Cookies deactivated. To use all functions of this page, please activate cookies in your browser. Login Register. Home Encyclopedia Midgetville Midgetville. Additional recommended knowledge. Retrieved on Or is it just a tall tale?
Topics A-Z. All topics. To top. About bionity. Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6. Your browser does not support JavaScript. To use all the functions on Chemie. DE please activate JavaScript. Then we were coming to the end of the road and we met this midget named George. We also have pictures of him. He gave us his phone number! One of my good friends told me about this place where midgets lived. She swore one night she had been driving through the place when she saw a midget out chopping wood.
This was around midnight! She got spooked by that, so I could never convince her to take me there. We were bugging out. We had heard the stories about Midgetville, but never believed them. Me and my friends were going nuts. None of us knew what to do. We turned down the road, but no midget — all we saw was woods. We went up and down this small stretch for about 25 minutes and saw no trace of the midget. We never found any houses or small stop signs but ever since then we all now believe in Midgetville.
My name is Jarrett and me and my boys went to Midgetville twice and did not see one damn midget. My friends and I are 16 and 17 years old. Recently some of my friends have gotten their licenses so we decided to go to Midgetville.
I have an older brother who has gone a few times and said it was pretty cool. We heard the stories of people getting shot at and cars being destroyed by bricks, so we parked under the route 80 overpass and decided to walk in. N ow available through our Web Site and Amazon Store.
We went up to a pick up truck to ask for directions. In the truck was a midget driver and a midget kid in the passenger seat. She would not give us directions. We then turned around and another car came up to us. This car was loaded with six midgets. We asked them for directions and the driver gave them to us but he looked really mad that we were there. Midgetville is fun, we did see the little houses and doors and everything that goes with it, but when they saw us they looked really pissed.
I was driving by and I heard bangs as I saw a few dwarves and thought they were throwing cans at my car. When I got out to check the damage, it was much more than I had expected. I went to the police and asked them about this. The little people apparently have the right to shoot at you from the waist down.
I think that one day we took a class trip to Midgetville. It was somewhere in Northern NJ. The houses were very very tiny, yet the stop signs were normal. We were going to see a play, Romeo and Juliet, and it was in an old Victorian castle — a very tiny castle. The people who put the play on were normal-sized however. Everyone on the bus was cracking jokes and saying how they wanted to ring the doorbells of the houses.
The houses were set back like almost in the woods. There was not one normal-sized house among them. A few of the houses looked abandoned, but the rest were in good shape. There were no people in the streets or driving. It looked kind of spooky. The buses had a hard time getting through the tiny streets. Located down a narrow dirt road leading through a pine forest, the Jefferson site seems like just the right setting for the enchanted land of Midgetville.
The group of houses that we found there, about eight in all, were indeed quite small, much smaller in fact than the dwellings we had seen in any of the other so-called Midgetvilles we had visited. A few of the dwellings were no larger than the prefabricated back yard sheds that you find at Home Depot. Warning sign at the entrance to 'Midgetville' in Totowa, shown here in Homes in the area, long as roadside attraction to countless carloads of teens, will be torn down after they were damaged during Hurricane Irene.
TOTOWA - Demolition crews are expected to begin tearing down homes ravaged by Hurricane Irene in a borough neighborhood known locally as "Midgetville," which has long been a roadside attraction to area teens. The neighborhood was dubbed Midgetville because of its scaled-down homes that, according to urban legend, were built as quarters for Alfred Ringling and his diminutive circus performers, according to the publishers of Weird NJ.
The small, isolated neighborhood consists of tiny cottages that were once vacation homes. The area is flood-prone, sitting along the banks of the Passaic River, and the homes were damaged severely during Hurricane Irene in The lure of Midgetville has drawn countless carloads of teens to the neighborhood over the decades, often leading to encounters with residents who grew tired of being known as a sideshow attraction.
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