Indian Country Has Its Ghosts – Indian 'Paranormal Enthusiasts' Study Unexplained Activity
Joshua Rogers in Native Travel.
ADA, OKLAHOMA – “We’re paranormal enthusiasts.”
Mark Williams, is founder of the Native American Paranormal Project
(NAPP). He describes his group of part-time explorers as “enthusiasts”
as opposed to the professional paranormal investigators portrayed on
such hit shows as “Ghost Hunters” and “Ghost Adventures.”
What also sets the NAPP apart is that all the members are Native
American and that the group specializes in investigating Native American
landmarks rumored to be haunted.
How it all began
Mr. Williams said that he has a lifelong interest in the supernatural
and is a fan of television shows like “Ghost Hunters.” One night after
viewing the program, he was inspired.
He posed the following question to a friend: “How cool would it be to see Native Americans on that screen?”
NAPP was started in the fall of 2011. Since then, the group has grown
to nine team members who seek out paranormal phenomena in Indian
country. The group films its investigations and turns the footage into
documentaries shown to audiences during film screenings.
Interest in the NAPP’s explorations has quickly grown with more than 11,000 “likes” for the group’s Facebook page.
One NAPP member is Steve Jacob, a staff member with Chickasaw Nation
Arts and Humanities. Mr. Jacob and Mr. Williams met a couple of years
ago at the McSwain Theatre after a screening of one of the movies in the
Chickasaw Nation’s Holba Kanali Native American film series.
Their conversation revealed that both shared an interest in the
supernatural and the unknown. Mr. Jacob decided to join the NAPP shortly
after their meeting.
“It’s kind of like a hobby. It’s a scary hobby at times but it’s a good hobby,”
Mr. Jacob said.
Mr. Jacob’s wife, D.D. Jacob, a Chickasaw, is also an NAPP member.
She decided to tag along during the group’s investigation of the Concho
Indian Boarding School. Dubbed the group’s “resident skeptic,” Mrs.
Jacob said she only went that first time to help her husband with the
drive back from Concho.
However, based on what she has witnessed during the NAPP’s past
investigations, Mrs. Jacob admitted she has become more open to the
possibility the group has witnessed paranormal phenomena. She is now a
permanent member of the group.
Ghost hunting
So far, the group has investigated various Native American sites in
Oklahoma including the Concho Indian Boarding School in Concho, the
Wheelock Academy in Millerton and Fort Washita near Durant.
Group members scout out possible sites to explore via the Internet
and from word-of-mouth. Then, they approach and get permission from the
appropriate tribal officials to explore the selected location.
Once at the site, members are assigned an area to record. The group
doesn’t use any specialized recording equipment. All of their equipment
is consumer-grade audio and video electronics.
Mr. Jacob said the group approached each site respectfully and was
careful not to disturb the surroundings or any ghostly inhabitants.
At first, Mr. Williams was concerned there may be fellow Native
Americans, particularly tribal elders, who might object to investigating
tribal landmarks. However, the feedback the group has received after
film screenings has been mostly positive.
“What’s funny is that some of our biggest supporters are the elders,”
Mr. Williams said.
Mr. Williams believes the investigative approach has been the key to success.
“Whenever we do these investigations, you have to debunk it first,”
he said.
“You have to try to find a reason to say that it could have been
something else. You don’t want to be one of those groups that thinks
everything is an electronic voice phenomenon or a ghost. You kind of
lose credibility that way. You always try to find a reason first. Then
when you get to the point where nothing could explain what it could have
been, you pretty much have to say ‘We might have captured something.’”
And the group agrees it has definitely captured something during the
course of the investigations. Mr. Williams and the Jacobs said the
Wheelock Academy, a former girls boarding school, “put them on the map”
as paranormal researchers. NAPP team members recorded multiple instances
of ghostly voices and other unidentifiable sounds. Near the end of the
investigation, the female members of the team reported footsteps and
girls’ voices.
In August, the team investigated Fort Washita, built in 1842 and
operated through 1865. The fort was originally constructed to protect
the Chickasaw and Choctaw people from outside invaders.
According to the TravelOK website, Fort Washita is rumored to be
haunted by a ghost called Aunt Jane, a woman who was murdered because
she wouldn’t reveal the location of her buried money. Aunt Jane’s money
was never found, and she was buried on the fort grounds. Since then,
Jane’s ghost has reportedly been seen near the fort’s ruins wearing a
white gown.
The NAPP will reveal the findings of the Fort Washita investigation
in a feature-length documentary currently being edited. The group plans
to present the film at a showing for the Choctaw Nation sometime soon.
Joshua Rogers is a employee of the Chickasaw Nation.
