Tag Archives: canada

The Haunted Legends of Carl Beck House in Ontario, Canada

Advertisements

Now a place you can rent and stay at, the Beck House in Canada is said to be one of the more haunted places. Those who have stayed the night come back with stories of strange encounters, believed to be the ghost of the Beck family members. 

Carl Beck House is an eerie but beautifully stately mansion located in Penetanguishene in Ontario, Canada. As the best Victorian mansions are, it is said to be haunted. For a long time, it was a private family home, but now you can also check in and stay the night to see for yourself as an AirBNB. This historic building has a dark past, with rumors of ghosts and hauntings that have persisted for decades. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

But who is still lingering in the house? Some say that the spirits of former residents still roam the halls, while others claim to have seen mysterious apparitions in the windows at night. Some even say there are as many as twenty different spirits trapped within the walls. But what is the truth behind these haunted legends? 

The History of Carl Beck House

Carl Beck House was built in 1866 by a wealthy businessman named Karl Maxillian (Charles) Beck (1838-1915). A German immigrant, he became the wealthiest of the local lumber magnates and made a lasting name for himself. He was also mayor of the town from 1892 to 1895 and owned the first car in the area.

The mansion was designed in the Italianate style and was the largest residence in the area at the time. Beck lived in the mansion with his wife Emelia and nine children until his death. 

The Haunted Legends of Carl Beck House

Despite its grandeur, Carl Beck House has long been associated with ghostly tales and hauntings. There are many theories about why Carl Beck House is haunted. Some believe that the mansion is simply a victim of the many tragedies and deaths that occurred within its walls over the years. Others believe that the mansion is haunted by the ghosts of former residents who are unable to move on from their earthly lives.

Visitors to the mansion have reported hearing unexplained noises, such as footsteps and whispers, and feeling a sense of being watched. There have been multiple reports of objects moving on their own and lights turn on and off for apparently no reason.

In the guestbook in the house for people to write down their experiences, there are entrances detailing how blankets moved by themselves when they were sleeping. Some have even claimed to have seen the apparitions of former residents, dressed in Victorian-era clothing, wandering through the halls. They are also warning about the doll in the green dress in the house.

The Spurned Daughter Back to Haunt her Childhood Home

According to local legend, the mansion is haunted by the ghosts of former residents, including Carl Beck himself, Emilia, Mary and her two younger sisters who passed away in the house very young on 2 Jun 1893 (aged 42–43).

One of the most famous ghost stories associated with Carl Beck House is the tale of the “Lady in White.” According to legend, a young woman named Mary lived in the mansion in the late 1800s. She was Carl’s eldest daughter, and was expected to take responsibility for caring for her siblings after her mother died young. 

However, after some time, Mary saw another life for herself when she became acquainted with a man and decided to marry him. Her father strongly opposed their union, believing that Mary deserved a better spouse and didn’t want her to leave the house, even though she had taken care of her sibling for 10 years already. 

Still, she followed her heart and left with her chosen one called George Robinson. This disagreement was so intense that it caused Carl to remove Mary from his will. According to other sources, Mary received only $1 after her father passed away in an accident in 1915, although he left assets totaling $10 million. He drowned while his horse was getting a drink, the buggy flipped. 

This is put up as a reason for her coming back to haunt her childhood home after she died in 1954 (aged 84–85). Although not much is known about her life after she left the Beck House, it looks like she stayed in Penetanguishene. Although there isn’t much mentioned of this dispute outside of retellings of the haunted rumours from the house, it remains the most well known cause for ghost lingering. 

A Night at the Haunted Beck House

Carl Beck House has long been shrouded in mystery and legend, with tales of ghostly activity and hauntings that have persisted for decades. Who are the one still lingering and haunting for their guests. Not only is the inside of the house said to be haunted, but there are also the ones claiming the ghosts also leaves it. They are said to appear on the adjacent Church Street where they claim to see apparitions of Victorian women strolling along the street, naturally connecting them to the Beck House. 

