Local ghost stories give DSC students creeps
Rachel Tanner | Dixie Sun News Editor
Urban legends, ghosts and haunted graveyards might be for the superstitious,
but even the non-believers are bound to be curious when it comes to haunted
places close to home.
Urban legends, ghosts and haunted graveyards might be for the superstitious,
but even the non-believers are bound to be curious when it comes to haunted
places close to home.
In and around the St. George area, there are a variety of so-called haunted
places, from a building right on campus to a field where some of Utah’s
most gruesome history took place.
The Val A. Browning library, located nearly in the center of campus, is said
to have a friendly ghost who visits at night.
Bonnie Percival, a librarian at the library, said she has heard talk about a
“nice little lady” with a long sleeved, high collared white shirt
and black skirt who sits at the reference desk sometimes late at night.
“I’ve heard that long after the library closes at night [a man]
hears noises and sees her sitting up there at reference very quietly while he
is working on the computers,” Percival said.
Another haunted campus located about 45 minutes north of St. George, Southern
Utah University, is said to have its own ghosts.
The building on campus known as Old Main has quite a bit of history behind it.
A lot of different stories have been told about this building, and most of them
all lead to creepy occurrences.
According to www.prairieghosts.com, a variety of different happenings have occurred
inside and in front of this old building. Piano music playing, lights turning
on and off, and elevators mysteriously breaking down are just some of the occurrences
that students claim to have seen happen over the years in the building.
The construction of the building, which happened in 1897, also brought some
eerie stories. The sandstone and bricks used to lay the foundation of the building
are said to be blood red because of a number of deaths that occurred on campus
years ago, including a story about the school custodian getting into a fight
with his wife, murdering her and dragging her down the stairs and across the
bricks in front of Old Main, staining them red.
Travis Bentley, a junior psychology major from St. George who is currently attending
SUU, said although he has never been to the campus late at night to see if these
old legends are true, one of his friends swears he saw someone in the third
floor window.
“My friend went one night with a group of people and stood outside the
building to see if anything would happen, and just when they were about to leave
he said they all saw something kind of whitish go past one of the windows,”
Bentley said. “They were probably all just seeing things, but who knows?”
Another local eerie place to visit is the Silver Reef cemetery, located near
Leeds north of St. George. According to www.myufo.com, the old Catholic cemetery
is haunted by a little girl who follows people out of the cemetery. There have
also been reports of people hearing footsteps and voices of children asking
to be taken home, and feeling as if they are being watched while they are there.
A different location not thought to be scary, but instead is thought of for
recreation and summer fun is Lake Powell. Before it was dammed, this man-made
lake was an ancient riverbed canyon with prehistoric Native American figures
etched into the rocks. It was a sacred area for many different tribes and reportedly
many people had died and been buried there, according to www.utahghost.org.
Because of this, today it is haunted by those ancient Native Americans. It is
said that flute music can be heard playing late at night, as well as laughing
and crying.
Last, but not least, is the story of the Mountain Meadows Massacre. The site
of the massacre, located north of St. George on Highway 18 near Enterprise,
is supposedly haunted.
This historic yet horrible massacre happened in April 1857. More than 120 men,
women and children on their way to California from Arkansas were murdered by
a band of Mormon militia in the field where the monument now stands. No one
to this day knows the reasons behind the slaughter, but many have reported that
they’ve heard voices crying out to them when they approach the creek below
the monument, according to www.carpenoctem .com/tv/haunt/ut/.