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Cuyahoga jco, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Cuyahoga jco, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

12 Haunted National Parks

Jess

It’s officially Autumn at our national parks! Peak tourist season is over, which means the crowds have thinned, the animals are putting on their winter coats and the rangers are gearing up for cold weather. But even though the seasons change, there are some fixtures of the national parks whose routines stay exactly the same: the ghosts! Yep, there are spooky spirits all throughout America’s national park system. 

Here are six of our favorite positively paranormal parks and where to find their otherworldly occupants.  

1. Grand Canyon National Park

Erin Whittaker, U.S. National Park Service, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Located in Arizona, Grand Canyon National Park is one of the seven wonders of the natural world. Why? At 277 miles long, 18 miles wide, and one mile deep, the Grand Canyon is truly an awe-inspiring sight. But the park has much more to offer; historic sites, fantastic hikes, beautiful views…and ghosts! Here are a few you may want to keep an eye out for.

El Tovar Hotel, Grand Canyon South Rim

Legend has it that several years ago, a confused guest of the El Tovar Hotel approached the front desk.

          “Where is the holiday party?” asked the guest.
          “What holiday party?” asked the equally confused front desk clerk.
          “The employee in the hallway invited us to a big holiday ball here at the hotel!” insisted the guest. “He was all dressed up in fancy period clothes from the 1900s!” 
          “I’m sorry,” said the clerk. “There is no holiday party, nor is there a gentleman dressed in period clothes working here.”

So who was the fancy-dressed man? Well, from the guest’s description, the hotel employees are pretty sure it was none other than Fred Harvey, founder of the Harvey Company and the designer of the El Tovar! This was no isolated ghost sighting, though. Guests and employees frequently report seeing Mr. Harvey strolling the hallways and gazing at the Canyon from El Tovar’s front stairs.

By the way, I searched for Mr. Harvey the last time I visited the South Rim. Sadly, I did not meet him. But maybe you’ll have better luck!

Visit El Tovar Hotel on Shaka Guide’s Grand Canyon South Rim Tour!

The Wailing Woman of the Transept Trail, Grand Canyon North Rim

If you’re an avid hiker, you probably know that one of the unspoken rules of the trail is to acknowledge that you’re sharing the trail with many other travelers. If you’re hiking on the Transept Trail at Grand Canyon’s North Rim, one of those fellow travelers just might be a ghost!

They call her the Wailing Woman because chances are that if you should cross her path, she’s–well, wailing.

As the story goes, in the early 1920s, the Wailing Woman was a guest of the newly built Grand Canyon Lodge. One day, her husband and young son went for a hike on the Transept Trail. When they hadn’t returned after several hours, the frantic wife searched along the trail, crying out for her family. It was too late. The gentlemen had met with bad weather, slipped, and fallen to their deaths. Driven mad with grief, the Wailing Woman returned to the lodge and took her own life. Now in the afterlife, the Wailing Woman is doomed to wander the Transept Trail, desperately searching for her family.

The Cavern Spirits, Grand Canyon West

A large portion of the Grand Canyon’s West Rim falls within the boundaries of the Hualapai Indian Reservation. In 1917, a group of Hualapai woodcutters discovered the entrance to the caves which, as it turns out, are the largest dry caverns in the United States. 

They are also very, very haunted.

The thing is, no one is one hundred percent certain about who haunts the Grand Canyon Caverns! Some say that the restless spirits of the Native Americans buried here still walk among the caverns. Some people swear that they’ve seen the ghostly form of a long-dead mine worker standing by the cavern’s elevator. Still others report hearing whispers and having rocks thrown at them from out of nowhere! The employees of the Grand Canyon Caverns offer nightly lights-off ghost tours, so perhaps you’ll have a spooky experience of your own someday!

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2. Yellowstone National Park

 Ghost Trees in Yellowstone / Gregory "Slobirdr" Smith, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Established in 1872, Yellowstone has the distinction of being America’s very first national park. With 150 years of human history under its belt, I’m sure it’ll come as no surprise that Yellowstone has also hosted a ghost or two in its day. This one is our favorite.

The Headless Bride of the Old Faithful Inn

Employees of the historic Old Faithful Inn will gladly tell tales of the Headless Bride because they’re so used to seeing her that she’s practically family. She wanders the Crow’s Nest in search of vengeance–and her head. 