Newest Posts

References:

Ontario Heritage Trust | C. Beck Manufacturing Company

Charles Maximilian Beck (1838-1915) – Find a Grave Memorial

Mary Ethel Beck Robinson (1869-1954) – Find a Grave Memorial

The Dying Screams of a Girl on Fire Haunting the Screaming Tunnel in Canada

Advertisements

Said to be haunted by the dying screams of a young girl who was set on fire and died, the Screaming Tunnel in Niagara Falls in Canada has become the site of some of the most eerily ghost legends said to linger within the dark. 

The Screaming Tunnel is located in the Canadian town of Niagara Falls in Ontario and the haunted site can be easily accessed by car or on foot. It is today said to be one of the most haunted places in the country although the root of the haunting remains a mystery. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

The Screaming Tunnel is a small limestone tunnel that runs underneath the railroad tracks, and it’s said to be haunted by the ghost of a young girl who died in a tragic fire.This 125-foot-long mysterious tunnel has been the subject of many chilling tales and legends for over a century. The tunnel is situated off Warner Road, just a short distance from the Niagara Parkway. 

Source

The limestone tunnel built in the early 1800s was running underneath what once was a Grand Trunk Railway line, now the Canadian National Railway. The Screaming Tunnel actually shares the same railway with the supposedly haunted Blue Ghost Tunnel as well. This has led to the belief that the spirits are using this railway to travel. It wasn’t made for passage though, but as a drainage passage to keep the tracks from being lost beneath flood waters.

The Legend Behind the Screaming Tunnel

Embraced with overgrown mosses, vines, and vibrant foliage, The Screaming Tunnel has a tragic story behind its eerie reputation, although no one can quite prove that it actually happened. The natural smell of sulfur is heavily prevalent.  According to the legend, the tunnel was once part of a farm owned by a wealthy family in the early 1900s in an old farmhouse behind the south side of the tunnel. The far end of the tunnel leads to a pathway through woods and a small cluster of homes was found around here.

One night, the family’s house caught fire, and the girl was trapped inside and her clothing and hair caught fire. She managed to get out by herself and ran out from the burning house aflame. She made it to the tunnel where she tried to extinguish herself as the flames tore through her clothes and skin. Panicked, she was looking for help from one of the nearby houses or anything that would extinguish the flames. But it was futile as she didn’t manage to put the flames out by herself and she died alone in the darkness of the tunnel. 

Source

While the story of the girl set on fire inside of the Screaming Tunnel is widely accepted, there are some variations to the legend. 

Some believe that the girl was murdered by her father who was mentally unstable. This is speculation, but it could seem like this version of the legend is a bit more modern. According to this version, he was abusive and a drunkard and that he was the one setting her on fire in the midst of a bitter custody battle. His wife had finally had enough and was taking their daughter with her when she was leaving him. Another fight ensued and the daughter ran away from them. But her father chased her and when he found her hiding in the tunnel before pouring gasoline over her and setting her on fire himself. 

Others claim that she was a victim of a love triangle gone wrong or even more disturbingly, the girl was raped by a drunkard she met when she was passing through the tunnel. In this version her body burned to destroy the evidence. Regardless of the specifics, the story has become a part of Canadian folklore and continues to attract visitors from around the world.

Evoking the Ghost of the Screaming Tunnel

As you walk through the tunnel, you can feel the weight of the legend on your shoulders, and every sound seems to echo louder than it should. Those brave enough to test the legend come prepared to the tunnel with matches. 

According to the legend, if you light a match in the tunnel at midnight and say the girl’s name three times, her ghost will appear, and you’ll hear her scream. Although what name she has been given is strangely not really known. 

Source

Some say that there is no name needed and that evoking her ghost is much simpler. If you light a wooden match while standing in the middle of the tunnel, you’ll hear a shrilling scream and your match will immediately blow out. Perhaps a cruel test to do on a ghost legend who perished in this exact way, but a rite of passage for the teens in Niagara Falls and a path of litter of beer and liquor bottles and graffiti trails after them.

The Pyre of Donald Jordanson

A completely different legend that has emerged in newer times though is the legend of Donald Jordanson that has been making rounds online. He lived on 16 acres of farming land. In 1924, he was newly married and had a newborn baby named Sam. That year it was a drought after the El Nino and the wheat and corn crops failed after the stormy weather. That dreadful summer, he lost everything. His wife left him and he lost his farm, and he lost himself in a psychosis. 

