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~ Researching, investigating, and writing about the paranormal.

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Category Archives: Famous Locations

Snowstorm Goals 2019: Snow Nessie

20 Sunday Jan 2019

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Famous Animals, Famous Locations, Loch Ness, Uncategorized

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Nessie, Surgeon's Photograph

snownessie

Photo by: Derek Brizendine

Snowstorm Goals 2019: Snow Nessie

Although it will barely break freezing tomorrow, the Atlanta area isn’t projected to get any measurable amount of snow in the coming weeks. That’s too bad since I’ve decided on my 2019 snowstorm goal: Snow Nessie.

A family in Warrensburg, Missouri, created a giant Loch Ness Monster (a.k.a. Nessie) with their recent snowfall. The “Snow Nessie” took 4 days to create and measures 6’ at her highest point. Creator Jessica Nicholson stated that inspiration came from the 2007 film The Water Horse. Snow Nessie is incredibly popular, as people stop to have their picture taken with her.

I’m fascinated in mysterious creatures that financially support towns. (See my articles on Mothman.) Further, Nessie holds a special place in my heart. Even after the 1934 “Surgeon’s Photograph” was deemed a hoax in 1994, hordes of people descend annually on Loch Ness in hopes of capturing an authentic photograph. Now that’s dedication.

surgeonsphotograph

Infamous “Surgeon’s Photograph”

Hopefully, one day I, too, will travel to Scotland in search of Nessie. In the meantime, I’ll have to build my own snow version—a very, very small version.

Historic Dun Glen Hotel Site Soon Accessible

02 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Famous Locations, Historic Places, In the News, Paranormal, Uncategorized

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Dunglen Hotel, Fayette County, New River Gorge National River, Thomas Gaylord McKell, Thurmond, west virginia

DunGlen
Room Key
Dun-Glen-Hotel

Historic Dun Glen Hotel Site Soon Accessible

A new recreational trail built by the National Park Service is expected to make a long-lost historical site accessible to hikers. The Dun Glen Hotel was lost to a fire in 1930; however, it remained a popular, albeit inaccessible, hiking destination for history buffs and paranormal investigators. Soon, this may change.

The Dun Glen (Dunglen) Hotel was dubbed the “Waldorf of the Mountains.” Alcohol flowed freely in this 4 ½ story, 100-room hotel situated on the New River, across from the dry town of Thurmond, Fayette County, West Virginia. Thomas (Tom) Gaylord McKell built the hotel intending to take advantage of the highly profitable adjacent coal mines and railroad. Opening in 1901, the hotel boasted three floors of guest rooms, a wrap-around verandah, and basement showrooms. And the wealthy guests arrived.

TMcKell

Within a few years, Tom McKell opened the New River Banking & Trust Company on August 11, 1904. Sadly, McKell died shortly thereafter on September 7, 1904 at the age of 59. His son William McKell took over operations.

On July 22, 1930, a devastating fire broke out and destroyed the hotel. Although no guests were injured, George Richardson and Stephen Thomas suffered minor burns. According to the Raleigh Register, the fire consumed the building, including the Earl Nichols grocery and soda counter, located in the terrace basement. Faulty electrical wiring was blamed. Damages totaled $100,000, roughly $1.5 million in today’s dollars. William McKell did not rebuild and abandoned the property.

Today the property sits within the New River Gorge National River park. The park service owns and operates the town of Thurmond as a national historic location. However, the Dun Glen area was left to nature. The new trail has been enthusiastically received. Next summer I will travel back up to Fayette County to check on the progress. I’ll keep you posted.

 

The Irony of Dumplin’ (2018)

24 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Cemeteries, Famous Locations, Famous People, Uncategorized

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St. James Episcopal Cemetery

StJames2

The Netflix original movie Dumplin’ (2018) is tragically ironic. Read how here: https://www.hauntjaunts.net/the-irony-of-dumplin-2018/

Hoodoo of Sacrifice: The Skeleton Key Conjurs

30 Sunday Sep 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Famous Locations, Horror Movies, Movie Reviews, Movies, Plantations, Uncategorized

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Felicity Plantation, Gena Rowlands, Hoodoo, John Hurt, Kate Hudson

hoodoo-you-voodoo

If you’re looking for a traditional horror film, check out The Skeleton Key (2005). Here’s my review: www.hauntjaunts.net/hoodoo-of-sacrifice-the-skeleton-key-conjurs/

