Norwood Young America, Minnesota·cemetery Ferguson's Cemetery stands isolated among the pine forests of Norwood Young America, Minnesota, a final resting place established in 1869 when Frederick B. Bagwell donated the land to serve the burial needs of the surrounding community. The cemetery's location, set apart from the town proper and surrounded by dense evergreen trees, creates a landscape of considerable solitude and natural beauty—a place where the boundary between the cultivated human space of the burial ground and the wild forest surrounding it remains intentionally maintained. The grounds themselves maintain the typical features of nineteenth-century rural cemeteries: headstones and markers arranged in orderly rows, paths enabling visitors to move among the graves, the carefully tended grass and landscaping that communities devote to such places. The quiet atmosphere of the cemetery has become more pronounced over the decades as the surrounding pine forest has matured, creating a sense of isolation that intensifies as one moves away from the town's center. The cemetery has served its designated function for nearly a century and a half, providing a resting place for hundreds of individuals whose lives were lived in the surrounding region, whose family connections and community ties drew them to be buried in this isolated but sacred ground.
Ferguson's Cemetery earned recognition as one of the most haunted burial grounds in Minnesota, gaining national attention through inclusion in a published book examining haunted locations across the United States, with Ferguson's Cemetery selected as Minnesota's representative entry for paranormal significance. The primary spirits associated with the cemetery are a young boy and his dog, entities whose continued presence at the burial ground suggests an attachment that death failed to sever. The apparition of the ghostly child has been observed by multiple witnesses, described as a youthful figure capable of manifesting with varying degrees of clarity. The dog accompanying the child appears as a phantom animal, sometimes described distinctly as a single ghostly dog and sometimes referenced more broadly as a phantom dog pack—suggesting either variability in witness perception or the presence of multiple canine spirits inhabiting the cemetery. Disembodied voices, particularly those identifiable as childish or youthful in character, have been heard throughout the cemetery grounds, vocalizations lacking visible source but carrying emotional content that suggests conscious communication rather than random auditory phenomena. Unexplained footsteps and knockings resound through the cemetery, particularly in the areas most frequented by visitors and investigators.
The story of the boy and his dog at Ferguson's Cemetery resonates with fundamental human and animal attachments that transcend death. The visible manifestations of both child and canine companion suggest entities whose connection to each other and to the location proved sufficiently strong to persist beyond the threshold of mortality. Whether the child and dog died together in some tragic incident or whether their bonds of affection drew them to the same location after separate deaths remains unclear from available documentation. The apparition sightings have included observations of the two entities together, moving in apparent proximity and interaction, suggesting that their spiritual connection mirrors the earthly relationship that likely defined their shared history. The phantom dog pack reference may indicate either multiple animals drawn to the location by association with the child's spirit or the manifestation of the single dog with variable clarity depending on observer perspective and paranormal conditions.
Ferguson's Cemetery continues to function as an active burial ground and as a historical landmark preserved and maintained by the community. The documented paranormal activity has attracted paranormal investigators, paranormal research teams, and amateur ghost hunters who conduct investigations and attempt to establish more detailed understanding of the spiritual phenomena. Photography documenting orbs and other subtle manifestations has been conducted at the cemetery, adding to the broader documentation of paranormal activity. The isolation of the cemetery, surrounded by pine forest and separated from urban development, creates an ideal environment for spiritual activity to persist undisturbed. The cemetery maintains its role as a place of mourning and remembrance for living community members, while simultaneously functioning as a location where the boundary between life and death appears unusually permeable. The boy and his dog remain among the most documented and recognized spirits in Minnesota's paranormal geography, their continued presence at Ferguson's Cemetery speaking to the enduring power of the bonds—between child and animal, between the living and the dead—that give meaning and purpose to human and animal existence.
Apparitions
Light Anomalies
Disembodied Voices
Unexplained Footsteps / Knockings
+1