According to the story, in 1915 a young lady of wealthy standing fell in love with one of the family’s servants and wished to get married. The woman’s father certainly did not approve of such a union, so the lovers eloped. It was very fashionable for the upper class to vacation at the newly-built Old Faithful Inn, so the husband insisted they stay there. As it turned out, the husband was very mean. Hotel staff listened to the newlyweds argue nightly; the husband was gambling their money away. One night, after a particularly loud fight, the husband fled the Inn in anger. He did not return. After several days, the staff grew concerned when they realized they had not seen the wife in some time. 

It was a poor chambermaid who finally found her headless body in the Crow’s Nest. The murderous husband was never found. 

Neither was the bride’s head.

3. Yosemite National Park

Anita Ritenour from Santa Maria, CA, USA, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Father of National Parks and Sierra Club founder John Muir - you can find out more about him on Shaka Guide’s Yosemite National Park tour  - once said, “The Mountains are calling, and I must go.” If you visit Yosemite, you may hear those mountains calling. You might also hear a ghost calling!

RELATED: Shaka Guide's Yosemite National Park Itinerary

The Grouse Lake Ghost

Grouse Lake is at the end of a 4-mile, moderate hike on the west side of Yosemite National Park. The lake is beautiful, but it’s also home to the restless spirit of a Native American boy.
It’s believed that the Grouse Lake Ghost was first discovered by Galen Clark, Yosemite’s first park ranger. On a crisp, fall day in 1857, Mr. Clark hiked to Grouse Lake, which was one of his favorite spots in the whole park. But as he got closer, he heard a high-pitched howl, like that of an injured animal. Clark searched, but couldn’t find the source of the sound. On the way back from his hike, Clark passed through a Native American hunting camp. 

          “Have you gentlemen come across a wounded animal?” asked Clark. “I heard its frantic crying, but I did not find it.”
          “That was no animal,” said one of the hunters. “What you heard was a spirit!”

The men went on to tell Clark that long ago, a Native American boy fell into the lake and drowned. Now, his spirit is restless, and he cries out to passers-by. But should someone come too close, he will grab them by the ankles and drag them to the bottom of the lake to keep him company!

These days, hikers have reported hearing mysterious cries coming from Grouse Lake. Are they the cries of an injured animal? Or could they be the lonely wails of a boy gone too soon? If you ever find yourself hiking the 9.7 miles to Grouse Lake in Yosemite, you may find out for yourself!

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Related: Halloween in Hawaii: Four Spooky Tales and Unsolved Mysteries

4. Rocky Mountain National Park

inkknife_2000, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

At nearly 358 square miles of mountainous splendor, Rocky Mountain National Park is famous for its sweeping views of the Colorado Rockies and fresh, mountain air. If you’re a horror fan, you may also know that Rocky Mountain is home to the famously haunted Stanley Hotel, the very place where author Stephen King got his inspiration for the novel “The Shining.” But F.O. and Flora Stanley aren’t the only ghosts that hang around Rocky Mountain National Park! 

Ute Spirits of Grand Lake

The Ute Tribe was one of the first Native American tribes to inhabit the land that’s now Rocky Mountain National Park. Long, long ago, a group of Utes set up camp on the shores of Grand Lake. Without warning, they were ambushed by their Arapaho enemies. The men of the tribe fought them off while the tribeswomen and children hastily boarded a canoe and attempted to escape. They made it halfway across when a sudden and unexpected wind capsized their boat. Everyone aboard drowned. For many years after these tragic events, the Ute people avoided Grand Lake completely. They believed that it was a cursed place. 

These days, it’s said that on quiet, hazy mornings, you can see lost spirits of the Ute women and children rising from the mist and beckoning you to join them!

5. Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua Tree National Park, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The fact that Joshua Tree National Park was established as a national park on October 31, 1994, is spooky in its own right. But honestly, there isn’t much else to be afraid of at Joshua Tree National Park. Thousands of artists, musicians, and creatives flock there each year because of the inspiration the desert’s rock formations bring. In fact, one musician hasn’t left–despite the fact that he died in 1973.

The Spirit of Gram Parsons 

Gram Parsons was a musical genius who collaborated with bands like the Rolling Stones and Emmylou Harris. He and his musical friends spent many drug-fueled nights at the Joshua Tree Inn–jamming, creating, and making memories. Sadly, Gram passed away from a drug overdose in the wee morning hours of September 18th, 1973. His father tried to have his body returned to Parsons' hometown, but his friends “kidnapped” it first. According to Gram’s wishes, they took his body to the desert and set it ablaze. 

