Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Dead and Buried: The KC area has a lot of famous non-breathers



There are a lot of famous people in Kansas City – and they're dead. From gangsters and Western outlaws to Mormon pioneers and sausage makers, the Kansas City area is full of famous stiffs.

Paranormal? No, but kinda neat.

"There's a lot of famous dead people," said Vicki Beck, a local historian. "Charlie 'Bird' Parker is up there in Lincoln Cemetery, Jim Bridger, Mount Washington; Cole Younger is out in Lee's Summit, Frank James, Annie Chambers, a famous madam ..."

There are seven Revolutionary soldiers buried in the Kansas City area and more Civil War personalities than you can count. The most famous name in the area is probably the outlaw Jesse James, buried in Mount Olivet Cemetery in Kearney, Mo. But who's the most famous name buried in Jackson County?

"Frank James would probably be the best known," said Victor Meador, a staff librarian at the Jackson County Genealogical Society Research Library.

Let's keep it in the family.

Of course, there are famous dead Kansas Citians who never made it home to rest, like "Beverly Hillbillies" creator Paul Henning, and dancer Ginger Rogers.

"She was born here, went to Hollywood, came back here afterward, but of course she lived in Hollywood and died and was buried there," Meador said.

The following is a list of famous Kansas City-area graves compiled with information from Findagrave.com and some guys I know.

Famous KC-area graves:

– Anderson, William T. "Bloody Bill." Civil War guerrilla, one of Quantrill's Raiders. Pioneer Cemetery, Richmond, Mo.


– Armour brothers, Andrew, Charles W., Kirkland B. and Simeon. Four of five Armours who started Armour and Company Meat Packing. Elmwood Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Atchison, David Rice. U.S. Senator who was allegedly "president for a day" between the terms of James K. Polk and Zachary Taylor. Greenlawn Cemetery, Plattsburg, Mo.

– Bingham, George Caleb. Famous American painter. Union Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Brink, James W. Rider for the Pony Express who carried mail on the first run. Mount Auburn Cemetery, St. Joseph, Mo.

– Buchanan, Junious "Buck." Kansas City Chief and Pro Football Hall of Famer. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Civella, Nick. K.C. crime boss, although he always denied it. Mount Saint Marys Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Coates, Sarah. Instrumental in the Woman's Suffrage movement and was a friend of Susan B. Anthony. Elmwood Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Cowdery, Oliver. Scribe who wrote down the Book of Mormon as it was dictated by the prophet Joseph Smith. Pioneer Cemetery, Richmond, Mo.

– Ford, Bob. The man who shot Jesse James – says so on his plaque, I’ve been there. Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Mo.

– Goldberg, Larry. Author and owner of New York City pizza chain Goldberg's Pizza. Kehilath Israel Blue Ridge Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Goodloe, James W. The Lawrence Raid by Quantrill's Raiders was planned on his farm. Blue Springs Cemetery, Blue Springs.

– Grooms, William. One of two Kansas City police detectives who were ambushed by mobsters in the 1933 Union Station Massacre. Mount Saint Mary's Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Hall, Joyce Clyde. Founder of Hallmark Cards. Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Harris, Martin. One of the three witnesses to the Book of Mormon. Pioneer Cemetery, Richmond, Mo.

– James, Frank. Outlaw and older brother of Jesse. Hill Park Cemetery, Independence.

– James, Jesse Woodson. Notorious outlaw. Mount Olivet Cemetery, Kearney, Mo.

– Jim the Wonder Dog. Setter believed to have psychic power. Marshall Ridge Park Cemetery, Marshall, Mo.

– Kauffman, Ewing Marion. Founder of Marion Laboratories, Inc., and owner of the Kansas City Royals. Kauffman Foundation and Memorial Garden, Kansas City.

– Kearns, Leannah "Annie Chambers." KC's most notorious madam. Her cathouse was at the southwest corner of Third and Wyandotte. Elmwood Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Kelley, Clarence M. Director of the FBI under Richard Nixon. Mount Washington Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Kelly, Edward Harry. Band leader and ragtime composer. Mount Saint Mary's Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Land, Frank S. "Dad." Founded the Order of De Molay in 1919. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Lazia, John. Crime boss of Kansas City's North Side. Linked to the Union Station Massacre. Mount Saint Marys Cemetery, Kansas City.

