Luke Farrell House: West Mankato |
Haunted Mankato |
Brian and Lorna Dunne |
Legend has it that Tourtellotte Park on East Mable Street off
North Riverfront Drive was the former location of Tourtellotte Cemetery, one of the most haunted cemeteries in the United States! Many
different hauntings have been reported here since the land was set aside as a cemetery and even now when it is a city park. The name
Tourtellotte comes from the large number of single (Tourt: not with a mate-{from the German}) males
(Ellot: those who must shave-{Mansipot Indian}) living around the area in the past. No one has been buried here since the
1890’s, and was so neglected and abused that the stones were simply removed and the area renamed Tourtellotte Park.
The bodies are still there - under ground. The site
is popular for various groups that are involved in voodoo practices and Satanism, which does not help
in the peace of the souls still seen wandering around at night. Some of the
ghosts witnessed here include a farmer with his horse pulling an old farrow plow. This is said to be P. Bezanker who drowned
in nearby water of the Minnesota River when his horse bolted into the water with the farrow plow and farmer behind.
A ghostly farmhouse also appears
with a fence and coal lantern swinging from the front porch stoop. Anyone approaching it, finds that it vanishes from sight leaving behind a
faint smell of corned beef and cabbage.
One of the most prominent ghosts seen in the part is the White Lady, the Madonna of Masta Choosets. She is often seen during full
moons on months that have 30 days in them, and is thought to be women who is buried here next to her young son: Dos-Cabezas Eddie. One unusual ghost
seen here is a two-headed man. No one seems know who this person is or the story of why he appears most often during days evenly divisible by two! During the 1920s
Tourtellotte Park was a favorite spot for the dumping of murder victims by mobsters around the New Ulm and North Mankato area.
Early 1900s ghostly cars have also been seen
speeding around this area on the roads and stopping at the main park entrance.
Legend has it
that the Luke Farrell house in West Mankato is haunted by
the ghost of an old lady named Helen. She has been seen on alternate Thursdays in
January walking down the grand staircase. She has also been seen as a
reflection in the hall mirror. During renovations in 1921, a wall was
removed and human bones were found. These bones were said to be of Helen, an
old woman who was reported missing by her husband in 1891. Helen had told her neighbor that her husband was seeing
another woman and she was going to say something to him the night she disappeared. Jebadiah, her husband
married the woman's younger sister (Salum) in 1892 - one year to the day of her sister Helen's disappearance. Salum was
later convicted of killing her husband Jebadiah and
committed to the Mankato Happy Village Rest Home (a home for the criminally insane at the corner of North 5th
and East Walnut Streets). Salum said that her older sister Helen
had come back from the dead to haunt her and that it was her older sister who killed Jebadiah.
Legend has it
that Memorial Library Room 113 is one of the most haunted places at Minnesota State
University. This was a technology education lab in the 1990's. Students who work late in Room 113
are sometimes visited by a former student asking where her technology
project is. Students who have seen her say that the room also gets very
cold just before she arrives. One
student who was working in the room late in the evening stated that he
saw her and actually saw her walk though the closed door "Like steam
going back into a kettle." Many times the lights go out as students work
there late at night. Legend has it that the Shadow People living there
use the darkness to get closer to the students working there. Other students
working late at night report that a 'student' lab assistant named "Doug"
sometimes appears
to help students with their work. There was a lab assistant by that name in the 1990's
who disappeared without a trace
on Pine Ridge Reservation (SD) in 2001.
at 2AM June 7, 1999.
Legend has it
that a young man who looks like Cory Feldman can be seen
standing on the Main Street bridge on cold summer evenings. Several
people have reported to police that they have seen him jump off of the
bridge but
there is never a splash and there is never a ripple in the water below.
A student protester jumped off the bridge during the 1966 Vietnam War
demonstration. He was never seen again. His name was Kory Fieldstein!
