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A Spirited Place

Mysterious sights and sounds have long perplexed the people of the Badlands.

The Lakota people called the rugged landscape of southwestern South Dakota mako sica, or”bad lands,” because rocky terrain, lack of water and extreme temperatures made it difficult to traverse and nearly impossible to inhabit. But it has become fertile ground for ghost stories.

A new board game called Horrified: American Monsters includes a character named the Banshee of the Badlands, which made us wonder: Is there such a creature? And what exactly is it? Our quest to track down the legend and its origins led us to other mysterious stories and encounters from this rough country.

The earliest written records of a Badlands Banshee come from Myths and Legends of Our Own Land published by Charles Skinner in 1896. Jason Offutt’s 2019 book Chasing American Monsters also includes the banshee along with other South Dakota tales like the Lake Kampeska Monster and the tiny devils of Spirit Mound.

Mateusz Wosik, a paleontologist at Misericordia University in Dallas, Pennsylvania, spent two summers as a park ranger in Badlands National Park. He used the banshee as the basis of an evening program for visitors in 2012 and 2013.

“I’m sure I scared the bejeezus out of little kids,” Wosik says.”It was a very popular program with the amphitheater full most Friday nights. There was definitely a big interest.”

Wosik approached the myths, legends and ghost stories with an explanation of how such tales get started. He believes many legends are a misinterpretation of fossils. For instance, the first discoverers of an ancient mammoth skull could mistake the hole in its center, which accommodated its trunk, as an eye socket.”So that’s where the legend of the one-eyed cyclops began,” he says. It’s also within reason, he suggests, to discover fossil remains of a real dinosaur but exaggerate them into a dragon.

The Badlands contain one of the largest deposits of fossilized prehistoric mammals in the world. Dinosaurs there became extinct around 30 million to 65 million years ago, Wosik says. Around 40 million years ago, what he calls”version 2.0″ of mammals began, creating animals much closer to what we know now.”Before that they were very weird,” he says.

One of the early mammals was the titanothere, or brontothere, a large animal similar to a modern rhinoceros that lived in the Badlands and contributed to the region’s legends. South Dakota’s Native American tribes have different stories about”thunder beasts.” The combination of fossil brontotheres and modern bison most likely blended into these”thunder beings.”

Mateusz Wosik often incorporated the Badlands Banshee in talks while working as a ranger at the national park.

As Wosik interviewed Badlands-area inhabitants for origin stories, he found that the tales vary slightly from person to person, but there was a connection between”thunder beings” and”water monsters.” A basic story tells of a father warning his son not to wander off, which of course the son ignored. A storm blew in with rain and lightning, a great battle between”thunder beings” and”water monsters.” Fossil remains of pterodactyls are the thunder beings that threw lightning bolts to the earth, which we find as fossil baculites, long pointy-shelled creatures. The water monsters would be what we now know as mosasaurs, whose fossilized skeletons have been found throughout South Dakota. They defended the earth in these great battles by throwing large boulders into the sky. The battles still create the immense noise we hear during thunderstorms. At the end of the tale the father found the boy sitting on the bones of a prehistoric water beast, one of the mosasaurs.

The folklore story of the Banshee of the Badlands came after these legends but doesn’t seem to have roots in Native American mythology. Wosik hasn’t determined if the tale is just a product of Skinner’s imagination or is based on stories he heard while in the area.

Skinner portrayed the Badlands as”hell with the fires out,” inhabited by rattlesnakes and a very unfriendly sounding place. Near a butte called”Watch Dog,” which Wosik has been unable to identify, the banshee appears to unlucky travelers. The shrieking transparent figure of a woman is common in ghost tales.”Think of the first ghost in the library at the beginning of Ghostbusters,” Wosik says.”Or the character in the video game Mortal Combat.”

Skinner described a typical encounter with the Badlands Banshee.”If war parties, emigrants, cowboys, hunters, any who for good or ill are going through this country, pass the haunted butte at night, the rocks are lighted with phosphor flashes and the banshee sweeps upon them,” he wrote.”As if wishing to speak, or as if waiting a question that has occurred to none to ask, she stands beside them in an attitude of appeal, but if asked what she wants she flings her arms aloft and with a shriek that echoes through the blasted gulches for a mile she disappears and an instant later is seen wringing her hands on her hilltop.”

“It’s like she’s wanting something, but not knowing what she wants,” Wosik explains.”It feels like a haunting, but she’s only wanting to communicate.”