Though his body may be gone, Gram Parsons’ spirit still hangs around the Joshua Tree Inn. Guests have reported hearing faint singing, smelling cigarette smoke, and even hanging out with Mr. Parsons himself, watching the sunrise and talking about life. 

As far as ghosts go, Gram Parsons sounds like one you’d wanna get to know!

6. Cuyahoga Valley National Park

Cuyahoga jco, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Ohio’s Cuyahoga Valley National Park is one of the lesser-discussed national parks. This is peculiar because at 2.2 million visitors a year, it’s one of the most visited! Cuyahoga Valley National Park protects nearly 33,000 acres of rolling hills, bucolic farmland, historic structures, and–you guessed it!--ghosts!

Everett Road Covered Bridge

The Everett Road Covered Bridge is the last remaining covered bridge in Summit County, Ohio. One story says that on a winter night in 1877, a farmer named John Gilson and his wife were returning from a holiday party. As their wagon crossed the Everett Road Bridge, one of the horses lost its footing. Everything–the team of horses, the wagon, and Mr. and Mrs. Gilson plummeted into the freezing river below. Mrs. Gilson survived the fall; Mr. Gilson did not. 

However many historians dispute this story. Records show that the bridge wouldn’t even have been built at the time Mr. Gilson died. So the alternate story is that the bridge was built over a Native American burial mound. Regardless of the story, we do know that a ghostly hitchhiker wanders the bridge, hoping to catch a ride with an unsuspecting driver! Is it Mr. Gilson, trying to get back home? Or maybe it’s a restless Native American spirit looking for their final resting place! We may never know…but will you dare to find out?

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7. Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Nestled on the border of Tennessee and North Carolina, Great Smoky Mountains National Park offers over a half-million acres of lush forests, majestic mountains, breathtaking scenic drives—and ghosts! Here are two of the many ghost stories told ‘round Great Smoky Mountains campfires.

Lucy of Roaring Fork

On the outskirts of Gatlinburg, Tennessee is the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail, one of the park’s scenic drives. Roaring Fork is full of historical buildings that were once the homesteads of the early settlers.  And recently, RVTrader.com named the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail one of the most haunted roads in America. Why? Because of Lucy.

Legend says that at the turn of the twentieth century, a young man was passing through on a cold, autumn evening and noticed a beautiful girl wearing rags and walking barefoot through the old forest. He offered her a ride home, and she gladly accepted. After dropping the woman off at home, the young man went about the rest of his journey. But he couldn’t stop thinking of his beautiful hitchhiker. So the next day, the man returned to her home. When her mother answered the door, the young man asked for her. 

“I gave Lucy a ride home last night, and I would very much like to see her again,” the young man said.

“That’s impossible!” said the mother. “Lucy passed away in a fire years ago.”

To this day, visitors on the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail report seeing the ghostly form of a beautiful, barefoot woman wandering along the road, hoping for a ride home.

Spearfinger

Long before it became America’s Most Visited National Park, the Great Smoky Mountains was home to the Cherokee tribe. Like most modern parents, the Cherokee warned their children of the dangers of the world. Perhaps the scariest of these warnings was the tale of Spearfinger. According to Cherokee legend, Spearfinger is an evil witch who roams the forest, searching for naughty children who wander too far from home. If she catches them, she’ll sing them to sleep with a haunting lullaby, and then she’ll cut out their livers with her long, stone finger!

8. Mammoth Cave National Park

The Ghost of Stephen Bishop

Some paranormal enthusiasts call Mammoth Cave National Park “the most haunted natural wonder in the world.” That’s saying a lot, considering Mammoth Cave consists of over 400 miles of underground tunnels! Since it became a national park in 1941, there have been over 150 documented paranormal events, but the most frequent ghostly guest star is Steven Bishop.

In the 1800s, Bishop was the slave of Dr. John Crogan, who owned the cave at the time. Bishop was known for his exceptional strength and spelunking skills, which made him an amazing—and very popular— cavern guide. When Bishop died, his body was buried in the nearby Old Guide Cemetery, but his spirit still roams the cavern labyrinths. But there’s no need to fear the Ghost of Stephen Bishop! He’s probably just checking in to make sure the (living) park tour guides are up to snuff!