– McCoy, John Calvin. Founder of Westport and, later, Kansas City. Union Cemetery, Kansas City.

– McElroy, Ken Rex. Bully of Skidmore, Mo., killed by the townspeople he terrorized. Memorial Park, St. Joseph, Mo.

– McKitterick, William. The man who domesticated bees. Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Pleasant Hill, Mo.

– Moten, Benjamin "Bennie." Pianist and band leader who helped define Kansas City jazz. Highland Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Nation, Carry Amelia. Prohibitionist. Belton Cemetery, Belton, Mo.

– Nelson, William Rockhill. Cofounder of The Kansas City Star. Mount Washington Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Nichols, Charles "Kid." Major League Baseball Hall of Famer. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Noland, Ledstone. Soldier from the Revolutionary War. Pitcher Cemetery, Independence.

– Paige, Satchel. Major League and Negro Baseball Hall of Famer. Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Parker, Charlie "Bird." Legendary jazz musician. Lincoln Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Pendergast, Thomas. Kansas City crime boss and Democratic Party powerhouse – the guy who got Truman elected to the Senate. Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Porter, Darrell R. Former Major League Baseball catcher for the Kansas City Royals, Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals. Longview Memorial Gardens, Kansas City.

– Quantrill, William Clarke. Guerrilla leader. Confederate Cemetery, Higginsville, Mo.

– Quisenberry, Daniel. Major League Baseball pitcher for the Kansas City Royals, St. Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Rice, Raymond B. Founder of the R.B. Rice sausage company. Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Sappington, Dr. John. Used quinine as a cure for malaria. Sappington Cemetery, Arrow Rock, Mo.

– Scott, Martha. Actress who appeared on "General Hospital," "Charlotte's Webb 2" and "The Bionic Woman." Masonic Cemetery, Jamesport, Mo.

– Smith, Hilton. Major League Baseball Hall of Famer. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Stover, Russell. Founder of Russell Stover chocolates. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Taylor, Johnnie Harrison. R&B and Gospel singer who sang "Who's Making Love" and "Disco Lady." Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Thomas, Derrick Vincent. Kansas City Chiefs perennial All-Pro linebacker. Mount Washington Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Truman, Bess. First Lady. Truman Presidential Museum and Library, Independence.

– Truman, Harry S. 33rd President of the United States. Truman Presidential Museum and Library, Independence.

– Whitmer, David. One of the three witnesses to the Book of Mormon. Richmond Cemetery, Richmond, Mo.

– Williams, Claude "Fiddler." Jazz pioneer. Mount Moriah Cemetery, Kansas City.

– Young, Hiram. Social reformer and former slave. Woodlawn Cemetery, Independence.

– Younger, Cole. Outlaw and murderer. Lee's Summit Historical Cemetery, Lee's Summit.

– Younger, James "Jim." Outlaw. Lee's Summit Historical Cemetery, Lee's Summit.

– Younger, Robert "Bob." Outlaw. Lee's Summit Historical Cemetery, Lee's Summit.

Yep, there are a lot of famous dead people around Kansas City. Let’s hope they stay that way.

Got a scary story? Ever played with a Ouija board, heard voices, seen a ghost, UFO or a creature you couldn’t identify? Let Jason know about it: Jason Offutt c/o The Examiner, 410 S. Liberty, Independence, Mo. 64050, or jasonoffutt@hotmail.com. Include your name, address and telephone number. Your story might make an upcoming installment of “From the Shadows.”

Jason’s book of ghost stories, “Haunted Missouri: A Ghostly Guide to Missouri’s Most Spirited Spots,” is coming in May. FREE SHIPPING when you order online at: https://tsup.truman.edu/store/ViewBook.aspx?Book=849. Visit Jason’s Web site, www.jasonoffutt.com, for his other books.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Waiting for Bigfoot -- Part 2

Author’s note: This is the second in a two-part series on Kansan Randy Harrington’s quest to find Bigfoot.

