Summary
➡ Two Guns, a property steeped in history and notoriety, became a point of contention between Harry E. Miller and the Condif family. Miller, allegedly an Apache, leased the land from the Condifs, establishing various businesses including a zoo. Due to a disagreement over lease terms, Miller killed Earl Kundiff but was strangely acquitted. Miller’s luck turned sour when he was brutally attacked by his own animals and the entire property was burnt down. Despite misfortune, the land evolved with new businesses emerging under the management of Kundiff’s widow. However, renown shifted from notorious to desolate as the community dwindled, today marked by evidence of satanic rituals.
➡ The speaker tells a tale of an area in Two Guns, Arizona, steeped in dark history involving Satanism, blood rituals, and legends about connections to ‘the gateway to hell.’ The site, supposedly cursed by Navajo Indians, also fascinates with its ancient ruins and natural beauty. It’s a place of contrast, where the remnants of past lives merge with ominous and macabre practices of the present day.
Transcript
But it is what it is. One of the scariest, creepiest places I’ve ever been to is the gate to hell in Two Guns, Arizona, a place that, if you did not know it was there, you’d probably drive right by it. I’ve been here before videotaping all the sigils, the burnt offerings, et cetera. And I went back. And this time around, I literally found evidence on video of a blood sacrifice that somebody had performed here for whatever reason.
And to see this, you’re going to want to sit back, you’re going to want to relax, and you’re going to want to check this out. I’m going to ask you to hit that subscribe button as well as the little bell right next to it. So you’re notified of all new videos. Here we go. So after doing some maintenance on my vehicle, I hit the road once again, and I found myself driving at nighttime, which I don’t necessarily dig.
I hit a rest stop, and when I woke up, I discovered that I was in Arizona. So I went out and checked out the desert a little bit, looking around for something interesting to take and get video of. I traveled for quite a while, and if you follow my channel, I go to a lot of really remote places where nobody else is around, and that’s what I enjoy.
But I found myself once again at the scariest place I’ve ever been before. And this happened quite by accident, because traveling at nighttime, I didn’t know where I was until, like I said, I woke up, and it turns out I was right across the street at a rest stop from Two Guns, Arizona, once again. So it had been a long time since I’ve been to this location, so I wanted to go back and take a look at it.
This is one of the scariest locations ever, and it’s located right next to route 40, west and east, and you’d never notice it whatsoever. It looks like a large abandoned piece of desert, just like everything else out there. But unlike any other deserted piece of the Arizona landscape, this one holds a crazy true story. This place was the site of a horrific murder in the most unbelievable way you could imagine, where 42 people were asphyxiated and burned alive.
Imagine. And on that property, there’s several stories, and I’m going to tell you all of them. But today, to this very day, people go there and do rituals and occult rites, trying to conjure up evil spirits, hence the name the Gateway to Hell. This place is scary, no two ways about it. And even getting into the cave, because, yes, there’s a cave that goes underneath this entire piece of property that spans a great deal of space is where all this occurred.
And that’s right where I went. So you’re going to want to buckle up for this one. If you’ve never been to Two Guns, Arizona, or you haven’t seen my previous video on this that I did about three years ago, the first thing, as soon as you pull off Route 40 that you’re going to notice is an old defunct gas station that has turned into a literal Mount Rushmore for graffiti.
Now, I know a lot of people don’t like graffiti. It does this, it does that. But you got to give it to these guys. Some of this graffiti is absolutely epic. I mean, it’s art. It is what it is. The second thing you’ll see is another structure that has a swimming pool that has once again been turned into a smaller version of Mount Rushmore of graffiti, but it’s equally as amazing.
And then there’s a structure next to the pool that gets a little bit more dark, some of it’s really cool looking, and again, very colorful. But you’ll notice that every place there are Satanic symbols, sigils and epitaphs, if that’s the correct word, that surround this place. And it gives you kind of a feeling of what’s to come next, because when you look past this building, you’ll see a bunch of old adobe structures that go on for a long, long time.
But as creepy as some of the graffiti is on its face value, when you go in there at night with a UV light, you can see some even creepier stuff. And there was a lot of stuff in there that was pretty unsettling to look at at nighttime, utterly alone, because at nighttime, even with the highway close by, you’re alone. No one knows you’re there. No one can see you.
