For most of the year the quaint New York town of Sleepy Hollow lives up to its name.
But recently the picturesque community has become a magnet for badly behaved tourists who descend on the town eager to experience a perfect Fall getaway.
Furious locals say their charming community is being ruined by the crowds who typically descend in the run up to Halloween and don’t leave until the end of November.
The town’s historic cemetery was recently forced to issue a warning to tourists about inappropriate behavior in its graveyard after seeing ghoulish acts during funeral proceedings.
‘Visiting us this season? Please read on,’ cemetery bosses wrote in an October 16 Facebook post. ‘At all times, act as if you are attending the funeral or grave of a beloved relative or friend. Others will be doing exactly that – for real.
‘We cannot stress enough that this is an active cemetery visited daily by grieving families. Those Cadillac station wagons are not prop cars, people grieving are not actors.’
Local businesses are also over the ill-mannered city-slickers.
Kim Kaczmarek – who owns Sleepy Coffee, Too, where she employs neurodivergent individuals with a variety of disabilities – said her business has had ‘unbelievable crowds’ this October.
The Sleepy Hollow Cemetery is a popular destination for visitors whose money helps keep it open
This has led to long wait times, and well, unhappy tourists.
She’s had customers speak unkindly to her staff, others write negative reviews, and even one couple who actually screamed at her outside the store because the shop was closing.
‘It is not okay to berate us,’ the retired teacher reminded customers in an October 21 Facebook post. ‘It takes a little bit longer for us because of the make-up of our staff and what their needs are.’
Sleepy Hollow, a town of 11,500 just 32 miles from New York City, has seen a massive influx of visitors since the pandemic, a feat which has been exacerbated by TikTok videos promoting it as the go-to Fall destination.
Last year, town officials were overwhelmed when its Halloween parade attracted around 30,000 people – well above the 5,000 they had anticipated.
The town welcomed between 150,000 and 200,000 visitors this year and last, according to Village Administrator Anthony Giaccio.
Even tourists are starting to get fed up.
Jayna Sutherland, a resident of nearby Cross River, visited Sleepy Hollow in mid-October of last year and told the Daily Mail: ‘It was a horrible experience.’
But the behavior got so out of hand this year, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery had to put out a public statement condemning the discourteous actions. ‘Those Cadillac station wagons are not prop cars, people grieving are not actors,’ it said
She and her husband made the trip after she saw an ad for an event in the town on Facebook and influencers began posting about Sleepy Hollow.
She expected it to be ‘a normal arts and craft fair like the ones that I’ve been to in the past,’ and said ‘it sounded fun and like a nice day trip.’
But when she and her husband arrived, they quickly realized how unequipped the town was for the flood of tourists.
She noted there were only a few narrow roads which caused traffic bottle necks and that there was almost no parking available.
The couple had to park 20 minutes uphill from the town. After trekking to the main street, they discovered just how crowded it was.
‘I’ve never seen crowds like this before,’ Sutherland said. ‘It was shoulder-to-shoulder to the point where you didn’t have free movement.’
She also said the food trucks were ‘overburdened’ and that she and her husband had to wait an hour in the shortest line for ‘a very, very bad’ personal-sized pizza that cost around $25.
In 1996 the town changed its name from North Tarrytown to Sleepy Hollow to capitalize on its association with Washington Irving’s famous short story and promote tourism.
Sleepy Hollow, with a population of around 11,500, has been hit with between 150,000 and 200,000 visitors this year and last
The town changed its name from North Tarrytown to Sleepy Hollow in 1996 to capitalize on its association with Washington Irving’s famous short story
A 2013 to 2017 drama named after the town also drove interest.
Giaccio said last year’s visitor numbers were double number of tourists the town used to have pre-COVID-19.
Sleepy Hollow’s annual street fair was promoted across social media, which brought in so many visitors ‘to a point where it was actually more people than we could handle,’ Giaccio said.
This year the town took extra preparations, according to Giaccio.
Sleepy Hollow has coordinated with the police department, neighboring Tarrytown and Westchester County to organize traffic, and they space out events to help alleviated crowds.
The town also promoted the use of public transportation among visitors in order to reduce traffic on the narrow roads.
Those visiting from New York City can hop on Metro North’s Hudson line from Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan to Tarrytown.
The ride takes only a mere 35 minutes. From there, they can catch a shuttle into the quaint town. There are also Amtrak and bus options.
Irving’s short story, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, is an American literary classic about a specter called the Headless Horseman which the town leans into to promote tourism
‘It was much more manageable than last year,’ Giaccio said.
Visitors typically used to arrive in their droves for about two weeks in October.
Now, the town has thousands come through every week from mid-September through mid-November, even when there are no scheduled events.
Giaccio said the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, the Dutch Church, the local fire department and ambulance corps are all supported by the money they make during the tourism season.
Businesses, of course, thrive during that period as well. Some of them are carried through the year by the revenue they make around Halloween, Giaccio said.
But he also accepted that some residents ‘feel negatively impacted’ and that he ‘could definitely understand why.’
