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Perched at the gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park, the Stanley Hotel is the crown jewel of haunted hospitality. This grand Colonial Revival hotel, which opened in 1909, famously inspired ...
Agnes Keith House: A house built on the site of a former house for British colonial officials. Reportedly haunted with a female apparition based on the experience by the house's former owners, the ghost is theorized to be the spirit of a known American author named Agnes Newton Keith. The house turned into a museum in 2004. [75] [76]
Graeme Park is an historic site and National Historic Landmark at 859 County Line Road in Horsham, Pennsylvania, United States. It is owned by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission and operated by the non-profit group, The Friends of Graeme Park. It is the only surviving residence of a colonial-era Pennsylvania governor.
House of Pedro Benedit Horruytiner, colonial governor of Florida, in St. Augustine. Alleged encounters with the Horruytiner ghost, as well as that of a cat supposedly killed in the house, have been reported there. [48] The Leaf Theater in Quincy reportedly is haunted by several former movie operators and theater attendees. [49]
Santa Cruz Boardwalk From 'The Lost Boys' Santa Cruz, California. This seaside amusement park founded in 1907 offers a bevy of family-friendly entertainment, but has also appeared in horror movies ...
Colonial Williamsburg, the world's largest living-history museum, offers a nighttime candlelit walking tour called “Haunted Williamsburg," which takes visitors through its historic buildings.
Haunted Hotels (also called America's Haunted Hotels) is an American paranormal television series that premiered on October 24, 2001, on the Travel Channel. The series features haunted hotels in America and the ghost stories that are told from employees and guests alike who work and stay in them.
William Breese Jr. House, also known as the Colonial Inn and the Inn at Brevard, is a historic home located at Brevard, Transylvania County, North Carolina.It was built about 1902, and is a two-story, Classical Revival style frame dwelling with a pebbledash finish and hipped roof.