Believers, skeptics welcomed at Bigfoot Museum


By AUSTIN KOELLER

Associated Press

HASTINGS, Neb.

Skeptics and believers alike can learn more about Bigfoot thanks to a new museum.

The Crossroads of America Bigfoot Museum in Hastings hosted its grand opening recently. Harriett McFeely, the museum’s owner, said she became interested in Bigfoot after seeing footprints on Mount Everest on TV.

“I was 8 years old, and they showed pictures on TV of these footprints that the Himalayan natives called ‘yeti.’ I saw those pictures and never doubted it,” McFeely said. “At that time, that was when I got interested in science. I have been interested in science my whole life. I studied on my own for years. Then, in 1967, Patty walked down Bluff Creek, everybody saw that, and I was hooked for life.”

She said she got the idea for the Bigfoot Museum after looking at her dining room table cluttered with Bigfoot artifacts.

“I couldn’t see it. Just about everything that is in this museum I have had in my dining room,” McFeely said. “There were pictures, footprints and everything; it was driving me crazy. I have gone out to different places and given talks. I always take different things I know about to groups. I thought it would be so much fun for people to see that.”

She said she started looking for a site for a museum to house the artifacts and did not have any luck finding a location due to the sites either being too big, too small or too costly. Finally, one day, a friend suggested she use a small corner of her house, previously used for wedding receptions, as a museum.

“What is the museum now used to be one giant room, and I would cook the rehearsal dinner. I had room for 50 people to sit down and eat. Then, I later divided it up and made the walls. So I thought, ‘There is my museum,’” McFeely said.

The Grand Island Independent reported that the artifacts housed at the Bigfoot Museum include three 2,000-year-old skulls, Bigfoot hand castings and a picture of Bigfoot “Patty” famously walking across Bluff Creek in 1967.

McFeely said she realizes some people are skeptical about the existence of Bigfoot, but she still welcomes them to her museum.

“I like the skeptics because they ask really good questions and make you think, which is good,” she said. “In all this time, I have only had one skeptic that was really nasty.”