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The Legend of the Ute Spirits of the Mist on the Grand Lake 

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On misty mornings on the Grand Lake in the Rocky Mountain National park in Colorado, it is said that the ghosts of the Ute tribe are haunting the cursed water after drowning in it after a bloody battle.

“Since that dark night when the storm frowned,
And night her mantle had thrown around,
The ghosts of the warriors lain,
Rise up from their graves again,
Again in battle line they stand,
The dead chief leading his command.
They then engage in deadly fight
And stop not till the morning light;
For at the first faint streak of day
These ghostly forms will fade away.
By Joseph L. Wescott as told by an old Ute Chief

Rocky Mountain National Park, located in northern Colorado, is a breathtaking expanse of wilderness encompassing over 415 square miles of rugged mountains, alpine lakes, and diverse ecosystems. Established in 1915, the park is renowned for its stunning vistas, including the towering peaks of the Continental Divide and the picturesque Trail Ridge Road, which offers panoramic views from over 12,000 feet above sea level. Visitors to the park can explore over 350 miles of hiking trails, encounter a rich variety of wildlife such as elk, bighorn sheep, and black bears, and experience the serene beauty of lush meadows and dense forests. 

The park also houses many of the infamous haunted places, like the real hotel that inspired Stephen King’s iconic novel, The Shining.

Read More: Check out the ghost stories from The Haunted History of The Stanley Hotel, the hotel in the Shining is based on.

Within the majestic beauty of Rocky Mountain National Park, where peaks touch the heavens and valleys cradle secrets, lies a tale that weaves through the landscape like the mist that graces its peaks. 

On misty mornings on the Grand Lake in the Rocky Mountain National park in Colorado, it is said that the ghosts of the Ute tribe are haunting the cursed water after drowning in it after a bloody battle.
Rocky Mountains: On misty mornings in the rocky mountain national park by Grand Lake, it is said that the ghost of the Ute Spirits from a bloody battle is still haunted the now cursed lake.

The Ute Tribe on the Grand Lake

Legend speaks of a group of Utes who, centuries ago, established a camp near the serene Grand Lake. This is Colorado’s largest natural body of water and in the time when the natives occupied the land, it was known as Spirit Lake. There are many stories around this lake, some claiming that the spirit of a mighty buffalo is roaming the lake when it is frozen, only leaving hoof prints behind.  

But the most haunted story about the Grand Lake is the Legend of the Ute Spirits. Where the tribe originally came from is uncertain, could they have come from the Great Basin or Mexico? Perhaps they were descendants of the Paleo-Indians who used to hunt mammoths and mastodons in the area. In any case, they held a stronghold in the Western slope of the Rockies for a long time. The nomadic tribes spent their summers in the area until the land was taken by the U.S government in 1803. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from the USA

The indigenous had lived in the area for thousands of years and the Ute tribe was primarily at the west side of the park around Grand Lake and Lake Granby. They were hunters and gatherers and migrated every season on the hunting grounds along the Western slope of the Continental Divide.

On misty mornings on the Grand Lake in the Rocky Mountain National park in Colorado, it is said that the ghosts of the Ute tribe are haunting the cursed water after drowning in it after a bloody battle.
The Ute People: In addition to their ancestral lands within Colorado and Utah, their historic hunting grounds extended into current-day Wyoming, Oklahoma, Arizona, and New Mexico. The tribe also had sacred grounds outside their home domain that were visited seasonally. Group of Ute Indians on the War Path. 1868. Andrew J. Russell, photographer.

This picturesque scene, however, would soon be marred by tragedy. The Utes found themselves unexpectedly ambushed by a rival tribe, the Arapahos and possibly the Cheyenne as well. The Arapahos were a neighboring tribe, originally from present day Canada who had migrated to the present day Colorado around 1790 because of conflict with their neighbors. They mostly settled in the eastern part of the park, and conflict between the two tribes escalated.

Originally they mostly fought over hunting ground, but after gold was found in Colorado in 1858, both of the tribes were pushed further away and confined them to reservations and by 1878, the Arapaho tribe were pushed into a reservation in Wyoming and Oklahoma, and the Ute pushed into the southwest corner of Colorado and Utah. 

On misty mornings on the Grand Lake in the Rocky Mountain National park in Colorado, it is said that the ghosts of the Ute tribe are haunting the cursed water after drowning in it after a bloody battle.
Ute Camp: Prior to living on reservations, Utes shared land with other tribal members according to a traditional societal property system. Instead of recognizing this lifestyle, the U.S. government provided allotments of land. The Utes were intended to farm the land, which also was a forced vocational change. Utes were forced to perform manual labor, relinquish their horses, and send their children to American Indian boarding schools. Almost half of the children sent to boarding school in Albuquerque died in the mid-1880s, due to tuberculosis or other diseases. Photo: Charles Craig, Uncompahgre Ute Indian Camp, 1893

But before the land was completely lost to them, there was fighting around the Grand Lake and evidence of fighting on the west side of the lake and maybe the east side close to Moraine Park. The Arapaho entered the area through Forest Canyon, avoiding detection by Ute scouts.

According to stories, around 300 Utes were killed, with few being able to escape. In a desperate bid to escape the violence, the women and children of the Ute tribe embarked on a canoe or some sort of raft, seeking refuge from the impending danger.

As fate would have it, a sudden gust of wind, an unseen force, disrupted the waters and capsized the canoe, plunging its occupants into the icy depths. The lake, once a source of solace, became a watery grave, claiming the lives of those who sought refuge on its surface.

The Ute Spirits on the Lake

The Ute, grief-stricken and haunted by the memories of that ill-fated day, came to view Grand Lake as a cursed place. They shunned its shores, steering clear of the watery abyss that held the echoes of their collective tragedy. The misty mornings that embraced the lake seemed to carry the whispers of the lost Ute women and children, their spirits forever entwined with the ethereal elements of the landscape.

Read More: Check out all haunted Lakes

Today, visitors to Rocky Mountain National Park may find themselves enraptured by the mist-kissed mornings, where the veil between the seen and the unseen grows thin. The legend holds that you can still see ghostly forms in the morning mist rising from the lake and hear the wailing of the lost women and children beneath the winter ice. 

It is also said that during these moments, the spirits of the Ute women and children manifest, their ghostly figures beckoning onlookers to join them in the depths of the lake.

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References:

The Legend Of Grand Lake | KRKY Ski Country 

The Ute Legend of Grand Lake | Grand County History Stories 

Native American History of Rocky Mountain National Park – Colorado Wilderness Rides and Guides 

https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/?a=d&d=ETG19140711.2.21&e=——-en-20–1–img-txIN%7ctxCO%7ctxTA——–0——

Rocky Mountain National Park: An Indigenous History 

The Legend of Grand Lake 


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