Devil's Playground documentary explores Calgary's most haunted urban myth - Action News
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Devil's Playground documentary explores Calgary's most haunted urban myth

Calgary filmmaker Dori Davidson-Revill has spent the past five years working on a documentary about the Devil's Playground a famous urban myth about children haunting the site of a turn-of-the-century schoolhouse fire.

First cut of film premieres at Calgary Comic Expo on April 28

In October 2014, Google Maps captured this photo of the property at view 8094 Ninth Avenue S.E., which is said to be the site where the schoolhouse in the Devil's Playground legend once stood. The buildings on this property have since been torn down. (Google Maps)

Legend has it that sometime in the past century, a schoolhouse on the edge of Calgary burned downkilling all inside. To this day, it is said, the ghosts of those who died hauntthe city.

The tale of the Devil's Playgroundis a famous southern Alberta urban legend that has fascinated ghost hunters and storytellers for years.

But is it true?

Did the school even exist? If so, wherewas it? Did it really catch on fire? Do the ghosts of four or eight schoolchildren depending on which version you hear still haunt the land where the building once stood?

Those are questions Calgary filmmakerDori Davidson-Revill has pondered since he first heard the story in high school. He has devoted the last five years of his life to investigating the tale and next weekhis documentary will make its debut at the Calgary Comic Expo.

Calgary filmmater Dori Davidson-Revill, right, seen here with film editor James Kennedy, has been working on his Devil's Playground documentary for the past five years. (Carly Stagg/CBC)

Davidson-Revill says he wanted to delve deep into the history of the Devil's Playground and explore the whole legend to uncover the truth.

"It's a real place in Calgary. There was actually a school on the land and it was run by a well-known family in Calgary, known as the Ellis family,"Davidson-Revilltold theCalgaryEyeopenerFriday.

"But as for a lot of the paranormal stuff, we tried separating the fact from the fiction."

Fact vs. fiction

Pinning down the exact location of the schoolhouse took some effort.

Davidson-Revill says over the years, at least 30 different locations were named as the "real" site of the Devil's Playground. Heand his team investigated several of them, including Symon'sValley Ranch and an abandoned home on Centre Street.

They finally pinpointed the real location ata once-rural area at 84th Street and Ninth AvenueS.E.

"The majority of the stories focused around that one, and that is the actual location, which is now gone. It's been torn down," he said.

Davidson-Revill collected a lot of anecdotal accounts from eyewitnesses who claimed to have seen strange things at the site handprints on foggy car windows, the sounds of children laughing, animal bones placed in strange patterns around the property.

A pact with the devil

They also heard several different versions about what exactly led to the fire.

We've had strange stories, from a crazy nun who burned the place down because she made a pact with the devil, to actual flying saucers and cows.-Calgary filmmakerDoriDavidson-Revill

"We've had strange stories, from a crazy nun who burned the place down because she made a pact with the devil, to actual flying saucers and cows," he said.

An interview with the owner of the property, Don Ellis, who has since died, revealed he was more afraid of people looking for ghosts than he was of ghosts themselves.

"He just told us scary stories of the trespassers, it was morea human element than it was an actual paranormal element haunting the land," Davidson-Revill said.

"He was always being harassed by people walking on [his property], some of them armed, and they would try looking for ghosts, they would break into his house."

Comic expo debut

Davidson-Revillsays his attempts to look for historical records of the event were met by filing errors. However, he did manage to determine a school existed on the property and it was active into the 1950s, despitesome versions of the story saying the schoolhouse burned down at the turn of the 20th century.

Itwas said to have been torched by a trespasser.

"The history is more fascinating than the paranormal aspect, and a lot more fun," saidDavidson-Revill.

Check out the the first cut ofDevil's Playgroundwhen it premiers April 28 at the Calgary Comic Expo.


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener