Back again.
Scott and I had to check on one of my projects in Arkansas, so I decided to bring the family and make another haunted trip out of it. Scott brought along his nephew Steven. Stevie also plays on our football team the Jaguars and is a buddy of Conner's.
We used emf detector for 1st time with some wild results but it will take some time to get used to it and the false positives.
We had many orbs in many of the photos but I really don't consider that to be paranormal at all anymore. We also had several strange experiences but none worth recording.
I shared my last experience of being grabbed on the shoulder with the ghost tour and apparently it happens a lot in that room. The host says it means they (spirits) like me. She also says she thinks I am sensitive. I hope she didn't mean in the "easily hurt or damaged" way...?
No
I don't think I am. In any way.
By the 1870’s, the region was well known by the white man and small groups of health seekers came to the area in search of whatever cures were needed. At that time, a group of approximately 400 settlers had gathered around what we now know as Basin Spring. The Osage Indians had hewn the basin out of a large rock ages ago and the spring flowed freely into that basin. The community was a ramshackle assortment of tents, lean-to’s and shanties. During an Independence Day celebration, the idea was proposed to formalize the settlement. A group of seven wealthy businessmen, including Alva Jackson, calling themselves the “Eureka Improvement Company” took it upon themselves to see to the development of this “Health Resort”. By the next year, the city charter had been formalized and the population had grown to 15,000. By the turn of the century, our full time population had grown to more than 20,000 permanent residents.
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