Adding to the creepiness, the banshee sometimes has a companion skeleton who seeks out music. Attracted to the melodies around cowboy campfires and settlers’ cabins, the skeleton seizes any violin left in his reach and plays throughout the night. His music at times leads people into”rocky pitfalls” and eventually steals the listener’s soul.

Wosik’s interviews with Native American people from the area concluded that the skeleton must be the banshee’s loved one.”The banshee and the skeleton seem to be stuck in curses where they can’t communicate,” he says.”Maybe he’s trying to steal a soul to give her.”

Wosik enjoys incorporating established fossil knowledge into folklore.”I suspect there is a basis in the banshee tale from something like the bison and titanothere connection to ‘thunder beings.’ With the banshee there is no fossil evidence, but if we apply the other stories, it makes sense. Most of these legends are based on something real, quite often fossils misinterpreted.”

The Badlands Banshee has appeared in books and games.

How did an obscure legend turn up in a board game? Mike Mulvihill of Seattle, Washington, is responsible for the design and development of Horrified: American Monsters.”We knew that we wanted to highlight the monsters of the entire country,” Mulvihill says.”For source material we chose the book Chasing American Monsters by Jason Offutt. In looking at our map we felt we needed something in the Great Plains. When we read about the banshee, its concept was so intriguing from both an image and gameplay aspect. As we discovered more about the banshee’s background, we found out about the skeleton that accompanies her. This image of a violin-playing skeleton and the banshee is what really sold us on including the character in the game.”

A children’s version of the Badlands Banshee story is featured at a podcast called”The Cryptid Catalog.”

Badlands rancher Joe Amiotte hasn’t seen the banshee, but he has plenty of unusual stories.”About 25 years ago me and my wife and my cousin were camping by the creek roughly 15 miles south of Interior,” he recalls.”We were sitting around the campfire having a few beers and we decided to make ‘bigfoot’ noises, or at least what we thought sounded like that. We did that for about half an hour and then quit. Not too much later we heard something that wasn’t a mountain lion, not a wolf. It was growling and branches were breaking. Well, it had taken us around 20 minutes or so to set up camp, but it took us exactly five seconds to break camp and get out of there. It was a growl, a deep bark that I’d never heard before. I’ve heard mountain lions scream, I’ve heard wolves howl, it wasn’t that.”

They returned the following day to retrieve camping equipment and saw no signs of anything.

“We’ve had a neighbor who saw something in a human form from the waist up standing about 500 yards from his porch,” Amiotte says.”By the time he drove up it was a mile away, so he didn’t go after it any farther. That was in the middle of the day.”

Aaron Kaye, who serves as Chief of Interpretation for the Badlands National Park, says the area has moods.”If you walk around in the Badlands at night, you’re going to see and hear things. I’ve heard blood-curdling screams. I’m sure they were big cats, but Ö.”

He’s heard stories of the”Badlands yeti.” A local rancher who is now deceased reported multiple sightings of a brown, bear-like creature and finding hair from it.”He was quite convincing,” Kaye says.”For me it was just a campfire story to tell kids. And the story may change a little every time I tell it.”

Kaye also says maintenance employees at the Badlands National Park visitor center once encountered a ghostly woman in a white dress in the building after hours. She hasn’t materialized since a remodel of the center a few years ago.

There appear to be no recent banshee sightings, but other ghosts do seem to inhabit the Badlands.”Every now and then when it’s really clear out by this old homestead place you can hear kids like they are playing in the creek nearby,” Amiotte says.”It’s never scared a horse, but we can never find anything when we ride over there. Sometime in the 1930s or ’40s there was a cholera epidemic. They lost some kids, and they were buried there, so we are pretty sure it is those kids’ spirits. They are friendly though, never doing anything to scare anyone.”

They leave that for the banshee, or the yeti, or any of the other mysterious creatures whose legends live in the Badlands.

Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the September/October 2023 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call (800) 456-5117.

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South Dakota’s Spooky Side

It seems every town in South Dakota has a ramshackle old house that people believe to be haunted. In Lake Norden, it was just down the street from my house. It was small and had long been abandoned. It also had what looked like iron bars on one of the windows, which I’m sure fed the legends that older kids shared with us. I never ventured very close to it, and I always gave it a sidelong glance whenever I walked past on the street.

South Dakota boasts plenty of spooky places, where voices moan in the twilight and things go bump in the night. Several years ago, we spoke to Chris Hull about strange goings-on at Sica Hollow State Park near Sisseton. Hull is a Sisseton native who works for the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks. Six generations of his family have lived around Sica Hollow, a beautiful woodland known for both spectacular fall foliage and haunting legends that date back to its very first Native American inhabitants, who christened the forest”sica” (bad, or evil). Visitors have reported hearing phantom drumbeats in the distance, and seeing bubbling bogs brimming with crimson-tinted water.