Legend has it
that the sprites of the 13 Swedish Americans hanged in
Mankato for starting the Cod Fish Wars of 1877 can be seen sitting and
talking at the river's edge in Sibley park during the evening of
December 24th... the day of the hanging.... at the site of the hanging.
Great Stone House |
Legend has it that voices and singing can be heard along with the smell of a campfire at the great stone houses in Rasmussen Park on Halloween Eve. On Halloween Eves between 1712 and 1867 eight women were burned as witches on this very spot in Olde Mankatoe. Photographs taken in the early evening of December 12 at the great stone houses are said to reveal the images of Gustave and Madeline Svenring, caretakers of the house murdered in their sleep December 12, 1887! |
Gustave and
Madeline
Svenring (?) |
Photo of "Lillian" taken by BBS TV
crew during taping of Supernatural Adventures.
|
Legend has it that "Fort Counsel", located just below Loyola Catholic School-Good Counsel Campus was a military hospital during the Dakota Sioux Uprising. It is also a place of rest for many soldiers and nurses who died there during the war. The Fort consisted of the hospital and several buildings, a large open field, and Councel (later named Good Counsel) Hill. As the story goes a young nurse named Lillian Svenring died of a broken heart after her husband Henri died in her arms in the hospital. She disappeared soon after but they say that she never truly left the Fort. She has been seen, in a glowing blue gown, walking from the Fort, up over the hill, and then vanishing. Legend says, every night she would walk from the Fort up over the hill to treat the wounded and check on the soldiers. She still does. There was an incident in the 50s, near the November full moon, when it was very foggy and a police officer thought he hit a woman dressed in blue who was walking along the road in the very thick fog. He radioed the accident in, then got out and could not find a body. When this land was up for sale there was only one bidder... the Roman Catholic Church. Soon after they purchased the land a secret exorcism was held on the property to rid it of spirits. No record of this exorcism exists. It did not work. |
Legend has it that the Carnegie Art Center on south Broad Street is haunted. The art center is a house that was built during the depression. The builders, a Mr. and Mrs. Paine, were extremely wealthy, and owned most of Mankato. They owned the larger horse hair furniture factories, and paid their employees with vouchers to purchase goods at stores the couple also owned, basically keeping all the money under their tight control. When the people of Mankato learned of the Carnegie center being built, they threatened the couple that if they ever moved into it the people of Mankato would kill them. The couple feared the people of Mankato. And never did move in. In fact NO one has ever lived in the Carnegie Art Center. Mr. Paine did pass on first, and Mrs. Paine did out live him. She donated their house to the city, with one stipulation, no children under 18 were allowed in it. She was never able to have children, and therefore resented children. Children are allowed in the center now, since Mrs. Paine is no longer alive. It is said that you can see the woman roaming the house during tours. The couple has also been seen together "enjoying" the house they dreamed of living in together. Workers often say a lady at the back of the crowd will start to explain things in the house but when they look for who was talking, a person in the place where the voice came from is just empty space. |
Photo taken by security guard in
1972
of person believed to be Mrs. Paine. |
Legend has it that in the field behind Gage Tower Dorm at Minnesota State there was once an old cemetery and when it gets dark many co-eds have seen a young girl hanging from a tree on the south side of the clearing. Beneath the girl is the shadow of what appears to be her lover. Many say that they have heard him crying softly. They have also seen dark shadows move from headstone to headstone. The headstones are not visible during the day! |
Only known picture of the Gage
Tower Ghost.
Taken in 1921. |
Legend has it that the old Albatross Bar near the University was
haunted. In the mid-1930s
a bartender was murdered there while she was closing up, her body was
found
slumped in the corner the next morning. She had been stabbed
seventy-seven times. Her
murderer was eventually caught, but not convicted until years later
after he committed another murder. Patrons of the bar have reported the
juke box apparently starting itself, sometimes running through all the
records in a blur. The bar has been replaced by numerous shops.