Randy Harrington knows Bigfoot exists – he’s seen one. An eight-foot-tall, human-like creature covered with reddish-brown hair. It approached his truck one night and rifled through the bed.

Randy knows because he was in the cab of the truck waiting for it.

“When I was a kid I read a Bigfoot book in elementary school and have been fascinated by it ever since,” he said. “Now I know it’s real.”

Randy, 41, of Leavenworth, Kan., has investigated Bigfoot for the past five years. And, although Bigfoot officially remains unknown to science, Randy said there’s evidence to support Bigfoot’s existence. Overly large human-like footprints, trees twisted into X shapes, and eyewitness accounts – almost everything but a Bigfoot.

“I don’t deny the fact that we do need a body,” he said.

During Randy’s investigations with the Green Country Bigfoot Research Center in Oklahoma, he’s seen enough evidence that Bigfoot isn’t just real, it’s intelligent.

“The twisted trees and the X formations, these things mean something to them,” he said. “We can say they’re territorial markers but we don’t know. I’m thinking it’s gotta be some kind of mapping system for them.”

Randy’s current Bigfoot stalking spot is Oklahoma’s Chickasaw National Recreation Area.

“There’s something that happened down there that shows us just how intelligent they are,” he said. “We found evidence that they bait their own prey. We have found a pound of acorn meat that had been hulled. They were stacked up in a little pile. A week or so later a hunter heard that a deer had been attacked and killed on that spot.”

Then there are the eyewitness accounts.

Randy said one Oklahoma woman reported seeing multiple creatures in her yard.

“There was a lady (Bigfoot) eating fruit in her back yard with little Bigfoots, and when they got too far away she slapped her thigh and they came back to her,” he said.

Why a Bigfoot hasn’t been captured is evident to Randy – they take care of their own.

“There’ve been multiple reports of one who’s fallen or have gotten shot and they’ve been carried off by other Bigfoot,” he said. “They do not want to have anything to do with us.”

In Missouri, Randy is involved in investigations in the Mark Twain National Forest and St. Louis.

“There’s a lot around St. Louis,” he said. “Any low-lying area that’s heavily wooded will have a breeding population of these animals. The fact that they will come in close to society is starting to be more and more clear. The park system where I had my encounter was near Sulfur (Okla.) and there were reports of them coming into town and eating out of Dumpsters.”

Missouri has its Bigfoot history, mainly around Louisiana in the early 1970s, but there have been reports throughout the state from the 1920s through today.

“I think they’ve been there all along,” Randy said. “When you go back through history and look at the names they gave animals, you think of the Missouri Momo, the Green Hills Monster, and that was probably a name for Bigfoot.”

Randy spends a lot of spare time in Oklahoma in a small trailer he built just to hunt Bigfoot. Although he’s seen one of the creatures, he wants to capture Bigfoot on video. But if he doesn’t, he at least knows he’s seen the most sought-after, unknown primate in North America.

“I’m basically doing this for me,” he said. “I just want to see one again. I want to look one in the face.”

Copyright 2007 by Jason Offutt

Got a scary story? Ever played with a Ouija board, heard voices, seen a ghost, UFO or a creature you couldn’t identify? Let Jason know about it: Jason Offutt c/o The Examiner, 410 S. Liberty, Independence, Mo. 64050, or jasonoffutt@hotmail.com. Include your name, address and telephone number. Your story might make an upcoming installment of “From the Shadows.”

Jason’s book of ghost stories, “Haunted Missouri: A Ghostly Guide to Missouri’s Most Spirited Spots,” is coming in May. FREE SHIPPING when you order online at: https://tsup.truman.edu/store/ViewBook.aspx?Book=849. Visit Jason’s Web site, www.jasonoffutt.com, for his other books.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Waiting for Bigfoot -- Part 1

Author’s note: This is the first in a two-part series on Kansan Randy Harrington’s quest to find Bigfoot.

Randy Harrington sat in the cab of his pickup; a blanket draped over the windows hiding him from the world.