Hull and some friends planned to camp in the hollow one night. One member of the party returned home to retrieve a few forgotten supplies.”We were hiking and heard him yell from down in the hollow,” Hull recalled.”He must have yelled five or six times. We wondered if his truck had gotten stuck and he had started walking.”

Hull’s group walked to the bottom of the hollow, but their friend was nowhere to be found. They returned the campsite just as he returned.”He said he was at home, and he had all the sleeping bags and things he’d gone to get.”

Guests and employees at the Bullock Hotel in Deadwood have long reported spooky encounters. The hotel is said to have been haunted ever since its namesake, Seth Bullock, died in Room 211 in 1919. A Sioux Falls television crew visited the Bullock for a Halloween story and listened intently, albeit skeptically, to the staff’s stories. Then, while in the basement, the reporter heard a woman laughing good-naturedly in her ear. But when she turned around, there was no one there. Later, when they reviewed the videotape, the reporter’s voice was the only clearly audible sound — other than unexplained static at the precise moment the reporter heard the mysterious laughter.

We’ve also written about an eerie stretch of 424th Street between Carthage and Fedora that locals call Spooklight Road. For years, people living along that gravel road have reported seeing the bright headlights of a vehicle heading north at night. As they waited for the vehicle to pass their farmsteads, nothing ever showed up. One local legend says the light is the lantern from a wagon train of settlers that got caught in a blizzard and died.

If you’re feeling brave, take a friend and explore one of South Dakota’s spooky places this Halloween season. My only advice is to keep a safe distance.

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Autumn Mysteries

South Dakotans are no-nonsense folks, so we always struggle to find supernatural tales for our October issues. But we have heard a few through the years. One of my favorite spooky stories, published in our September/October 2014 issue, is about a mysterious bright, white light in Miner County that appears out of nowhere. Locals call it the spooklight. It can be seen along a particular stretch of dirt road between Carthage and Fedora. The story’s author, Donna Palmlund, talked to family and neighbors to get their spooklight accounts.

Palmlund’s father grew up on a farm west of Spooklight Road. His grandfather would say that sometimes the spooklight was so bright they could sit inside and read by it. After the Hass family moved off the farm a man named Joe Spader lived there. “After I moved to that farm it wasn’t long before I was aware of this light that was very peculiar,” Spader said. He described the light as looking like a bright spotlight cresting a hill and then going down the hill, but a car would never materialize. Before he heard about the spooklight, he was worried someone was trying to steal something.

Another mysterious light has been seen in southeast South Dakota, looking over Nebraska’s Crazy Peak, which rises above the chalkstone bluffs on the Nebraska side of the Missouri. Sometimes the view gives South Dakotans an unexplainable light show. “I’ve seen all sorts of UFOs there in the past,” said Carvel Cooley, a longtime local historian. “It’s just lights. They don’t make any noise and they can stop, start, zap out of sight, disappear and reappear.” Although a lot of locals have seen the lights, most don’t talk about it. Some give credit for the lights to swamp gas. Others bring up the Santee Sioux legends of seeing “little people” in the neighborhood of Crazy Peak.

Another well-known eerie South Dakota spot is Sica Hollow in Roberts County. Reports of strange voices, lights flashing in creek bottoms and bubbling red bogs along the “Trail of Spirits” make Sica Hollow a spooky place to visit any time of year. Its first Indian inhabitants dubbed the forested area”sica,” meaning bad or evil.

We visited with Chris Hull a couple of years ago. Six generations of Hull’s family have lived near Sica Hollow. He has spent countless hours hunting or camping in the forest and has seen the glowing lights. Once he also had a more mysterious experience while camping with friends. They realized they had forgotten supplies, so one friend drove home to get them. “We were hiking and heard him yell from down in the hollow,” Hull told us. “He must have yelled five or six times. We wondered if his truck had gotten stuck and he had started walking. So we walked for a mile and got down to the bottom, but there was nothing there. We climbed a hill to search for lights and found nothing. Finally we went back to the campsite and he pulled in at the same time. He said he was at home and he had all the sleeping bags and things he’d gone to get. But all five of us heard him yelling that night.”

When the leaves fall and Halloween is close at hand, we all like a good South Dakota ghost story. If you have one to share, email me at editor@southdakotamagazine.com.