#SpotlightSunday Highlights Corpsewood Manor

01 Sunday Jul 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Famous Locations, Famous People, Haunt Jaunts, Murders, Uncategorized

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Charles L. Scudder, Corpsewood Manor, Joseph Joey Odom, Kenneth Avery Brock Lowrence, Samuel Tony West

Corpsewood

My latest blog highlights Corpsewood Manor, the infamous location where Dr. Charles L. Scudder and Joseph “Joey” Odom were brutally murdered on December 12, 1982. Read the blog to see why this location is unique. Read the entire blog here: https://www.hauntjaunts.net/explore-corpsewood-manor-spotlightsunday/.

#FunFactFriday

04 Friday May 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Crimes, Famous Locations, Famous People, Haunt Jaunts, True Crime, Uncategorized

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#FunFactFriday, Al Capone, Atlanta Penitentiary, James "Jimmy" Clark, St. Valentine's Day Massacre

JimmyClark

Head on over to HauntJaunts.net to read my latest blog. On this day in 1932, one of America’s most notorious mobsters entered the Atlanta Penitentiary along with a ghost.

Read the blog here: https://www.hauntjaunts.net/haunted-al-capone-goes-to-the-atlanta-penitentiary/.

Old South Pittsburg Hospital Shut Down

06 Friday Apr 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Abandoned America, Famous Locations, Hospitals, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

alpha concepts llc, black mold, diane hayes, gary stephen hayes, gene vess, klinge brothers, osph closed, osph ghost hunts llc, unpaid taxes

api-osph

Old South Pittsburg Hospital Shut Down

Old South Pittsburg Hospital (OSPH) has been shut down by the City of South Pittsburg, Tennessee. The shuttered hospital is a favorite location for paranormal enthusiasts as it provides unlimited access to three levels, sits in a quiet residential neighborhood, and is easily accessible off the interstate. OSPH will remain closed for an indefinite time.

The hospital was operational from 1959-1998 until a modern hospital was built in the next town. Physician Gary Stephen Hayes and Diane D. Hayes purchased the abandoned facility in March 2000 for $202,500. At some point, the property was re-deeded in the name of Alpha Concepts, LLC, an administratively dissolved company. State records indicate the LLC was administratively dissolved in 2007. [Dissolution is not fatal for a company. It means that a company has not remained current in paying state fees; however, a company can pay late fees and become current in most states.] Early reports stated that the property was deeded to OSPH Ghost Hunts, LLC, another administratively dissolved company (2016); however, I could not confirm. Either way, the address for Alpha Concepts leads back to Dr. Hayes. It’s his Alfa Romeo tucked in one of the hallways.

An anonymous caller contacted the city complaining about black mold and possible unsafe conditions. City Administrator Gene Vess told media outlets that black mold was found, causing an environmental hazard. Coupled with the zoning violations and the lack of proper city and state business licenses, the owners face a large hurdle to clear before events may resume; however, unsuspecting travelers may not know.

According to the OSPH website, the hospital is open for business. Nothing on the site indicates problems. Their Facebook page is more candid, although overly optimistic about how long the renovations will take, let alone the cost. A quick online calculator shows that the clean-up on the black mold will run from $30,000-54,000. Ouch. The price increases if other environmental hazards, like asbestos, are discovered. Word of caution: I’m concerned with the language used on the FB page stating that their employees are removing the black mold. At no time should inexperienced employees, family, or volunteers attempt to remove black mold. Black mold is dangerous.

FB post2

Additional events are actively promoted tonight. The ticketing site appeared to let me purchase a $139 ticket to investigate with the Klinge Brothers. At no time did the site alert me to the closure. Troubling.

Reservations

The March 2018 closure was not the first problem OSPH has experienced. The federal government filed a lawsuit on the 1100 Holly Avenue property last September (2017). The suit alleges that the Hayes failed to pay $506,036 in unpaid taxes, plus an additional $46,679 in employment taxes from another location. To date, the suit has not been settled or come before the Court.

