A brutal storm hit the Sierra
Nevada Mountains in 1846. Twenty-two feet of snow accumulated.
In November of this same
year, a group of 87 pioneers—the Donner Party-- heading from Springfield,
Illinois to the gold fields of California took an ill-advised shortcut and
found themselves stranded in this ferocious mountain snowstorm.
As hypothermia set in and
their food supplies ran out, starving and delirious this group resorted to the
greatest human taboo—cannibalism.
We know this because of their
journals and from the survivors who later gave interviews.
One female survivor when
questioned about how this experience affected her stated—
“What would you do if you were a mother watching your
children starve and freeze to death? You’ve already eaten the horses and oxen,
and boiled their hides into a horrible gelatinous concoction; you’ve eaten
field mice and finally cut the throats of your beloved family dogs and eaten
them, paws and all. But you know that there’s protein that will keep you alive
in those snow banks.”
She refers to the people who
had already died . . .
A train in more recent years stranded in the snow at Donner Pass. |
That summer, Union Army Gen.
Stephen Kearny had the grim task of cleaning up the Donner Party’s debris.
Donner Pass photo from 1870. |
The local Truckee residents
and many others believe the site where the Donner Party was stranded is
haunted.
Memorial Statue--top of the pedestal is exactly 22 feet to show the depth of snow in 1846. |
This area today is the Donner
Memorial State Park. Nikko Combs, a park interpreter states that the area just might be haunted. She points to the fact the park brought in a cadaver dog, that
indicated one specific area holds human remains.
People believe that one ghost that haunts the park is Tamsen Donner. She was one heroine of this tragic story.
Tamsen Donner |
When the first rescue party
arrived, she sent her children with them but remained with George, who was
unable to move for his hand and arm was now gangrenous. This ultimately claimed
his life.
Today people visit the park
to hike, camp and, cross-country ski. And then there are what Combs calls the
“spooky history buffs.”
One of these visitors,
Elizabeth, found herself getting a warm feeling as she drove toward Donner
Pass. She felt she was about to see an old friend, this confused her for she
had no plans to do this.
As she neared the park, tears
sprang to her eyes unbidden. As she parked, she smelled a campfire burning. She
felt someone was watching her, but she was the only one around.
She walked to a cabin the
Donner Party used, she heard voices, but no one was there and no fire was
burning at this site.
Another witness was not
looking for a paranormal experience.
He was out skiing alone at
Sugar Bowl Ski Resort, close to where the Donner Party camped when he became
disoriented and realized he was lost.
A woman approached him,
dressed strangely. She led him to a camp where several other people were. He
then found the trail he needed to be upon.
He returned to this camp to
thank the woman, but there was no trace of her or the campsite. Nothing was
there to indicate that it had been full of people just minutes before.
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