You know what I mean? And I find it strange that people are now using stuff like this to paint messages that you’d never see. If you didn’t have a UV light, which I did have, if you’ve been in the desert, a lot of times, you know that a UV light is very handy for finding spiders and scorpions at nighttime. Well, it also pulls up really Satanic looking stuff in the middle of the night at places like Two Guns, just an FYI.
Now, because of the history of this particular piece of property or piece of land, it’s hard to tell if these are original adobe structures or these were reconstructed from one of the previous owners. And again, I’ll get into the history of all of that. But just taking it all in for someone that comes from Massachusetts or for someone that doesn’t live out in the desert, this is phenomenal.
It’s absolutely phenomenal. And it’s massive. This goes on for a long time. Now, this aerial shot right here is going to show you how big and how far this entire adobe community went on. I mean, it’s massive. It’s a large area, and when you’re traveling all around it, there’s lots to see. There’s lizards and snakes and thorns and cactus and valleys and structures everywhere. I mean, this is a big, big place.
But the craziest thing about this entire place is the entire story hinges on what’s underneath this. And if you don’t have a keen eye, you’ll never find the location. But there’s a cave underneath this property that holds the entire story. So let’s start at the beginning, the recorded history of this place. In 1878, Apache raiders invaded a Navajo settlement. They killed everyone aside from three girls in the Navajo camp.
Other Navajo leaders attempted to hunt down the Apache raiders, who mercilessly killed most of their tribe. After searching high and low, the Apaches discovered the Navajos were hiding in an underground cave, because one of the Apache raiders had chased a group of Navajos, and somehow, mysteriously, they just seemed to have disappeared. This didn’t stop the Apache raiders. They kept scouting the entire area. And while one of the Apaches was low, crawling on his stomach, he noticed warm air coming out of a hole in the ground and what sounded like voices echoing.
They quickly figured out that every time they chased these guys, the Navajo suddenly just disappeared without a trace, horses and all. After discovering their location in the cave, the Apaches decided they couldn’t make their way into the cave. They’d have to do something else. They couldn’t get into the cave because they would simply get killed. It was a very, very small opening. So what they decided to do was gather up all sorts of brush, sticks, twigs, anything that would burn, and they stuffed the entire entrance of the cave with this debris and they set it ablaze.
Now, the Navajos were hiding in this cave, 42 people, so the story goes, in total, and all their horses. The cave’s entrance was big enough to get the people and the horses in, and that’s what they did. So the Apaches set this on fire. The fire was so bad that the Navajos started slitting the throats and cutting off entire hind quarters of the horses to use the blood to put the fire out, to no avail.
The fire completely killed all of them, completely horses, everything. And for the Navajos that couldn’t stand the smoke anymore and tried to exit, they were shot as soon as they exited the cave. And that’s the story. That’s the Apache death cave, something that I stumbled into completely and utterly by accident. I noticed the buildings on the side of the road, and they were interesting to me. So I turned back, and after scouting around the entire area, I discovered an entrance in the ground I had no idea in the world what this place was whatsoever at all.
If I had known so many had died in here, I definitely wouldn’t have gone in on my own. But I did. So hindsight is hindsight. But that’s not the end of the story. This death cave was purchased in the early 1920s by homesteaders Earl and Luis Kundif. They owned nearly 320 acres of land in the area, and they had built a trading post, a restaurant, a gas station, and even a post office.
Travelers along the National Old Trails Highway, which became Route 66 in 1926, would stop here for a much needed respite. Now, whether or not they knew the Apache death cave was there is unknown. And if they had known about the curse of the Navajo Indians is also unknown. Something I couldn’t find. But after the Condiffs let go of the property, it came into possession to of a guy named Harry E.
Miller. Now, this guy was no joke. He had a much grander vision for this piece of property. Miller had leased some of the Condif’s land and by 1925, had opened a trading post of his own. He opened a zoo, complete with mountain lions, healer, monsters, snakes, scorpions, cougars, you know, the usual. Well, how about the name of the place? Well, the story goes that Miller named the town in honor of the Western silent film actor William Surrey Hart, also known as Two Gun Bill, because his twin Colt 1851 Navy revolvers appeared in most of his 77 films.
