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In this episode of Ghostly Podcast, we travel to the salt-marsh shores of South Carolina’s Lowcountry to explore the legend of The Gray Man of Pawleys Island — one of America’s most famous (and most benevolent) ghosts.
Just a quarter mile wide and three miles long, this barrier island south of Myrtle Beach has fewer than two hundred year-round residents — yet for three centuries it has drawn presidents, generals, millionaires, and movie stars. And for more than two hundred years, a solitary figure in gray has been spotted walking its beach in the hours before a hurricane makes landfall. He doesn’t haunt. He doesn’t frighten. He warns. And those who listen almost always return to find their homes untouched — sometimes the only ones left standing for miles.
In September of 1822, a massive hurricane tore through the coast, killing around 300 people in what are now Horry and Georgetown Counties. University of South Carolina climatologist Cary Mock has described the destruction as comparable to Hurricane Hugo in 1989 — one of the deadliest natural disasters in the region’s history.
Out of that storm came a story that Pawleys Island still talks about today: a young man riding home to see his fiancée, caught in the thick pluff mud of the marsh, drowned before he could reach her. Not long after, she saw a figure on the beach — dressed in gray, the very image of her lost love. He told her to take her family and leave. She listened. Her home was one of the few that survived the storm.
The Gray Man legend was first put into print by Julian Stevenson Bolick in his 1946 book Waccamaw Plantations and expanded in his 1956 ghost story collection.
Theory 1 — The Drowned Suitor (1822): The classic version. The young man who died in the pluff mud trying to reach his fiancée before the storm. Most ghost historians consider this the original and most credible version.
Theory 2 — The Confederate Soldier: A Civil War soldier who somehow crossed back to warn his family of an approaching storm. They evacuated and survived — only to receive a telegram days later saying he had died on the battlefield weeks earlier. The timeline doesn’t line up with the 1822 first sighting, but that almost makes the legend more interesting: locals kept rewriting him into new eras.
Theory 3 — Plowden Weston: A real historical figure, born 1819, a Georgetown rice-plantation aristocrat who owned the land that is now the famous Pelican Inn on Pawleys Island. He dressed his men in gray uniforms — unusual for the time — and died young of tuberculosis before the Civil War ended. Local lore says his gray-clad spirit still walks the shore. A footnote: the co-owner of the Pelican Inn has pointed out that Weston would have been a child at the time of the 1822 sighting. But nobody said ghosts have to follow timelines.
Unlike almost every other ghost in American folklore, the Gray Man protects. Those who heed his warning consistently report returning home to find their property untouched — even when surrounding homes are destroyed.
Across every version of the legend — the drowned suitor, the Confederate soldier, Plowden Weston — the outcome is always the same: he appears before a storm, he delivers a warning, and if you listen, your home is saved. Not just your life. Your house. The thing you built. The thing that holds your memories. After 200 years of watching people he couldn’t save, he keeps coming back to try again.
Pawleys Island today looks much as it always has. The old cottages of cypress and pine still sit along the shore. No chain restaurants, no big hotels — the town meant it when it said it wanted to keep the island as it is. And every time a storm starts to build out over the Atlantic, a few people still make their way down to the beach. Not just to watch the sky. But to see if anyone’s walking along the shore in gray. Just in case.
Listen now: GhostlyPodcast.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Vote on the Evidence: Do you think the Gray Man of Pawleys Island is truly haunted? Cast your vote at GhostlyPodcast.com/polls
Follow us: Instagram | Facebook | X (Twitter)
And tell us — do you believe?
#GhostlyPodcast #GrayMan #PawleysIsland #SouthCarolinaGhosts #Lowcountry #HauntedBeach #HurricaneHistory #Paranormal #HauntedHistory #SpookyTravel
Join our Patreon for all sorts of great extra Ghostly, including early, commercial-free episodes. Join today: ghostlypodcast.com/support/
We want to hear from you with your ghost stories! Email us at [email protected]. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter at GhostlyPodcast.
Got a ghost story you’re dying to share? Now you can! Ghostly has an official phone line. Call or text us with your spooky encounters — and if you leave a voicemail, you might hear it on the show! You can also just say hi, or make your voice heard in our latest polls.
Here’s how to vote: Text the episode title. Add YES if you’re a believer, NO if you’re a skeptic. Then, give it a haunting score from 1 to 10. Your opinion matters. Let us know what you think.
Here’s that number: (312) 869-9929
Music for this episode was performed by Michael Rivers
“Pat Facts” and “Ghost Story” themes by Mondo
“Time for a Debate” theme by Gail Gallagher — gailgallaghermusic.com
Note: The Gray Man legend was first put into print by Julian Stevenson Bolick in his 1946 book Waccamaw Plantations, and expanded in his 1956 ghost story collection. The Unsolved Mysteries episode featuring Jim and Clara Moore aired October 31, 1990.
