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  1. The Green Man, Charlie No-Face. Raymond Theodore Robinson (October 29, 1910 – June 11, 1985) was a disfigured American man whose years of nighttime walks made him into a figure of urban legend in western Pennsylvania. Robinson was so severely injured in a childhood electrical accident that he could not go out in public without fear of causing ...

  2. Oct 20, 2017 · Personal photo Ray Robinson, also known as “Charlie No-Face.”. The legend of The Green Man states that he glows green as a result of being struck by lightning or being shocked in some kind of industrial accident. He also haunts South Park, the North Hills, or the country lanes around Washington, Pennsylvania. “The legend goes that he ...

    • Gabe Paoletti
  3. Raymond Theodore Robinson: The Green Man’s Early Life Before he became a local legend, the Green Man was a young boy named Raymond Theodore Robinson. Like most kids his age, Raymond spent a lot of his time outside exploring the town in which he lived. He had lost his father at the young age of 7, just a year before his own accident.

  4. Mar 17, 2021 · The Green Man, he said, grew out of the Ray Robinson legend. Green Man stories always involve a man who was electrocuted or injured in some type of industrial accident. He is called the Green Man ...

    • Bob Bauder
  5. 29 October 1910 - 11 June 1985. Raymond Theodore Robinson, also known as The Green Man or Charlie No-Face, was a real person who became a figure of urban legend in western Pennsylvania due to his severe disfigurement from an electrical accident at the age of eight and he was often bullied and mistreated during his life and was renowned for his ...

  6. Oct 28, 2017 · This story is true. In early August 1919, 8-year-old Ray Robinson was walking with his sister and a few friends in New Castle, Pennsylvania, when they noticed a bird's nest perched atop a tree ...

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  8. Jan 21, 2013 · Raymond Robinson was born on October 29, 1910, in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. On June 18, 1919, when he was eight years old, Raymond was heading to a local swimming hole with some friends when he stopped to climb up the Morado Bridge, which spans Wallace Run outside of Beaver Falls, to see if a bird’s nest located high on a girder contained any birds or eggs.

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