a four-hour round-trip that includes a trip to the island and local hotspots.Facebook

9 of 28Professional photographer Cindy Vasko called the island “the creepiest place I’ve ever visited.“YouTube

10 of 28Locals have insisted the dolls come alive at night — whispering to each other and opening their eyes.Flickr

11 of 28The Island of the Dolls has a gift shop and makeshift museum showcasing newspaper clippings about Barrera.Isla de las Muñecas

12 of 28A beautiful patch of land by day, the Island of the Dolls purportedly haunted Barrera until he died.Isla de las Muñecas

13 of 28Barrera was a Mexican family man abandoned his wife and kids in the 1950s — to live like a hermit on the uninhabited island he would later cover with dolls. Isla de las Muñecas

14 of 28As legend has it, Barrera found a dead girl and her doll floating in the canals. To appease her spirit, he hung up her doll — the first doll of countless others.Isla de las Muñecas

15 of 28Another doll-saturated area of trees on the Island of the Dolls.Isla de las Muñecas

16 of 28Continuous isolation and ominous sights like these, particularly by moonlight, may have made Barrera an unreliable witness.Flickr

17 of 28A rare mannequin amidst the ubiquitous dolls.Isla de las Muñecas

18 of 28Barrera’s eerie death in 2001 led some skeptics to reconsider the stories about the supposedly haunted island. He was found drowned in the same spot where he claimed to have found the young girl whose doll spurred his creepy collection.Isla de las Muñecas

19 of 28As if decapitated dolls hanging from the trees weren’t spooky enough, this one is covered in simulated blood.Flickr

20 of 28The Island of the Doll’s inanimate inhabitants vary in all shapes, sizes, and number of limbs.Flickr

21 of 28Barrera maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would adorn with headdresses or sunglasses in his spare time.Flickr

22 of 28Dolls cling to the island’s shack, as if they were protecting its contents. Flickr

23 of 28This doll should feel lucky she’s only missing one limb, as many of her peers lost much more. Flickr

24 of 28A 1987 eco-tourist trip initially brought the island’s strange decorations into the public eye.Flickr

25 of 28Barrera would show curious visitors around the island for a small fee.Flickr

26 of 28While the dolls themselves are certainly an eerie sight to behold, the facts surrounding Barrera’s death are far more ominous.Flickr

27 of 28According to local legends, Barrera’s spirit remains on the island among the many dolls he collected.Flickr

28 of 28Like this gallery?Share it:

Share

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27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams View Gallery

27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams View Gallery

27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams View Gallery

27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams View Gallery

27 Photos Of Mexico’s ‘Island Of The Dolls’ That Will Haunt Your Dreams

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While the exact number of decaying dolls hasn’t been recorded, the story of how the island came to be overrun with dolls is far more intriguing. As legend has it, the first doll was hung when the island’s sole inhabitant found the corpse of a drowned girl and her doll.

Fearing vengeance from the girl’s spirit, he hung up her doll as a kind of offering. Then, worried one doll wouldn’t satisfy the spirit, he continued to collect and hang dolls for decades — until the day of his eerie death.

Today the Island of the Dolls is a popular, albeit macabre, sightseeing attraction. Tucked away some 11 miles from the heart of Mexico City, a visit to the island is just a winding riverboat ride away.

The Unsettling Legend Behind The Island Of The Dolls

In the 1950s, Don Julián Santana Barrera decided to abandon his family and live alone on the arable sliver of uninhabited land on Teshuilo Lake. The island’s new caretaker occasionally ventured to the neighboring Barrio de la Asunción to sell his vegetables and enjoy the popular pulque — an alcoholic beverage made from the fermented sap of the agave plant.

However, his ever-growing superstitions led him to start preaching the Bible around town. Eventually, the sector expelled him, and he remained on his island.