By Ghostly Paranormal Podcast4.7
185185 ratings
In this episode of Ghostly Podcast, we travel to the salt-marsh shores of South Carolina’s Lowcountry to explore the legend of The Gray Man of Pawleys Island — one of America’s most famous (and most benevolent) ghosts.
Just a quarter mile wide and three miles long, this barrier island south of Myrtle Beach has fewer than two hundred year-round residents — yet for three centuries it has drawn presidents, generals, millionaires, and movie stars. And for more than two hundred years, a solitary figure in gray has been spotted walking its beach in the hours before a hurricane makes landfall. He doesn’t haunt. He doesn’t frighten. He warns. And those who listen almost always return to find their homes untouched — sometimes the only ones left standing for miles.
In September of 1822, a massive hurricane tore through the coast, killing around 300 people in what are now Horry and Georgetown Counties. University of South Carolina climatologist Cary Mock has described the destruction as comparable to Hurricane Hugo in 1989 — one of the deadliest natural disasters in the region’s history.
Out of that storm came a story that Pawleys Island still talks about today: a young man riding home to see his fiancée, caught in the thick pluff mud of the marsh, drowned before he could reach her. Not long after, she saw a figure on the beach — dressed in gray, the very image of her lost love. He told her to take her family and leave. She listened. Her home was one of the few that survived the storm.
The Gray Man legend was first put into print by Julian Stevenson Bolick in his 1946 book Waccamaw Plantations and expanded in his 1956 ghost story collection.
Theory 1 — The Drowned Suitor (1822): The classic version. The young man who died in the pluff mud trying to reach his fiancée before the storm. Most ghost historians consider this the original and most credible version.
Theory 2 — The Confederate Soldier: A Civil War soldier who somehow crossed back to warn his family of an approaching storm. They evacuated and survived — only to receive a telegram days later saying he had died on the battlefield weeks earlier. The timeline doesn’t line up with the 1822 first sighting, but that almost makes the legend more interesting: locals kept rewriting him into new eras.
Theory 3 — Plowden Weston: A real historical figure, born 1819, a Georgetown rice-plantation aristocrat who owned the land that is now the famous Pelican Inn on Pawleys Island. He dressed his men in gray uniforms — unusual for the time — and died young of tuberculosis before the Civil War ended. Local lore says his gray-clad spirit still walks the shore. A footnote: the co-owner of the Pelican Inn has pointed out that Weston would have been a child at the time of the 1822 sighting. But nobody said ghosts have to follow timelines.
Unlike almost every other ghost in American folklore, the Gray Man protects. Those who heed his warning consistently report returning home to find their property untouched — even when surrounding homes are destroyed.
Across every version of the legend — the drowned suitor, the Confederate soldier, Plowden Weston — the outcome is always the same: he appears before a storm, he delivers a warning, and if you listen, your home is saved. Not just your life. Your house. The thing you built. The thing that holds your memories. After 200 years of watching people he couldn’t save, he keeps coming back to try again.
Pawleys Island today looks much as it always has. The old cottages of cypress and pine still sit along the shore. No chain restaurants, no big hotels — the town meant it when it said it wanted to keep the island as it is. And every time a storm starts to build out over the Atlantic, a few people still make their way down to the beach. Not just to watch the sky. But to see if anyone’s walking along the shore in gray. Just in case.
Listen now: GhostlyPodcast.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Vote on the Evidence: Do you think the Gray Man of Pawleys Island is truly haunted? Cast your vote at GhostlyPodcast.com/polls
Follow us: Instagram | Facebook | X (Twitter)
And tell us — do you believe?
#GhostlyPodcast #GrayMan #PawleysIsland #SouthCarolinaGhosts #Lowcountry #HauntedBeach #HurricaneHistory #Paranormal #HauntedHistory #SpookyTravel
Join our Patreon for all sorts of great extra Ghostly, including early, commercial-free episodes. Join today: ghostlypodcast.com/support/
We want to hear from you with your ghost stories! Email us at [email protected]. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter at GhostlyPodcast.
Got a ghost story you’re dying to share? Now you can! Ghostly has an official phone line. Call or text us with your spooky encounters — and if you leave a voicemail, you might hear it on the show! You can also just say hi, or make your voice heard in our latest polls.
Here’s how to vote: Text the episode title. Add YES if you’re a believer, NO if you’re a skeptic. Then, give it a haunting score from 1 to 10. Your opinion matters. Let us know what you think.
Here’s that number: (312) 869-9929
Music for this episode was performed by Michael Rivers
“Pat Facts” and “Ghost Story” themes by Mondo
“Time for a Debate” theme by Gail Gallagher — gailgallaghermusic.com
Note: The Gray Man legend was first put into print by Julian Stevenson Bolick in his 1946 book Waccamaw Plantations, and expanded in his 1956 ghost story collection. The Unsolved Mysteries episode featuring Jim and Clara Moore aired October 31, 1990.

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