This week’s news of the facility being closed indefinitely highlights the problems with abandoned properties. When I investigated OSPH, I was not informed that black mold was present. I was warned not to step on the tiles in the basement chapel as they would release asbestos but nothing on black mold. [I was extremely careful in the chapel—just saying.] What happens when property owners fail to inspect the grounds for environmental hazards? Or after inspecting the property, they decide to withhold information? Deeply troubling. I will be following up over the summer with answers and comments. Stay tuned.

Spring Break Road Trip: Cassadaga, Florida

30 Friday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Camps, Cemeteries, Famous Locations, Florida Mysteries, Hauntings, Historic Places, Road Trip, Roadside Attractions, Uncategorized

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carl hiaasen, cassadaga hotel, devils chair, george p colby, lake helen cemetery, lily dale ny, psychic center of the south, tom petty casa dega

Postcard

Spring Break Road Trip: Cassadaga, Florida

Spring Break is in full swing, and there are some off-the-beaten-path places worth exploring. One of them is Cassadaga, Florida. Cassadaga is 40 minutes north of Orlando, off I-4 or an hour and ½ southeast of Ocala. Here are 10 things to know before you go:

Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp

  1. Cassadaga is named after Cassadaga Lake outside Lily Dale, New York, sister town to Cassadaga, New York and Florida. Lily Dale is the oldest Spiritualist community in America. It was incorporated in 1879 as Cassadaga Lake Free Association but was ultimately renamed Lily Dale Assembly in 1906.
  2. George P. Colby (January 6, 1848-July 27, 1933), a trance medium, believed his Native American spirit guide “Seneca” led him to Volusia County, Florida in search of land to establish a Spiritualist community. George was homesteaded 145 acres in the area and donated 55 of those acres to create Cassadaga. He died at the age of 86 and is buried in the Lake Helen Cemetery.

Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Early Photo

  1. Cassadaga is a Native American word that means “water beneath the rocks.”
  2. Wintering psychics and mediums from the north sought a warm location to winter. The unincorporated town was established on December 18, 1894 as the Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Meeting Association.
  3. Cassadaga is known as the “Psychic Center of the South.” Less than 70 people reside in Cassadaga. All are psychics and mediums.
  4. The Cassadaga Hotel, the only hotel in town, was originally owned by the camp but was lost in foreclosure. It is privately owned. The original building burned down on Christmas Day 1926 but was rebuilt within 2 years.
  5. More than 15,000 people visit Cassadaga per year. There are 7 parks and meditation areas in the camp. Visitors can walk the town, book appointments with psychics, tour 2 historical buildings, shop the bookstore, or sip coffee at the hotel.
  6. Singer/songwriter Tom Petty (1950-2017) wrote the song “Casa Dega” about the town.
  7. Fiction writer and essayist Carl Hiaasen based the fictional town Grange in Lucky You on Cassadaga. In the novel, Grange is a strange town where people experience a lot of religious miracles. The main character JoLayne, and African-American woman who wins ½ of a Florida Lottery jackpot, resides in Grange.

CarlHiaasen

  1. If you visit, stop in the Lake Helen Cemetery, situated between Cassadaga and Lake Helen. In the cemetery in a family plot, there is a brick bench, a mourning bench. An urban legend has started that this is a “Devil’s Chair” whereby the Devil arrives when someone sits on the bench. Another tale states that if a can of beer is left, it will be empty in the morning. Let me know what happens.

DevilsChair2

Happy Travels!

Why Hospitals Are Haunted

28 Wednesday Mar 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Abandoned America, Famous Locations, Hospitals, Road Trip, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

hawkinsville state hospital, old hawkinsville state hospital, taunton state hospital, trans-allegheny lunatic asylum

Hawkinsville State Hospital

Hawkinsville State Hospital, Georgia Archives.

Why Hospitals Are Haunted

Ghosts haunt hospitals. Paranormal teams can investigate a lot of shuttered hospitals; however, very few have access to those that are open. Unlike cemeteries where the dead don’t have a strong connection, hospitals across the nation are the perfect locations for residual hauntings.

Prior to 1885, sick people were cared for at home by their family. According to Wendy Cage, author of Paging God: Religion in the Halls of Medicine, early American hospitals “provided lodging for the homeless, the poor, and travelers.” While some cities operated hospitals, a large number were established by religious organizations, specifically Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish organizations. Volunteer chaplains in many of these hospitals visited nearly every patient who died while admitted. Religious beliefs, prayer, and spirituality played a large role in the hospital ministry, even in an unofficial capacity. God and the afterlife may have been contemplated.

