Park Visit
Visit Adam's Hill Park in Richfield, exploring the grounds where paranormal sensed presence phenomena have been reported.
- Duration:
- 1 hr
Age
All Ages
Cost
Free
Free
Access
Wheelchair OK
Park grounds, gentle slopes
Equipment
Photos OK
Adam's Hill represents a preserved natural area within Richfield. The park occupies terrain that reflects the region's historical agricultural development. The location's history predates modern suburban development of the Twin Cities area.
Adam's Hill carries a paranormal reputation rooted in the tragic suicide of a farmer. The specific circumstances and timeline of this death remain undocumented in public records. Paranormal reports describe a sensed presence—the awareness of unseen entities without visual confirmation. This sensed presence manifests as emotional unease or spatial awareness of non-human presence.
Notable Entities
Visit Adam's Hill Park in Richfield, exploring the grounds where paranormal sensed presence phenomena have been reported.
Gatlinburg, TN
Great Smoky Mountains National Park preserves 522,427 acres of southern Appalachian terrain across Tennessee and North Carolina. The land was the heart of the Cherokee Nation before forced removal in 1838 along what became the Trail of Tears, and home to Appalachian Scots-Irish and English settler communities through the early twentieth century. Congress authorized the park in 1926; it was formally dedicated by Franklin D. Roosevelt on September 2, 1940.
Grand Canyon Village, AZ
Grand Canyon National Park encompasses 1,217,262 acres of canyon, plateau, and Colorado River corridor in northern Arizona. President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed the Grand Canyon a national monument in 1908; Congress established the national park on February 26, 1919. The park's South Rim Grand Canyon Village Historic District and North Rim Grand Canyon Lodge are landmarks of early National Park Service architecture.
Estes Park, CO
Rocky Mountain National Park, established by President Woodrow Wilson on January 26, 1915, preserves 415 square miles of Front Range Colorado including Trail Ridge Road, Longs Peak, and the headwaters of the Colorado River. The park's Ute and Arapaho heritage is documented in oral tradition and in early settler accounts including the Legend of Grand Lake.