Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Weep, Woman, Weep: The Haunting of Logan Cemetery

Logan Cemetery
          The Logan Cemetery in Logan, Utah is located within the campus of Utah State University, stretching from central to north campus. Students walk through to get to classes, to get home, or even to find a quiet place to study. Near the center of the cemetery is an eerily lifelike statue of a woman kneeling in grief which has come to be known as the “weeping woman.” Able to be seen from several of the residence halls, it’s no surprise that this spooky cemetery is the source of an urban legend of its own. 

The Woman, the Myth, the Legend

            Although there are many variations of the tale, each version is similar in one way: if you visit the statue at night, you will be able to witness tears rolling down her face as she weeps for her deceased children. However, the details vary in almost every imaginable way. Some say you have to visit at midnight, others claim the anniversary of her children’s deaths or on a full moon. Certain versions even say that you must “make a circle around the statue with your friends and say ‘weep, woman, weep,’ or ‘cry, lady, cry’” (qtd. in Lambert). Some say her children were killed by her. People even debate over whether she cries actual tears or tears of blood. It is told that if you visit her, you can still see stains on the statue from where the tears ran down her face. However, having visited myself and failing to see these stains, I can’t help but wonder if they are a manifestation in the imaginations of people who tried to visit during the safe hours of the day, desperately hoping for their own tale to tell.

The Tragedy of Julia Cronquist

The graves of the Cronquist children
            The weeping woman statue was erected to memorialize Julia Cronquist by her husband Olif after five out of eight of their children died before adulthood. The tragedy begun in March 1889 when scarlet fever first struck the Cronquist household, killing her twins, Olif and Oliver, when they were just six years old. Five years later, she lost another child, Lilean. It is unclear whether Lilean was stillborn or died shortly after birth, but regardless, Julia had her second chance at happiness taken from her before she even had a chance to enjoy it (Jenn). Seven years after that, scarlet fever made its return and she lost two daughters, Emelia and Inez, on the same day at the ages of four and two respectively. Julia visited the graves of her lost children often to grieve the losses that had occurred before she eventually met her end in 1914 (Family). Julia died from heart disease, most likely a complication from when she had contracted scarlet fever earlier in her life (Jenn). She met an almost poetic end: a broken heart caused by the same disease that killed half her children.

Logic Behind the Legend

            It is not uncommon for ghost stories such as this to circulate among college campuses. For many students, they are experiencing the biggest change in their lifetime. Dropped in a strange city with strange people away from family, students tend to tackle the fear of the unknown by first tackling the fear of the supernatural. Exchanging stories between peers helps with the adjustment by increasing their understanding of the new environment, even if the tale shared is not realistic (Major 238).
The Weeping Woman
There are two forms of inclusion that occur when people partake in legends. The first form benefits ego over relationships and can be related to gossip. People tend to feel more comfortable when they are “in the know” of the world around them. Being able to say “Yes, I actually have heard of the weeping woman. This is the version I heard,” provides the same sort of satisfaction as saying that you know two of your acquaintances have started dating. In both cases, the information holds no importance to your life, but you feel good knowing it because it means someone liked you enough to tell you the story.
The other form of inclusion the legends bring to campus is known as “legend tripping” or “legend questing.” Legend tripping is the event where a group of friends go out and try to verify the legend for themselves. This presents a deeper level of interpersonal trust than the mere sharing of the tale. When people check out haunted locations together, there is an unspoken understanding that, should something happen, no one will be sacrificed to the ghoul for the sake of everyone else’s escape. Even further than that, collegiate legend quests are described by some as “a significant kind of experiential learning” (Tucker 185). When students at Utah State form a ring around the weeping woman statue and chant, they experience campus in a way that very few dare to, enhancing their connection to this strange new place that they now call “home.”

The Haunting Lives On

            Erected in the early 20th century, this haunted statue is almost as old as the university that surrounds it. Between regular commutes through the cemetery and folklore assignments given every semester in a course required for all university students, this particular legend shows no signs of slowing down. Whether this legend will withstand the test of time remains to be seen, but some solace can be found in the fact that, as long as this legend circulates, Julia Cronquist will never be alone again.


Works Cited
Family History. Utah Department of Administrative Services Division of Archives and Records Service, 22 Mar. 2013, http://archives.utah.gov/research/guides/familyhistory.htm. Accessed 17 Oct. 2016.
Jenn. “Weeping Woman – Logan Cemetery.” The Dead History. 14 Oct. 2012, www.thedeadhistory.com/cemeteries/weeping-woman-logan-cemetery/. Accessed 14 Oct. 2016.
Lambert, Katherine. “Haunted history surrounds Utah State campus.” The Utah Statesman. Utah State University, 30 Oct. 2014, http://usustatesman.com/haunted-history-surrounds-utah-state-campus/. Accessed 14 Oct. 2016.
Major, Claire, and Nathaniel Bray. "Exam Scams And Classroom Flimflams: Urban Legends As An Alternative Lens For Viewing The College Classroom Experience." Innovative Higher Education 32.5 (2008): 237-250. Academic Search Premier. Web. 18 Oct. 2016.
Tucker, Elizabeth. Haunted Halls: Ghostlore of American College Campuses. University Press of Mississippi, 2007.



Photo Credits:
Fig. 1: Kirsten Mara, 11 Oct. 2016
Fig. 2: Kirsten Mara, 11 Oct. 2016
Fig. 3: Kirsten Mara, 11 Oct. 2016