But you got to take this with a grain of salt, because Miller claimed to have worked with two guns on numerous projects. Now, you’re going to have to remember this. This guy’s a little wacky because he also claimed to be a full blooded Apache, which is kind of ironic, because if this property was cursed by the Navajos being a full blooded Apache yeah, that wouldn’t jive, and a real Apache wouldn’t set up shop there.
At any rate, going so far to refer to himself as Chief Crazy Thunder, he gave tours of the Apache death cave, selling skeletal remains to tourists, because what could possibly go wrong? Selling the bones of people that were set on fire underground, trying to use horse blood to put the fire out? I mean, what could possibly go wrong? Well, to answer my own question, all seemed to be going well until 1926.
Only a year after leasing the land, miller and Earl Kundiff got into a disagreement over the lease’s terms. So being two guns, arizona Miller shot Kundiff in cold blood, killing the unarmed man. And for some reason, Miller was acquitted. He was mauled. This is crazy. After Miller was acquitted, he was mauled by not one, but two of his own mountain lions. And if that wasn’t bad enough, he was then bitten by one of his own venomous Gila monsters.
Now, you do remember me saying the curse of the Navajos. It seems like that curse is taking effect because this guy’s getting all screwed up by his own animals. The guy that leases the land to him ends up getting shot and killed by him, and then he’s acquitted. But the curse continues to go forward. So listen to this. After getting attacked by his own animals, after shooting and killing the guy that leased him the land and somehow he got acquitted, that story is very murky.
But back in the early 19 hundreds, you could pay off a judge or two, et cetera. At any rate, after all this occurred, he left Two Guns Arizona and the state. And the curse didn’t forget about him, because before he left and after getting attacked by his own animals, et cetera, the entire property burned to the ground. So there you go. But he made sure to take plenty of turquoise jewelry, silver, and other expensive merchandise with him.
Now, the widow Louise Kundiff, she continued moving forward. She opened a new trading post and tourist shop after Miller’s burned to the ground. She soon opened a new gas station, too. Over time, Two Guns shed its outrageous reputation and thrived as several businesses, including motels, taverns, and even campgrounds, sprung up. Even Miller’s zoo was revived and reopened. But the renaissance did not endure. After the lone service station caught fire in 1971, folks began to find their gasoline elsewhere, and tourism fell off a cliff, no pun intended.
Two Guns was left for dust, just the way I found it, basically. So we covered the origins of the curse of the death cave. We covered the people that bought the property afterwards. We covered the guy that leased the property from the people that brought the property afterwards. Now, I’m going to tell you about the history of Two Guns prior to all these shenanigans, because Two Guns apparently was worse than Tombstone and any other western town put together.
And here’s why. So history remembers Two Guns, Arizona as being worse than Tombstone and pretty much any other gambling or mining town in the west. Billy the Kid and many other celebrated outlaws at one point hit out in Two Guns, Arizona, with the closest law enforcement being some 100 miles away. Two Guns earned a reputation of being meaner than Tombstone and Dodge city combined. The main street aptly referred to as Hell Street, and including 14 saloons, ten gambling houses, four brothels, and two dance halls.
I mean, that’s a perfect recipe. What could possibly go wrong? When the wild town finally got a peace officer, the first one pinned a badge on at 03:00 P. m. And was laid out for burial at 08:00 P. m. . So within 5 hours, he was killed and put in the ground. Five more foolish men also tried their hands at marshalling in this godforsaken town. None of them lasted more than a month in their position before they, too, were killed.
Boot Hill cemetery filled up fast where at one time 35 graves could be seen with wooden markers and stone covered mounds. All are gone today because I couldn’t find them, but that of Herman Wolf, a trader who passed away in 1899 and the only one to have died peacefully. You see what I’m saying? This was prior to anybody purchasing the property, but after it had already had been cursed by the Navajos in the death cave.
So there you have it. That’s all the past history, the curse, how it affected people, et cetera. But what I want to jump into now is current day. I’ve been to this location four times in the past four years and every time I’ve gone there, there has literally been evidence of Satanic rituals, rites, et cetera. Now, in my last video, many people in the comments just laughed that off as teenagers having fun.
