Stull Cemetery

Lecompton, Douglas, Kansas, United States

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Number of Images

10

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Description

The Stull Cemetery[20] has gained an ominous reputation due to urban legends involving Satan, the occult, and a purported "gateway to Hell".[21] The rumors about the cemetery were popularized by a November 1974 issue of The University Daily Kansan (the student newspaper of the University of Kansas), which claimed that the Devil appeared in Stull twice a year: once on Halloween, and once on the spring equinox.[22][23] People soon said that the cemetery was the location of one of the seven gates to Hell and that the nearby Evangelical Emmanuel Church ruin was "possessed" by the Devil. However, most academics, historians, and local residents are in agreement that the legend has no basis in historical fact and was created and spread by students.[19][23] In the years that followed the publication of the University Daily Kansan article, it was a popular activity for young folks (especially high school and college students from Lawrence or Topeka) to journey to the cemetery on Halloween or the equinox to "see the Devil". Many would jump fences or otherwise sneak their way onto the property. Over the decades, as the number of people making excursions to the cemetery grew, the graveyard started to deteriorate; this was exacerbated by vandals.[19][23] To combat this, the county's sheriff office patrols the area around the cemetery, especially on Halloween, and will arrest people for trespassing.[24] Those caught inside the cemetery after it is closed could face a maximum fine of $1,000 and up to six months in jail.[21] Despite its dubious origins, the legend of Stull Cemetery has been referenced numerous times in popular culture. The band Urge Overkill released the Stull EP in 1992, which features the church and a tombstone from the cemetery on the cover.[19][25] Films whose plot is based on the legends include Nothing Left to Fear,[26] Turbulence 3: Heavy Metal,[27] and the unreleased film Sin-Jin Smyth.[27] The cemetery is also the site of the final confrontation between Lucifer and Michael in "Swan Song", the season five finale of the television series Supernatural.[19][28] In-universe, Sam and Dean Winchester (the series' protagonists) are from Lawrence; in a 2006 interview, Eric Kripke (the creator of Supernatural and the showrunner during its first five seasons) revealed that he decided to have the two brothers be from Lawrence because of its closeness to Stull.[29] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stull,_Kansas
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Stull Cemetery, Created by EKSNi, Lecompton, Douglas, Kansas, United States