Category: Urban Legend

  • The Secret Speakeasy Subways

    The Secret Speakeasy Subways theory was the rumor that beneath New York City there existed a parallel underground rail system, or at least a hidden network of special-use tracks and tunnels, reserved for bootleg transport, VIP movement, and clandestine visits by powerful gangsters and politicians during Prohibition. In its most dramatic form, the story claimed that Al Capone and senior political figures could travel underground between protected locations without using the public subway. The theory drew power from the city’s real subterranean complexity: abandoned lines, service tunnels, freight tracks, old pneumatic-transit remnants, and concealed rail connections such as the later-famous Waldorf-Astoria platform. These real underground spaces gave the rumor enough physical plausibility to endure as a New York Prohibition legend.

  • The Great Los Angeles "Lizard People" Tunnels

    The Great Los Angeles "Lizard People" Tunnels theory held that an ancient reptilian or lizard-symbol civilization had constructed a vast subterranean city beneath downtown Los Angeles, complete with catacombs, treasure chambers, and secret passages. The best-known modern version entered wide circulation in January 1934, when mining engineer G. Warren Shufelt claimed that underground structures beneath Fort Moore Hill and central Los Angeles could be detected with a specialized "radio X-ray" device. In the story’s strongest form, the tunnels belonged to a prehistoric “golden city” inhabited by hidden lizard people or a lizard-venerating race that retreated underground after catastrophe. The theory became one of Los Angeles’s most durable underground-city legends and a precursor to later reptilian-subterranean narratives.