When Ted Ecker took a DNA test, he had no idea it would trace his roots to Chief Skenandoa, a towering Oneida warrior who helped shape early America.
Moab Man Uncovers Link to Chief Skenandoa
When Ted Ecker took a DNA test, he had no idea it would trace his roots to Chief Skenandoa, a towering Oneida warrior who helped shape early America.
|


Join our newsletter.
Stay informed.
Related Articles
-

Sugar House Restaurants on the Rise: New Spots Reshaping the Neighborhood
Sugar House is in the middle of a full-scale dining shift. Over the past two years, new openings, relocations, and rebrands have reshaped the neighborhood, bringing everything from shabu-shabu and Thai curries to steakhouse cocktails, food-hall energy, and century-old LA flavors. These additions are changing how locals eat, gather, and think about Sugar House as a dining destination.
To access this post, you must purchase Utah Stories (Digital + Print) or 3 month free trial (Digital). -

Utah’s X-Files: Is Utah Ground Zero for Alien Activity?
From reptilian encounters in Provo to strange lights over Utah Lake, the Beehive State is a hotbed of mystery. As UAP hearings unfold in Washington, Utah’s skies—and stories—are drawing new attention.
To access this post, you must purchase Utah Stories (Digital + Print) or 3 month free trial (Digital). -

Halloween in Ogden: Haunted Houses, Neighborhood Displays, and Fall Festivals
Ogden transforms every October. Streets become haunted spectacles, farms turn into fall wonderlands, and ghost stories echo through historic districts. From pumpkin patches to bone-chilling haunted houses, here’s where the real Halloween spirit comes alive.
To access this post, you must purchase Utah Stories (Digital + Print) or 3 month free trial (Digital). -

The Haunting History of Park City’s Glenwood Cemetery
In Park City’s Glenwood Cemetery lies the town’s first music teacher, who listened to his own funeral concert through a telephone. Around him rest miners crushed in avalanches, children lost to illness, and families who never saw another spring. The light filters through the trees, exaggerating the stillness, as if time has thinned here like the living and the dead are only separated by a breath.
To access this post, you must purchase Utah Stories (Digital + Print) or 3 month free trial (Digital).