Late at night workers and tenants in the apartments above have reported hearing
30's style music and seeing
something, a person or a presence, standing in the shadows, passing
behind them in a mirror, and walking across the floor... never a
clear look, always just a glimpse. Enough however to let them know that
they are not alone in their businesses or rooms.
Photo of "Frank" taken in TV
room during
Richard Nixon inauguration. |
Legend has it that the Old Mankato Brewery site at the east end of East Rock Street is haunted. Railroad and newspaper man Frank Hammill is generally regarded as the father of Mankato Beer. He arrived in 1883 on the Chicago Northwestern Railroad. He later became publisher of the Mankato Advocate, mayor of the town, and a prominent Republican politician. Hammill died suddenly in 1922 of a mysterious stomach problem. His body was displayed in the beautiful house he had built for himself and his family on North 7th Street. His wife lived the remainder of her days there and often reported feeling that Frank was still there with her. As time passed and new owners took over, the house gained a reputation of being haunted. Frank, said the new owners, was still in town. Many guests report hearing noises, voices, and feeling that they simply were not alone in the old house -- one family even moved out. Today the apparent haunting continues, and the current residents are absolutely certain they are not alone. They even refer to their guest as Frank. |
Legend has it that the former "Cheers Bar" on Madison Avenue was haunted. Some say that this is why it was sold and the name was changed. The Cheers Bar was said to be haunted by a "red lady." Inebriated patrons say they have seen waiting on tables late at night. Employees won't talk about the subject and no one ever went into the basement. The building is one of the oldest in town and was built on the site where a house burned to the ground in 1875 killing the old woman who lived there. |
Legend has it that the park on West Welcome is the home of strange happenings on summer nights. Many neighbors call it Lilly's Park because they say that they can hear that name called over and over again on dark nights seemingly from the playground area. On other nights, when the wind is still, people walking by the park can hear children playing and the swings will be swinging. Sometimes a growl will be heard from out of nowhere. It seems that 2 children and an adult (Lilly) were murdered there by a "werewolf like animal" (As reported in the November 17, 1958 edition of the Mankato Journal Democrat). Be careful when going around the slide. That is where one of the children is believed to have died. |
Courtesy:SaltLakeCemetary |
tunnel system. |
Legend has it that all of Mankato was a forbidden area to the native Americans living in the area. If you check other Web sites you are told that Mankato's original name was Mahatto. Mahatto is an Ojibwa Indian word meaning "Blue Earth". (Mankato is in Blue Earth county and the Blue Earth River meets the Minnesota River there.) This is incorrect and really is a hoax to hide the true meaning and horror associated with the name. Dr. Roger Carlson, the famed geologist published his masterwork in 1918 (used copies of his book may still be found on Amazon and/or EBay). In this work he traced the real origin of the name. It is a Hekawi Indian name meaning "Bone Eaters". (See special note on the Hekawi Indians below.) It seems that before the Ojibwa settled in the area, it was the land of the Hekawi. Mankato was a forbidden zone. Legend has it that strange evil spirits live in caves and underground in Mankato. These evil spirits kill and eat all parts of their victims. Hence the name... Fact or Legend: Road crews are forbidden to dig in certain areas around Broad and Elm Streets. No one will say why. There are no records of road crews ever working late at night in Mahatto?? Fact or Legend: Workers are not allowed in the tunnel system under Minnesota State University after 11 pm. Legend says that three workers disappeared in these tunnels in the 1930's never to be seen again. Legend has it that you can hear their screams and the sounds of something eating and snapping bones echoing through the tunnels late on cold, winter nights. NOTE: The Hekawi Indian name was made famous by the 1965-67 TV show "F-Troop". The writers were warned not to use the name. They did. Fact: Most of persons associated with "F-Troop" are either locked up in mental institutions or dead! Fact: Everyone reading this will die. |
Only known photo of
Hekawi Indians. |