He didn’t want to be seen.

A tent Randy had pitched earlier sat a few yards away, next to a table laden with fruit. The tent was a decoy; the fruit was bait. The full moon bathed the landscape of Oklahoma’s Chickasaw National Recreation Area in light and, peeking from behind the blanket, Randy could see the whole campsite.

He was waiting for Bigfoot, the legendary North American ape.

“I’ve had a close encounter,” Randy said. “It blew my mind. It’s an unbelievable ride I’ve been on.”

Randy, 41, owns a siding company in Leavenworth, Kan., and investigates Bigfoot sightings for the Green Country Bigfoot Research Center in Oklahoma.

As Randy sat in his truck in February 2006, listening to the sounds of midnight through a parabolic microphone, he heard something moving on two legs.

“When it walked across the gravel pathways, it dragged a stick,” he said. “It was a Bigfoot carrying a stick. One of the metal posts in the park got hit by the stick – bang.”

When the creature got near his pickup, Randy said, it stopped. Then he heard it hoot.

“I heard a burst of 15 to 16 owl calls right behind my truck,” he said. “I’m listenin’, then it took two or three steps forward and then stopped. It was inching closer and closer to my truck.”

Randy said the creature was using owl calls to make sure the campsite was empty, then it hit a tree with the stick

“I heard sloshing coming from across the creek,” Randy said. “It was another Bigfoot coming to it. It was communicating with another Bigfoot (with the stick).”

Peeking from behind a fold in the blanket, Randy saw something terrifying in the side mirror.

“I could see one come from behind the tree,” he said. “I thought I was going to have a heart attack. It was humanoid. At that point my heart’s starting to race.”

The Bigfoot, covered in reddish-brown hair, didn’t realize Randy was in the truck, but Randy didn’t know that.

“I didn’t move a muscle,” he said. “After 15 calls, all hell broke loose. They came up to my truck. The big one, his arms were swinging side to side like an ape, stepped around my truck. I’ve got ladder racks on the back of my truck that are seven feet tall, and this thing was head and shoulders above the rack.”

Randy works for a fire department and said he’s been trained not to be afraid of anything – except this.

“I thought it was going to rip the door off my truck,” he said. “I pulled my back off the seat because I thought they might feel my heartbeat through the metal of the truck.”

The back of his truck sank when Randy felt a Bigfoot step on the bumper and he reached for the ignition key.

“I thought I was going to have to get out of there,” he said. “But they started rifling through the Tupperware containers in the back of my truck.”

He didn’t turn the key.

“I did not want them to know I was in that truck,” he said. “I did nothing but listen.”

The creatures turned over a generator in the bed of the truck and banged propane bottles together.

“Then they walked around my campsite and then they left,” he said. “I had a table full of fruit that they didn’t touch. The came to my truck with a purpose.”

The creatures never stepped in front of his truck – Randy said they’re too intelligent to do that – but, he wished they had. He never saw their face.

“I had a video camera and I was going to flip on my headlights and have unbelievable video,” he said. But Randy just sat in his truck, frozen, listening to the two Bigfoot leave the campsite.

Randy has researched Bigfoot for the past five years. Although he’s investigated spots in Missouri and Kansas, his eyes are on Oklahoma.

“There’s definitely a breeding population down there,” he said.

Next week: Sightings in Missouri and the behavior of Bigfoot.

Copyright 2007 by Jason Offutt

Got a scary story? Ever played with a Ouija board, heard voices, seen a ghost, UFO or a creature you couldn’t identify? Let Jason know about it: Jason Offutt c/o The Examiner, 410 S. Liberty, Independence, Mo. 64050, or jasonoffutt@hotmail.com. Include your name, address and telephone number. Your story might make an upcoming installment of “From the Shadows.”

Jason’s book of ghost stories, “Haunted Missouri: A Ghostly Guide to Missouri’s Most Spirited Spots,” is coming in May. FREE SHIPPING when you order online at: https://tsup.truman.edu/store/ViewBook.aspx?Book=849. Visit Jason’s Web site, www.jasonoffutt.com, for his other books.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Angry Hooded Shadows

Joseph was 18 when he moved into his first apartment, but he didn’t stay long – the apartment was angry.