But I’m going to show you why this is not accurate whatsoever at all. If you don’t believe in Satanism, you should, because it believes in you. So here we go. This is the final part. Practicing Satanism at the death cave. What could possibly go wrong? Hail Satan. Hail Satan. Hail Satan. Hail Satan, indeed. So if you haven’t been paying attention in the last decade or so, satanism has come out of the shadows and it’s in the mainstream, it’s in the government, it’s in the schools, it’s absolutely everywhere.
So if you don’t understand that, I don’t know what to tell you. I literally did a video ten years ago on my old channel that YouTube deleted, where I went inside the Satanic Temple in Salem, Massachusetts, and it was nothing but a disgusting menagerie of sexual images, statues, tools, et cetera, that were considered quote unquote art. It was disgusting. So when people say that nobody’s worshipping Satan, I disagree completely.
And whether you want to take the blinders off or not, that’s totally up to you. But here we go. Real quick, let me interject that. If you go over to the Satanic Temple’s website, they’re having a 30% off Black Friday sale today. So make sure you hit that red button, because selling your soul now, you get a discount. What’s better than that? But I digress. When you walk around the property, you see what you would expect to see on an area that’s completely unpoliced.
There’s no communities around it, it’s basically abandoned. So people come in, they drink, they explore, and some people deface the property with graffiti, et cetera, which I’ve already shown you. But you can’t help but notice that all over the place there’s evidence of burnt offerings. There’s bloody handprints here and there, and there’s symbols and sigils all over this place. And these symbols and sigils are important because if you know anything about Satanism, you understand that these aren’t just your run of the mill things.
These things go all the way back to the father of Satanism, Aleister Crowley. Someone that you may or may not have heard of, but Alastair Crowley called himself The Beast Six Six. He was born October 12, 1875, and he died December 147. He was an occultist, a writer, and he was a practitioner of magic spelled with a K. This guy had such a following that he ended up on the COVID of the Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover.
And Jimmy Page from Led Zeppelin actually bought one of his properties, only to come home one day to find it burnt to the ground. This guy was a sexual deviant. He literally had sex inside the Great Pyramid while consuming and covering himself in the human feces of himself and women that he was sleeping with. A completely depraved individual. And the only reason I bring this guy up is because he was steeped in the occult.
He was claimed to have opened a portal with Jack Parsons, the guy that started up Jet Propulsions Lab, and which is what caused the Roswell crash. That’s what history says. That’s not my opinion. I’m just telling you what history says. Ever since they opened that portal and couldn’t close it, we’ve had nothing but quote unquote UFOs all over the place to the point where they’re now actually admitting it.
So there’s that. But all over this property, you can literally find these exact images all over the place. This is not the casual observer. This is someone that is seriously involved in Satanism. And who else would go to a place like this, go in the cave, spill blood of theirselves, an animal or whatever, and then surround themselves with sigils and do burnt offerings in a place that’s considered to be one of the gateways to hell? Now, in this final chapter on Satanism, I brought up all the topics of the current events in the world, how Satanism has come out of the shadows and places like this.
This is just one place in Two Guns, Arizona, a place that has been cursed by the ancient Navajo Indians, and it’s completely covered, covered in death. One way or the other. People to this very day are still going there and doing literal rituals. And the beauty about good and evil is if you pray, you can pray all you want and your prayers will be answered. But chances are you’re never going to see God until you’re gone, or you’re never going to see an angel until you’re gone.
But if you start messing around with black magic with a K, like Alistair explained in absolute detail, you will make contact one way or another. And that’s what this entire place is. It’s crazy. So let’s take a look around this entire property, because on its face, it’s beautiful. I just wanted to tell you exactly what’s going on here and what people think and what people do here, in my opinion.
So from a historical standpoint, this is amazing. And it’s why I’ve spent so much time here. Every time I’ve gone, here, you can’t tell what’s original and you can’t tell what was rebuilt over the years, whether it was the guy that built this place into an amusement park, selling the bones of dead people to customers, or the people that built it up into a tourist attraction. Where there was a campground, there was actually a Koa gas station, hotel stores, et cetera.
