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In Elbow Lake there’s a haunted house
where some families refuse to live. In
Fergus Falls, at the Regional Treatment
Center (RTC), there are stories of
employees seeing apparitions (ghosts)
and hearing the phantom sounds of chairs
moving along the floor.
In recent years at the Fergus Falls
Middle School, some people believed that
the auditorium was haunted by the spirit
of a young girl.
“Several of the teachers saw a
strange light inside the building,” said
Chad Lewis, co-author of the book,
Minnesota Road Guide to Haunted
Locations. “No one knows who this
girl is or was.”
Lewis said the county museum has
reported strange sounds whose source
cannot be found.
“Objects seem to appear in places
that they were not previously in,” he
said. “Perhaps the spirit is attached to
an object from the museum, which would
be fairly common.”
In other nearby communities, spirits
are believed to be roaming restaurants,
former creameries, and other
establishments.
Lewis, who will speak Thursday at 7
p.m. in the Elbow Lake Public Library,
said stories about ghosts and haunted
places are common in all areas of
Minnesota.
“At the RTC in Fergus Falls, I’ve
heard many stories of former employees
seeing apparitions,” said Lewis. “I ask
people to bring their stories to me
during presentations like the one coming
to Elbow Lake.”
In 1999, Lewis received a Bachelors
of Art Degree in Psychology from the
University of Wisconsin-Stout. As a
graduate student, he completed his
Master’s Thesis on Students’ Belief in
the Paranormal. In 2002, Lewis received
a Masters in Science degree in
Psychology, also from U of W at Stout.
Lewis and Terry Fisk, his co-author,
have come across accounts of people
sleeping in a haunted bed and breakfast,
hearing ghostly wails in a theater,
going roller-skating with ghosts,
swimming with mischievous spirits,
having a drink in a haunted pub, seeing
gravestones move on their own, hiking a
haunted trail and hearing spirits
playing music.
Lewis and Fisk have hunted ghosts in
nine states. They’ve written ghostly
guide books for Minnesota, South Dakota,
Iowa and Illinois. They’re close to
completing books for Wisconsin and
Michigan.
“For our research, we look for places
with long histories of hauntings with
multiple eye-witnesses who we can
interview,” said Fisk. "In a lot of
cases, people didn't know each other and
thought they were the only ones who had
these experiences. Yet, they saw almost
the same things.”
A walk through a darkened woods
brought them to the foot of an old
lighthouse. It was empty and padlocked.
Suddenly, they were startled by the
sound of a door slamming violently
against a wall inside the structure. But
they were skeptical.
"We thought maybe the wind blew a
door (closed)," Fisk said. "But within
two minutes, we heard ‘bam.’ We knew
there was no wind. It was perfectly
calm. And there was no way somebody was
in there because it was padlocked."
With all his ghost hunting, Fisk
wonders if one of those ghosts may have
followed him home. How else could he
explain the strange things that started
happening in the home he and his wife
had occupied for eight years?
It was 2008 when he and his wife both
saw the orange mist in their living
room. They glimpsed it just in the
corners of their eyes, but when they
turned, it was gone.
Every year, close to Halloween,
libraries invite the authors to delve
into the paranormal to give talks. Such
is the case this coming Thursday in
Elbow Lake. Rocking chairs that rock
alone, lingering spirits and an ordinary
piano playing with no player will be
among the topics of discussion.
Pipestone residents invited Lewis to
the Calumet Inn that has more than its
share of ghostly lore. There are stories
of a man in a tweed suit that can be
seen in the mirror behind the front desk
of the Calumet. But when the desk clerk
turns, there is no one there.
The authors don’t want people in and
near Otter Tail County to take their
word for it.
“We want people to go away from this
presentation with an adventure of their
own,” said Lewis.
Author Chad Lewis to speak in Elbow
Lake
Chad Lewis, co-author of the “Minnesota
Road Guide to Haunted Locations,”
will speak at the public library in
Elbow Lake on Thursday, Oct. 22, at 7
p.m. at Thorson Memorial Library.
Admission is free.
“With Halloween fast approaching,
I’ll include lots of information for
you,” said Lewis. “I plan to talk about
the strange side of Minnesota, including
the most haunted locations and spirits
that continue to roam the area.”
Lewis will come to Elbow Lake with
ghostly photos, case history, eyewitness
accounts and ghost lore. This unique
presentation encourages you to visit
places for your own ghost story.
The presentation will take the
audience on a ghostly journey to some of
the most haunted places in Minnesota. It
covers the entire state from Wandering
Ghosts in the North Woods to the Haunted
B&B in Wabasha.
“From phantom creatures prowling the
woods to graveyard apparitions located
in your own backyard, no place in
Minnesota is without its own haunting,”
says Lewis.
Find out where you can see possessed
statues come to life, pick up a phantom
hitchhiker, encounter a ghost train,
enjoy a play in a haunted theatre, and
have your car pushed by spirits.
Lewis is a paranormal researcher and
author for
Unexplained Research L.L.C He holds
a Master's of Science degree in
Psychology from the University of
Wisconsin-Stout.
The author, along with fellow author
Terry Fisk, have a unique book.
Lewis trekked across the world in
search of the paranormal. From tracking
vampires in Transylvania and chasing the
Chupacabras in Puerto Rico, to searching
for the elusive monster in Loch Ness,
and pursuing ghosts in Ireland's
castles, he brings over 14 years of
research experience to his presentations
— including the one Thursday evening in
Elbow Lake.
He’s been featured on the Discovery
Channel’s “A Haunting,” ABC’s “World’s
Scariest Places,” and has hundreds of
interviews to his credit.
Lewis is the author of the Hidden
Headlines series and also the co-author
of the Road Guide to Haunted Locations
book series.
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