The Farson Mercantile, located in Farson, Wyoming, stands as a historic commercial building and community gathering place whose history encompasses the development of small-town commerce in the American West. The structure was constructed in 1908, during a period when remote Wyoming communities were establishing the commercial and social infrastructure necessary to support settlements far from major urban centers. The building was originally designed and utilized as a general mercantile, the type of establishment that served a critical function in frontier communities by providing dry goods, supplies, and products essential to daily life. The mercantile would have been a central community gathering point, a location where residents encountered one another, exchanged information, and conducted the transactions necessary to their survival and prosperity. The physical structure was built to withstand the harsh Wyoming climate and the demands of frontier commerce, with architectural and construction qualities reflecting the resources and building practices available in the early twentieth century.
Over the century-plus of the Farson Mercantile's existence, the building has been transformed and repurposed to meet changing commercial needs and community preferences. The structure has housed various enterprises, including operations as a deli and ice cream parlor, souvenir shop, and other retail ventures. The building's longevity and its continued operation into contemporary times speaks to both the quality of its original construction and the community's commitment to maintaining a historic commercial center in a remote location. The evolution of the building's commercial uses reflects broader economic and social transformations in rural Wyoming, from nineteenth-century frontier commerce to contemporary tourism-oriented retail. The building's transformation into an establishment selling ice cream and souvenirs represents a shift from necessity-based commerce to recreation and tourism-based commercial activity, a transformation that many rural American communities have experienced as their economic foundations have shifted.
The paranormal reputation of the Farson Mercantile centers on a female spirit referred to as "the lady," a ghostly entity whose presence has become established through consistent reports from staff and visitors over an extended period. The apparition has been reported specifically at the top of the stairs within the building, a location that may hold particular significance regarding her original presence in the structure or her manner of death. The manifestations of the apparition, appearing at consistent locations within the building, suggest either a spiritual attachment to a specific area or to the building itself, or an inability or unwillingness to move beyond the location of a traumatic or significant event. The female spirit has been reported as visible to witnesses, a transparent or semi-transparent apparition whose visual manifestation carries sufficient definition to be recognized and described by multiple observers.
Beyond the visual apparition, the Farson Mercantile has become known for a specific category of paranormal phenomena involving the movement of physical objects. Staff members preparing to close the establishment at the end of business hours have reported experiencing the mysterious movement of cups and other objects within the building. These objects have been described as flying or moving through the air apparently of their own accord, without any visible physical force or mechanism explaining their movement. The displacement of objects occurs in the pizza oven area as well as in other locations within the structure, suggesting either multiple manifestations or an entity capable of manifesting across different portions of the building. One particularly intriguing report involves pizza oven timers turning off or becoming disabled apparently of their own accord, electrical devices apparently manipulated by paranormal forces.
The specific character of the paranormal phenomena at the Farson Mercantile—involving both an apparition and kinetic activity focused on objects and electrical devices—suggests an entity of considerable energy and intentionality. The concentration of phenomena in the evening, particularly when staff are closing the building for the night, suggests either entities more active during hours of darkness or spirits responding to the transition from commerce to closure. The Farson Mercantile continues to operate as both a retail establishment and a recognized paranormal location within Wyoming paranormal lore. The building's persistent commercial function, despite being located in a remote and isolated community, reflects the continued economic importance of the location and the community's commitment to preserving its historic character. The female spirit's continued manifestation through apparitions and object movement suggests an entity deeply attached to the structure and its operations, present through over a century of the building's transformation from frontier mercantile to contemporary retail enterprise.
Apparitions
Object Manipulations