9. Olympic National Park

The Lady of the Lake

Olympic National Park in Washington is chock full of hauntingly beautiful lakes—but Crescent Lake is more haunt than beauty. 

In 1937, Hallie Latham Illingworth was a popular waitress at the Lake Crescent Tavern. She was married to Mr. Monty Illingworth, but he was often cruel to her. The two had an extremely volatile marriage, and on December 22, 1937, Hallie went missing. Her husband claimed she’d run off with another man, and then he himself moved to California with another woman.

Three years later, Hallie’s body washed up on the shores of Crescent Lake. Her estranged husband was arrested and charged for her murder. 

But Hallie’s spirit hasn’t found rest. Park rangers and guests alike have reported seeing the ghostly figure of a woman wandering along the edge of the lake, crying for the life she lost. 

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10. Canyonlands National Park

The Ghost Horses

Animal lovers beware—this story isn’t for the faint of heart.

With its brilliantly colored rock canyons and endless vistas, a visit to Canyonlands National Park in Utah is like traveling back to a time when cowboys and outlaws ruled the Wild West. 

But legend has it that the mournful whinnies of a pack of ghostly mustangs echo through the canyons when the moon is full. These are the spirits of a herd of wild mustangs that died because of some negligent wranglers. In the 1800s, some cowboys rounded up several dozen wild mustangs to break in and sell to the highest bidders. Once they’d chosen the horses that would fetch the most money, they left the area—and also left behind a few horses. The abandoned mustangs were trapped in captivity without food or drink, and they eventually starved to death. 

Now, their spirits are free to run through the park with wild abandon. 

So if you find yourself hiking the Canyonlands trails some lonely evening and the clamoring of hooves and low, mournful whinnies fill the air, be sure to give the Ghost Horses of Canyonlands some space!

11. Everglades National Park

Ghostly Pirates

With its labyrinth of bald cypress trees, shady hammock forests, and grassy rivers, Everglades National Park can be a spooky place on its own, especially after the sun goes down. But the Ghost Pirates of the Everglades can make those clear, starry nights even more chilling. 

A long, long time ago—so the legend says—a ship full of greedy pirates spotted a merchant ship sailing through Cape Florida, just outside of Miami. Seeing a golden opportunity for a large payday, the pirate ship gave chase. But the crew of the merchant ship was quick thinking and knew the area well, so the captain led his ship through the Everglades in order to get the pirates off their tail. 

The merchant ship made it out unscathed; the pirates weren’t as lucky. They found themselves hopelessly lost in the labyrinth of unfamiliar swampland, and eventually, they all starved to death. 

Now, the ghostly pirate ship can be seen sailing through the Everglades, fated to stay lost for all eternity.

12. Badlands National Park

The Badlands Banshee

The Lakota people called them Mako Sica, or, the Bad Lands. Early settlers dubbed them “Hell with the fires out.” The Badlands’ famously majestic yet unforgiving terrain has a deeply rich history beginning millions of years ago. They’ve been home to dinosaurs, wild horses, bison, ancient Native tribes, and settlers. They’re also the metaphorical stomping grounds of the Badlands Banshee.

No one knows where she came from, or how long she’s been there. Some say she’s a spirit as ancient as the rocks themselves, but others say she was a spurned lover seeking revenge. Whatever her origin story, the Badlands Banshee is a terrifying creature. On the surface, she’s a beautiful, ghostly woman. But if she’s spotted, her terrifying shrieks will echo through the Badlands and straight into your nightmares. Sometimes, she’ll attack and scratch. Occasionally she’ll bring a friend—a terrifying skeleton that loves to listen to music around the campfire. 

Folks who have claimed to cross paths with the Badlands Banshee say that she’ll try to lure unsuspecting park guests to their deaths. So, if you’re camping under the stunning South Dakota stars and hear a sudden shriek cut through the night air—run!

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Want to hear more legends like these? Check out one of our GPS driving tours next time you're traveling and listen to some more spooky stories below: 

Tears of a Grieving Wife: Akaka Falls' Origin
The Mysterious Dog of Mauna Loa
Curse of Pele and the Stubborn Man
Koke'e State Park's Headless Bigfoot
The Bones of Yeitso
Brown Mountain Lights

The Cries from Grouse Lake

 

 

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