SAN ANGELO, TX — There’s an abandoned campsite inside San Angelo State Park that has become the subject of local ghost stories, paranormal investigations, and eerie speculation.
Known as the Lower Ghost Camp, the site was built in 1995 and abandoned around 2002. Today, it’s littered with cracked concrete tables and decaying wood awnings, surrounded by cacti and dry brush. A nearby boat ramp leads nowhere, as the area is completely dry and overgrown.
The ghost camp gained notoriety in 2015, when paranormal investigator Paul Stewart claimed to have recorded shadowy figures and voices in the area, including what he believed were Native American languages. Stewart’s group, the West Texas Paranormal Society, documented their findings using electronic voice phenomena (EVP) tools.
Texas Parks and Wildlife notes that the land once belonged to the Jumano tribe and has seen continuous human activity for more than 18,000 years. Though no one lives there now, wasps and dirt daubers have taken over what used to be the campground restroom.
On Sept. 17, San Angelo State Park staff announced that the Lower Ghost Camp Trail—along with the Shady and North Scenic Loop trails—would remain closed while repairs are made following recent storm damage.
The rest of the park remains open for day use and camping.
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Listed By: Rita Repulsa
It was from above the spot upon which that very park bathroom was built that I once attempted to rally the now extinct Wini people, (pronounced: Weenie,) to abandon their proto-leftist ways and stand their ground against the then invading Jumanos. Tragically, I was unsuccessful in my attempt, and their spirits still roam in confusion to this day...
https://sanangelolive.com/comment/48251#comment-48251
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