But walking around looking at this is amazing because there’s not too many places you’re going to see ancient ruins, so to speak, pretty much undisturbed. Do you know what I mean? And it goes on for a very long time. And it’s amazing how they live. When you look at this from the air or from a distance, you can barely notice it because they use everything from the earth, timber and stone that match the surroundings perfectly.
They’re not disturbing nature. They’re actually living with it something that we have no clue how to do whatsoever anymore. And previously, being a builder of homes and other structures, I appreciate the work that went into this entire setup. They used so little space, but they still allowed so many people to gather in this space because I’m assuming that it worked out well for heating a small area with a minimal amount of wood.
But the timbers and the stonework is pretty amazing because some of this is original, some of it was rebuilt, but it’s still standing. That’s pretty amazing to me, especially out in the harsh conditions like the desert, because the sun beating down all day will take you out no matter what you’re made of. If you live in California, Arizona, Nevada, Wyoming, florida. You know what I’m saying? But when you start looking around, you notice that there’s a hole with a broken ladder over it right below the main building that they do their rituals in.
And you’ll notice right here in the wood I didn’t notice this before. Somebody had nailed or used brass inserts to put symbols right into the wooden sill. This is the main building with all the evil stuff inside it that’s directly over the mouth of the death cave, literally. And speaking of the death cave, I guess it’s time to go down, back down into the death cave. So follow me down because here we go.
You it. So I just got this from a Native American yesterday in Arizona, and I’m going to leave it here as kind of a peace offering. You’ll notice that somebody has put the only thing to fear is death itself. A little spinoff on Winston Churchill’s. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. This is directly at the entrance of the cave. And the moment I walked in, I smashed my head on a huge rock, which kind of sucked.
It. Come on, dude. It. It’s cold. It’s cold out. It. It. It. It. It. Come here. It. So a few years ago, I did a video on this exact same place but when I had gone there originally, I just thought it was a cave. I had no idea the history or the lore behind any of this. So I did a much more in depth. I was down there for a lot longer this time around.
I was well aware of the history, I was well aware of the curse, and I was well aware of the fact that I was alone and nobody knew I was there. Plus, two months earlier, I had been there and there was a I don’t want to call her a psychic, but she was a woman that could communicate with spirits. I didn’t want to videotape her. I didn’t want anything to do with somebody talking to spirits.
But what she told me is that she was getting the feeling that these people were cool with this, that they were good with this. And I have a hard time believing that people were cool with being trapped in a cave. I mean, this is where they were. I mean, granted, over the years, over the last hundred or so years, it’s caved in, it’s crumbled, et cetera, but 42 people and their horses were in this building.
I’m sorry, in this cave. And it’s not a very big cave, but they were in here. And then there’s a passage at the very end. That’s blood right there. That’s fairly fresh blood that was dripping down from the air holes above, and that wasn’t there prior, but this place is very active. Lots of people go here and they try to summon various spirits. And you can tell that by the symbols because these aren’t symbols of teenagers having fun.
These are people that have studied this. They understand what the symbols mean. And every one of the symbols here are demonic. If you’re silly enough to Google Angelic and demonic sigils, and then you compare them to what’s in this video, you’ll see exactly what I’m talking about. When I left this place, I had a heavy pressure on me. That was palpable, not exaggerating, just telling you I said a few prayers because I’m a Christian.
I said a few prayers and it kind of alleviated the situation. If you want to see the interior of this cave in more detail, I’ll leave a link below to my other video that I did on this a few years back when I didn’t know what it was. Plus I’m going to leave links in the description box below for all the websites and all the write ups that I source the information from this for, and I’m appreciative to all of them, including all the people that allowed me to use their cover songs, et cetera.
All their YouTube channels will be linked below as well. But imagine being in this space, 42 people. You’re hiding from people that are trying to kill you, and then they set the place on fire and there’s no way out. And you’re so desperate, you try to run out the cave’s entrance and you get shot immediately. And the others simply started hacking up their horses, trying to use the horse’s blood to put out the fire.
That’s the of the Navajo Indians at Death Cave in Two Guns, Arizona, a place that’s seen more death than most places will ever see. If you enjoyed this video, make sure you hit that like share and subscribe and leave a comment below and I will return the favor. I am out. .