The pre-1920 hospital was where people went to die, not heal. These facilities were the place of last resort; staff were compassionate and helped ease death. For some, it was the last positive human experience; therefore, it would make sense that some dead would remain.

Modern US hospitals emerged after the Civil War. By 1920, people went to the hospital to be cured—not die. However, those who died in these hospitals may still have had a connection to the better service they received and may linger long after death.

TauntonTaunton State Hospital, Taunton, Mass.

Not all spirits who haunt hospitals are malevolent. In fact, there are numerous stories of helpful spirits or friendly spirits in closed hospitals. Nurses are commonly identified as haunting hospitals. Patients, too, linger. Few spirits are truly evil. Of these evil spirits, many may have not died at the hospital but are drawn there. However, abandoned asylums may be a different story.

Most of the facilities featured on Top Haunted Hospital lists were actually asylums. Further, a lot of these asylums and sanatoriums were horrible places. Cruelty prevailed. Understandably, these locations have a lot of negative energy and evil spirits attached. These abandoned facilities are dangerous. Anyone contemplating investigating an asylum or sanatorium should protect herself in body and mind. Say your prayers. Call on your spirit guides for protection. And when leaving, make sure that nothing or no one follows you home.

Trans-AllaghenyTrans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, West Virginia

If you find yourself in a hospital, look for these identify factors to see if the hospital is haunted:

  1. Scrutinize clothing. Look to see if the clothing is of a different time period.
  2. Check to see if you’re hallucinating. Were you dreaming?
  3. Look at people to see if they appear whole. Spirits will be missing a limb or some other important feature.
  4. Notice changes in smells.
  5. Watch for changes in electricity.
  6. Pay attention to sounds.
  7. Summon the courage to ask the nurses if the hospital keeps a “Ghost Report.” The GR is a listing of ghost sightings and strange phenomena. Not all hospitals keep a log, but you may get lucky.

Crisis and death happen at hospitals. Staff are employed over long periods of time and are attached to hospitals. Paranormal teams should head out to rural hospitals that have been closed and abandoned to investigate. These facilities present an opportunity to test new equipment, practice techniques, and discover new stories. Hit me up; I may tag along!

GAStateLunaticAsylum

ParaNews for the Week of February 26, 2018

27 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Camps, Famous Locations, Famous People, friday the 13th, In the News, ParaNews, Reviews, TV Reviews, Uncategorized

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camp crystal lake, izombie, old south pittsburg hospital

Poster

Paranormal News for the Week of February 26th, 2018

ParaNews for the Week of February 26, 2018

Three take-aways to begin your week:

  1. iZombie (2015- ) begins Season 4 tonight on the CW. Critics hail the season as a reboot or a second pilot. iZombie debuted to rave reviews as fans follow Olivia “Liv” Moore, Seattle’s Assistant Medical Examiner, a highly-functional zombie. Seasons 1 and 2 brought solid ratings; however, Season 3 saw a huge dip initially. The ratings evened out, and series creator Rob Thomas was able to snag a 4th All of the series regulars return for S4 with some new, fresh characters introduced. iZombie airs on Mondays at 9:30 PM on the CW. Catch up with Seasons 1-3 now streaming on Netflix.

Camp-Crystal-Lake

  1. Friday the 13th (1980) introduced teenagers to Camp Crystal Lake. Unfortunately, most were unable to sleep over at Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco, the Hardwick, New Jersey, camp where the first installment in the fantastically profitable franchise was filmed. Until now. The Boy Scout Organization, owners of the camp, are opening the camp up for overnight camping on Friday, April 13-Saturday, April 14. Campers may also bid on auctions featuring actress Adrienne King, who played “Alice” in the first two films. Minimum age is 21 years old. Visit https://www.crystallaketours.com/news/ for more information.

 

api-osph

  1. Tennessee’s most haunted abandoned hospital Old South Pittsburg Hospital has started daytime investigations, Sundays through Thursdays. Investigations began on February 12, 2018. Cost is extremely reasonable at $25 per person. Contact Stacey at 423.362.0086 to reserve your tickets.

 

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