The Three Witches of Stemmons Tower
by Paula Bosse
by Paula Bosse
I have to admit, I had never heard of “the Stemmons witches” until a few years ago. They seem to have made quite the impression on teenagers of the ’60s and ’70s (and ’80s?), who would frequently take uninitiated fellow teens to visit the mysterious/sinister cloaked figures, after having told them elaborate scary stories about the figures that stood solemnly and forebodingly on the grounds of the 4-building Stemmons Towers complex.
I gather they could be seen from the freeway, and I can understand how they’d look pretty creepy, especially at night, from a distance (and up close). What a perfect teenage ritual for kids with cars: wait until dark, then take your friends to the Towers, pumping them full of spooky urban legends on the drive over, then watch their faces as you introduce them to witches 1-3. If there were night watchmen on overnight duty at Stemmons Towers, they must have had their hands full.
The reminiscences I’ve read all say the three figures disappeared at some point (late ’80s or early ’90s?) — and no one seems to know what happened to them. Do YOU know what happened to them? Where are they today?
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The three figures are by artist Pedro Coronel, a Mexican sculptor and painter aligned with Rufino Tamayo — he was influenced by Diego Rivera and worked with Constantine Brancusi. He often used onyx and sandstone (from the photo, it looks like the “witches” were made of a black stone). The name of this work was “Hooded Figures.” From The Dallas Morning News:
These strange figures are permanent sidewalk superintendents at the new Stemmons Tower North, fourth and final building being erected in the complex on Stemmons Freeway. The three stone “Hooded Figures,” by sculptor Pedro Coronel, are among several works on the Towers’ landscaped plaza. (DMN, July 31, 1966)
(“Stemmons witches” has a much better ring to it than “sidewalk superintendents.”)
Read memories of teenage visits to these “witches” on the Dallas Historical Society “Phorum,” here.
Where have these “Figuras Encapuchadas” scurried off to?
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Sources & Notes
Thank you SO MUCH to Fred Goodwin, who sent me this photo. He says he came across it years ago somewhere on the internet and does not know the original source. Thank you, Fred!
I’ve seen only one other photo of this work by Coronel — it accompanies the caption quoted above, in The Dallas Morning News (July 31, 1966, p. 1C). Sadly, it’s not a good scan.
A story by Steve Brown appeared in the DMN on Dec. 14, 2023, reporting that the four towers are to be converted to a residential community (“Dallas’ Landmark Stemmons Towers Sell for Conversion to Apartments”). Um, okay.
See a cool night-time photo of Stemmons Tower #1 in the 2018 Flashback Dallas post “Stemmons Tower, Downtown Skyline — 1963.”

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.


Thank you so much for this story. I was a teen in 1976, and this rings SO true. Late night drives to visit the foreboding witches at the Stemmons Towers.
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Hello Paula!
This was certainly a blast from the past! I definitely took people there late a night to see the “witches” – it was so spooky!! And a right of passage as a teenager in Dallas.
Thanks for this, and for all the Dallas history you remind us of.
Best,
Diana Ost
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Thank you, Diana!
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The towers will soon be luxury apartments. Better than demolishing them, I guess. And the LAST THING we need is affordable housing, right?
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I also remember going to visit the Stemmons Witches in the 70s. It was after a long night of watching Jimi Hendrix flicks right down the road at some old theater. I haven’t thought about this in years. Thanks for the flood of memories and good times that this story has brought back
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I went with friends once and again with a date I was trying to impress. I can’t find it now, but I recall reading that the witches were moved to a courtyard or internal area of one of the market centers along Stemmons but they are no longer there. A day after Paula’s Flashback post a guy on the Memories of Mesquite Facebook posted photos he claims are the witches on private property somewhere.
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They were NOT in Mesquite!!!!!
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oh hey Norm!
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My dad worked at Stemmons Tower East from 1965 till 1971. I’d go to the office w him as a boy and play around the witches. He told me that they’d haunt me if I did wrong!
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The comic irony is that whoever had the sculptures and let them rot away in some private woods didn’t realize that works by the artist who created them go for astronomical prices at auction.
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the story I heard as a high school teen that 3 sisters were forced to sell the land and cursed the land. When the towers were being erected a construction worker fell to his death and the three witches were the three sisters who gaze down on the spot he fell
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[…] 2. “THE THREE WITCHES OF STEMMONS TOWER” (January) […]
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They were hideous, I’m glad they are gone. Dallas chooses the worst artists, I cannot think of one good outdoor display in Dallas. I think satanist are the ones who choose those who bid on art projects.
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what a great blast from the past. Tried going back last week while in Dallas but back parking lot was fenced off with razor wire at top. No longer there after researching and found the article.
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I remember the statues from the ’70s. I heard that they were moved because they created traffic problems along stemmons when people slowed down down to view them, which makes sense. I don’t know where they are now or if they still exist
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