For almost two centuries a
mysterious light has haunted an area where Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri
converge. This light is described as a very bight shimmering orange ball that
remains bright even when seen from a distance. Witnesses state that this ball
of light bobs and weaves its way very quickly down the center of a graveled Oklahoma
country road and then bounces up among the treetops and simply vanishes. The
light always appears on one stretch of road known as “Spooklight Road’ or the
“Devil’s Promenade.” This phenomenon occurs on a nightly basis between the
hours of 10:00 p.m. and midnight.
Residents of all three states
see the light so often they have their own names for it: the Quapaw Spooklight,
the Joplin Spooklight, and the Hornet Spooklight. One of the earliest noted
sightings of the light was by Native Americans along the infamous “Trail of
Tears” in 1836. Another early sighting of the Spooklight was by Anglo settlers
in the community of Hornet, Missouri in the late 1800s. These sightings caused
such a panic that many of these settlers packed up and moved away. The
first published account of this phenomenon was in the Kansas City Star in 1936,
which dubbed it the “Ozark Spooklight.”
Over the years both
paranormal and scientific investigative teams have tried to solve this mystery. In 1946 the Army Corp of Engineers did an investigation. They
studied the phenomenon for three weeks and walked away baffled. Their official
report listed the light as “a mysterious light of unknown origin.” In 1965 the
magazine Popular Mechanics sent a reporter and photographer to investigate the
light. When this article was published it stated that the cause was car lights on
U.S. 66 ten miles from the Devil’s Promenade. Soon afterwards, many local
residents pointed out that the light was seen for many years before there was a
highway or cars.
Another explanation for the
light is listed as escaping “natural gases.” But the light doesn’t appear to be
affected by wind or rain, which does impact natural gases. It is also pointed
out that natural gases rarely appear with the same intensity of light
that is seen along the Devil’s Promenade. The light is so bright that residents twelve miles away in Joplin, Missouri can see it. Yet another explanation is that the
light is a result of an electrical atmospheric charge, the problem with this
explanation is that this type of charge is normally associated with earthquakes.
After World War II stories
about the Spooklight began to spread to other parts of the country. In the 1960s
and 1970s this phenomenon became so popular it was not unusual to see the
Spooklight Road packed with vehicles and people hoping to catch a glimpse of
this mysterious light. Today there is a web site, blog, and a twitter page all
devoted to publishing recent eyewitness accounts.
Over the years many legends have
been told that provide a more ghostly reason for the presence of the
Spooklight. One early legend recounts the story of a Quapaw Indian maiden who
fell in love with a young brave but her father would not let her marry the
young man because he lacked a suitable dowry. The young maiden defying her
father eloped with the brave. Very quickly the two lovers were pursued by a
group of warriors. As the couple was close to being caught they joined hands
above Spring River, which is the Devil’s Promenade, and leapt to their deaths.
It is said that shortly after this the Spooklight began to appear. In this tale
the light represents the joined spirits of these two young lovers.
There are many other legends
that explain the Spooklight’s existence; one involves a miner who was decapitated
in an accident. Another involves a Quapaw Indian whose wife cut off his head,
while yet another is about an Osage Indian chief who was decapitated near Spooklight
Road. One story told often over the years involves an army sergeant who was captured
during a Civil War battle. It is said he was executed by a cannon that blew off
his head. All of these legends state that the Spooklight is actually a lantern
that these various victims use to look for their lost heads. I find that most
unexplained light phenomenon legends have at least one good decapitation/lantern
story.
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