10/30: Shalloween (2002 article)

Webmaster’s Note: In my early career, I worked in broadcast radio, and for a newspaper. I used to write short “musings” about various topics. I recently found one I wrote about five years after I moved to Iowa and learned about “Beggar’s Night.”


Date: November 13, 2002 5:52:45 PM CST
Subject: Musing 10/30: Shalloween

Halloween isn’t what is used to be. At least, not to me. You see, I used to live for that special time of year when my makeup and special effects lighting could be put to good use. I’d often say I would gladly give up one of the two gift getting holidays for an extra Halloween—I liked it that much. Imagine my displeasure when I moved to Iowa in 1995 and discovered that Halloween didn’t exist here.

That’s right. It didn’t exist. Well, obviously October 31st had not been legislatively removed from Iowa calendars, but the actual celebration of the wonderfully fun event known as Halloween was nowhere to be seen. At least not in the capital city of Des Moines.

A long time friend of mine, Joel, clued me in. He’d recently moved to Iowa from Illinois and he had already discovered that an event called “Beggar’s Night” had replaced our favorite holiday. Beggar’s Night (assuming it is supposed to be possessive) was celebrated on October 30th. Children would dress up in costumes and go door to door and collect candy. That certainly sounds like Halloween to me. However, on the actual night of Halloween there were no trick or treaters to be found, though there was a rather large amount of adult Halloween parties at various clubs and similar establishments.

What’s the deal? After I asked various Iowa locals, I found an answer. Halloween, they told me, was moved a day earlier for the children in order to allow the adults to party on the 31st and not drive home drunk and run over the kids. Nonsense, I thought. How could a state (city?) change the date of a holiday? Well, adults do run legislation so perhaps it was true.

So October 30th arrived and I dressed up and went into town to get a coffee at a place that, amazingly enough, served only coffees. (I’d never seen a coffee shop before. In 1995, the trend was still new.) What a fabulous bonus! I got to dress up a day earlier than normal. Maybe it wasn’t all that bad.

Along the way I saw various children going door to door dressed as cross country skiiers. It was snowing, you see, which was yet another thing wrong with Hallow… er, Beggar’s Night in Iowa. I’ve heard of a White Christmas, and was eager to see one in person that year, but never a white Halloween… And so the evening quickly passed as lovely snow drifted down on top of roaming ghouls and goblins.

On the next night, the adults partied.

Is this a true story? You bet. Was Halloween actually relocated to prevent adults from running over children in a drunken stupor after the annual work Halloween gathering? Today, after all, it’s much more trendy to blame the Pagans. But I don’t. For, you see, Des Moines also outlawed Ice Cream trucks. You know the type. They drive up and down neighborhood streets ringing bells, and children try to chase them down to buy a fudgebomb.

Why are there no ice cream trucks, you ask? And what do they have to do with this tale?

A long ago, you see, a young girl was chasing an ice cream truck and was hit and killed by a car. A ban on street vending went into place soon after to protect the youth of Des Moines.

So now you know. Beggars Night in Des Moines helps protect the children. It’s just not protecting them from the Pagans and Wiccans as the trendy news media would like you to believe.

Happy Halloween, everyone. Unless, of course, you are a child in Des Moines. In which case, I hope you had a great Beggar’s Night yesterday. I know I did.

Now … does anyone know where I can buy a fudgebomb?

From Circus to Carnival…

Longtime visitors of this site know it was a bit confusing when the new Circus of Freaks opened in Des Moines a few years ago, due to there previously being a Circus of Freaks listed on this site (we even hosted their website). But, since that other one was not operating (but still intending to come back) we figured folks would figure it out.

Earlier this year, the Barnum Circus of Freaks changes its name. Per Facebook:

Now if the previous Circus of Freaks returns, there will be only one.

Progress?

And so it begins…

If you are visiting this site, you probably like haunted houses. Most folks are not into them. But, even those of us who do like them, don’t like them until late October. Only the truly “into it” folks start planning haunted house visits before then. And the stats for this site show that…

Virtually no visits to this site in the weeks leading up to October. Only a few hundred last week. The real thrills come later, as we see more folks start searching for things to do on the week of Halloween-proper.

And, for what it’s worth, the folks visiting outside of late-October are mostly hitting the page for The Haunt, the Slaughterhouse themed bar downtown which operates in the months when the haunt itself is closed.

Let’s see how 2025 does… But I don’t expect nearly as many visitors this year. The new A.I. search engines do a great job listing haunts before you even get to the search results:

I had to go to Page 2 of search results to even find my site, just after the listing for Slaughterhouse (when I searched last night). I feel bad for folks who do this for a living. 😉

Reviews updated!

The reviews page has been updated as of 10/4/2025 with the start-of-season reviews from Facebook, Google and Yelp. Oddly, several of these went down in review count since last year for some reason. Can pages/accounts delete reviews they don’t like?

Also, not all haunts are in Yelp, which is a shame since iPhones use Yelp for reviews in their Maps app. For example, Sleepy Hollow’s iPhone map entry shows Yelp reviews:

But it seems Apple may also have its own review system. I see some haunts have 0% rating on iPhone currently with no reference to Yelp:

And Slaughterhouse has 100% rating from 12 ratings, and Zombie Hollow has 0% from 1 rating:

…and while the Slaughterhouse number of ratings matches the number of review on Yelp, the rating on Yelp is 4.0 out of 5:

This means iPhones may show either Yelp or whatever this other rating system is. If anyone knows how it works, leave a comment.

But, I will try to add the Apple ratings to the Reviews page, too, when I can.

REVIEW YOUR FAVORITE HAUNT! And since not everyone uses Yelp, or Google, or Facebook, or iPhone, review on multiple sites.

Haunts for 2025

I have slimmed down the website a bit this year due to lack of time, and I do not plan to use the directory plug in I have been using the past few years. It is $$$ to renew the full license, so we’ll see what next year looks like.

I only have name and website link so far for the haunts that have submitted information, but I plan to get full details added when I get a moment.

Updating for 2025 soonly.

I expect to start updating this site for 2025 later this week. I am greatly motivated after spending two days exploring the fully-immersive “Dark Universe” section of the new Universal Epic Universe theme park in Orlando last week. That place is a dream for anyone who appreciates classic Universal horror movies, for sure.

Dark Universe at Universal Epic Universe