The Vampire's Tree | Panteón de Belén, Guadalajara Mexico

The Vampire's Tree | Panteón de Belén, Guadalajara Mexico

30:03 Oct 31, 2025
About this episode
Join host Kristin as The Grim opens the gate on All Hallows' Eve, crossing into Panteón de Belén — Guadalajara's most haunted cemetery, where Gothic arches, marble crypts, and centuries of legend wait beneath the Mexican sun.Originally built as part of the Hospital of Belén, a charitable sanctuary established by royal decree in 1751, the grounds were transformed into a burial site in 1848 when cholera swept through Guadalajara and the dead outnumbered the living. Architect Manuel Gómez Ibarra — the same visionary behind Guadalajara's cathedral — designed the cemetery in two realms: one for the wealthy, one for the common soul. Among its notable residents is José Cuervo, founder of the world-famous tequila brand, whose family holds a plot within its walls. But the cemetery's most enduring legacy belongs not to the famous, but to the forgotten — young women buried without surnames, their names erased to protect the reputations of the men who wronged them.The legends of Panteón de Belén are as layered as its history. A vampire stalked 19th-century Guadalajara, draining animals and stealing newborns until locals hunted it down and buried it beneath a concrete slab — from which a tree now grows, its bark said to bleed dark sap when cut. Victoriana Hurtado, a woman with catalepsy, was buried alive by her own sons before they could inherit her fortune, her hand breaking through the earth and turning to stone. A young boy named Nachito, terrified of the dark in life, had his coffin rise from the ground ten nights in a row until his parents built him a tomb above ground — where visitors still leave toys and candy today. Star-crossed lovers José and Andrea, forbidden from marrying in life, were buried beneath interwoven stone crosses, their union finally sealed in death. A pirate's hidden treasure, a dare gone mad, a night watchman who never existed, and a phantom carriage that stops at the cemetery gates but is never seen — the stories here never end.During Día de los Muertos, Panteón de Belén transforms entirely. Candlelight dances across gravestones, a monumental altar built by local students holds nearly 1,500 candles, and guided tours bring its restless spirits to life. It is a place where history, legend, and memory are inseparable — where the living and the dead share the same flickering light.Open only by guided tour, with night photography forbidden, Panteón de Belén remains one of Mexico's most significant heritage sites and most haunted locations. Some say the photography ban protects its restless souls. Others whisper it keeps the vampire from rising once more.Support the showSupport The Grim by buying a cup of our next Grave Grind!https://buymeacoffee.com/kristinlopesFind All of The Grim's Social Links At:https://www.the-grim.com/socialmedia
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