One day, Barrera came upon the dead body of a drowned girl and her doll. Superstitious and deeply religious, he grew fearful that the dead girl’s spirit haunted the island. He decided to hang her doll up on a tree to appease her potentially vengeful soul and started a habit he wouldn’t break for the rest of his life.

YouTubeJulián Santana Barrera with one of the island’s dolls.

To keep the girl’s spirit content, Barrera retrieved dolls that had washed up in the lilies of the canal and saved them from the garbage wherever he went. These discarded dolls were hanged up across the island in whatever ramshackle state he found them in.

According to some stories, Barrera was increasingly haunted by a girl whispering, “I want my doll” and footsteps in the dead of night. While it’s unknown what exactly he experienced in his hut, in the thick of the jungle miles away from civilization, one thing is terrifyingly certain.

Barrera was found dead in 2001 — drowned in the same spot he reported finding the dead girl and her doll nearly 50 years before.

How Isla De Las Muñecas Became An Macrabe Attraction

The legend of Don Julian Santana Barrera’s dolls remains fairly disputed. His relatives believe that the story was merely an evocative backdrop to give his efforts an intriguing allure. Others believe a girl did drown there — and that she haunted him up until his death.

Whether or not the frightening tales are true, the entire island still boasts dolls today in various states of decay.

As evidenced by the dirt-covered surfaces and eroding materials, Barrera never cared to clean or fix the dolls. He welcomed them as they were and hung them up with missing eyes or torn limbs, and they’ve since endured years of weather and continuous wear-and-tear.

Al Jazeera interviews Barrera’s nephew now serving as caretaker of the Island of the Dolls.

Barrera also maintained a cabin filled with dolls that he would dress up in headdresses and sunglasses to a whole roster of other accessories. As word of the mysterious island began to spread, curious visitors would make their way to Barrera’s little kingdom, where he welcomed them with open arms.

Al Jazeera interviews Barrera’s nephew now serving as caretaker of the Island of the Dolls.

Once he realized that visitors were willing to pay a small fee for a guided tour, this bizarre site grew popular. And after Barrera himself was found dead in 2001 in the same spot he claimed to have found a dead girl 50 years earlier, it grew into the commercial hotspot it is today.

Is The Island Of The Dolls Still Around Today?

La Isla de las Muñecas is currently in the care of Anastasio Santana Velasco — Barrera’s nephew.

In the last two decades, boat tours in Mexico City have popped up to take visitors to the Island of the Dolls. Though Barrera saw his collection as an assortment of beautiful protectors, a fair amount of tourists find the island bizarre and terrifying.

The creepy atmosphere sets in during the boat ride, which is part of a four-hour round trip that costs $75. Though the excursion begins with a winding ride through lush greenery and chirping birds, the growing amount of lily pads slow the boat down as the island draws closer.

From pelicans and kingfishers to egrets and plenty of water snake species, the ride showcases the beauty at the heart of the jungle — until the island appears. For professional photographer Cindy Vasko, La Isla de las Muñecas was the “creepiest place” she ever visited.

Isla de las MuñecasEl puente de arboles, or the bridge of trees, welcoming you to the Island of the Dolls.

“At the end of the journey, the trajinera (boat) turned along a bend in the waterway, and I was struck by a surreal vision of hundreds, maybe thousands, of dolls hanging from trees on the tiny island,” she said.

Locals insist that the spirits on Mexico’s doll island come alive at night and whisper to each other. Some visitors bring their own dolls as a sign of respect and to ask for blessings.

While the dolls will always be the island’s main attraction, there’s also a small museum that features newspaper clippings and Barrera’s supposed favorite doll, Agustinita.

But although the island has become a tourist attraction, it all started because Barrera made his home alone on a scrap of isolated land. Some say that when he died, his spirit joined the others that supposedly haunt La Isla de las Muñecas.

After learning about Mexico’s strangely disturbing Island of the Dolls, take a look at the Serbian skull tower of Niš in 15 chilling images. Next, look at haunting photos of Nagoro, Japan, the village where dolls replace the dead.