“There was tension in the apartment,” Joseph said. “The longer I lived there, the stronger the tension would get. As I would walk across the rooms I would feel sensations going through me.”

Joseph felt the anger growing in his apartment, but nothing prepared him for what followed.

“One night I woke up and looked at the foot of my bed,” Joseph said. “There was a blacker-than-night creature. It spun around like it was angry and confused. I felt the whole presence of it at the foot of my bed.”

He turned on the light and the thing was gone – two weeks later, it returned.

“I was visited (by) one that was about seven-foot tall with a hood and a cape,” Joseph said. “It just came up to my side of the bed and towered over me.”

A black hooded figure; this specter has haunted humans for centuries. It can appear as a shadow lurking at the periphery of your vision, but sometimes it is fully visible, like it was to Joseph.

In his book of sermons, “Footprints on the Sands of Time,” William Branham refers to this “dark, gloomy-looking shadow” as the Death Angel. Branham claims to have seen this angel which has “a hood of dark smoke” and foretells someone’s death.

Psychic Dawn Newlan of the Ozark Paranormal Society has seen entities like this and knows how frightening they can be.

“These figures are … an evil entity,” Dawn said. “The fear it sends through your body is something hard to describe, but you know with every inch of your existence that what you are in the presence of is not good and you should not be there.”

That terror invaded Joseph when the creature appeared in his bedroom.

“I felt such fear I was paralyzed. It just stood there like it was looking through me,” Joseph said. “I covered my head like a kid. This one was bold and meant to bring about fear, and I knew it.”

When Joseph grew brave enough to peel off the blanket, the figure was gone – but the fear remained. After that night, Joseph rarely stayed in his apartment alone, but anyone staying there also saw the entity.

“My brother saw them,” he said. “A friend of mine woke me up screaming one night. She had seen one of them, so I knew it wasn’t only me.”

Joseph eventually moved.

“I am just glad they didn’t follow me,” he said.

Joseph’s experience isn’t unique.

“My brother-in-law saw one of these things in his apartment. It was not friendly – at all,” an anonymous Shadows reader wrote. “He said he could feel the anger directed toward him. He saw it. Tall, dark, no face, with a hood.”

The online Shadows reader Truthseeker has also seen the hooded figure.

“I was laying in bed at night, unable to sleep, a dark black figure floated about a foot or two above my bed,” she said. “His head looked like it was hooded… no detail other than that. It was very menacing and obviously not a good thing.”

The visits soon became frequent and Truthseeker had had enough of them.

“I sat up in the bed and I actually took a swing at this thing,” she said. “The instant my fist would have come in contact with it, it vanished. I was shocked, although I’m not sure what I was expecting. I just let my anger and frustration come out.”

It must have worked; the black, hooded figure hasn’t visited Truthseeker since.

“I felt very good after I figured out that I had ‘defeated’ it that night,” she said.

Although Dawn doesn’t suggest attacking these dark, hooded entities, she said people terrorized by them should find spiritual protection.

“They had better find absolute faith in one divine energy,” Dawn said. “My favorite saying is ‘You cannot harm me for I am protected by the Hand of God.’”

Copyright 2007 by Jason Offutt

Got a scary story? Ever played with a Ouija board, heard voices, seen a ghost, UFO or a creature you couldn’t identify? Let Jason know about it: Jason Offutt c/o The Examiner, 410 S. Liberty, Independence, Mo. 64050, or jasonoffutt@hotmail.com. Include your name, address and telephone number. Your story might make an upcoming installment of “From the Shadows.”

Jason’s book of ghost stories, “Haunted Missouri: A Ghostly Guide to Missouri’s Most Spirited Spots,” is coming in May. FREE SHIPPING when you order online at: https://tsup.truman.edu/store/ViewBook.aspx?Book=849. Visit Jason’s Web site, www.jasonoffutt.com, for his other books.