He disappeared and soon others did too. The lawyer Frank Male, his former neighbour Ethal Davidson and his business partner John Frew. When the police went to his farm to investigate, they noticed smoke coming from the tunnel. At least a dozen bodies were piled up on each other in a blazing pyre. The farmer, crazed and screaming, wawed a pitchfork towards the officers and fell over, impaling himself. So perhaps it is really the ghost of Donald Jordanson who is crying out in the tunnel? 

Although as with most of the urban legends, there really isn’t much substantial evidence that this even happened. And considering there are few, close to no sources for this as well, makes it even less likely to be rooted in truth. 

Source

Alternative Stories Behind the Screaming Tunnel

But really, how much of the legend is actually true? Despite being a very popular legend, it is strangely without many details and facts. A reporter for the Niagara Falls Review once tried to find any historical evidence of a farmhouse set on fire, but found nothing. 

Historically there used to be a small group of houses on the other side of the tunnel a bit away from the main road like in the legend. The small village is gone now, but you can still see the old foundations of the houses among the trees. It is said that one of the people living in one of the houses was a woman who was known by the neighbours for being a bit off, or at least enough enraged to leave her mark.

Read also: Ghostly Encounters in Moonville Tunnel in Ohio, The Haunted Cantabrian Tunnel of Engaña and The Hangman’s Tunnel in Loja for more haunted tunnels around the world

It is said that she had a tumultuous marriage and got in a lot of loud fights with her husband. But she wouldn’t necessarily unleash all of her anger towards him. After having a fight with her husband, she would bottle up all that anger and hold it in until he left for work and would walk to the very middle of the “Screaming Tunnel” and scream at the top of her lungs. 

Neighbours would hear this but ignore it, as many didn’t want to deal with the woman, or perhaps understood her anger. This is what many believe to be the true origins of the name “The Screaming Tunnel”

Newest Posts

References:

https://web.archive.org/web/20120102103052/http://www.hauntedhamilton.com/14_niagara_screamingtunnel.html

Screaming Tunnel – Atlas Obscura

Screaming Tunnel | Niagara’s Haunted Place to Visit | Articles

The Eerie and Haunted History of Old City Hall in Toronto

Advertisements

Said to be haunted by numerous ghosts, the Old City Hall in Toronto, Canada is now known as one of the creepiest buildings in the city. From strange entities targeting judges’ robes in the stairs to the last executed prisoners in the country, the spirits of the building are said to linger. 

The eerie history of Old City Hall in Toronto has many believe that it is the most haunted building in the city. This Romanesque building of justice was constructed in the late 1800s and has served as a city hall, courthouse, and even a movie set. It was originally home to Toronto’s city council from 1899 to 1966 and was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1984.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

Designed by prominent architect E.J. Lennox, known as the builder of Toronto, the building was constructed between 1889 and 1899, replacing the original city hall that stood on the same site on the corner of Queen and Bay street. The building features a clock tower that stands over 300 feet tall, making it one of the tallest structures in Toronto at the time and was such for the next 18 years.

Source

The Haunted Prison Cellar

The Old City Hall is known for its dark and eerie past, and many people believe that the building is haunted. There are several ghostly tales associated with the building, including reports of apparitions, strange noises, and unexplained occurrences. It is also said that some security guards will not venture into certain areas or floors late at night.

Source

The first place said to be haunted is the building’s basement. The cellars acted at one time as a holding center for prisoners and still today the old cells are still there. Because of this, it is no wonder that people believe this place was also a place of haunting, although the prisoners who spent time here didn’t stay for long. 

But could it be that some of their ghosts stayed for eternity? According to legends about the Old City hall,  the moans of the incarcerated have been heard as well. 

The Northwest attic that was used to store the City’s first record archive, is also a spot where a presence is felt, but no one is quite sure what it is. People who have been in the attic claim they are often suddenly overcome with a peculiar “feeling” that no one has ever managed to solve the mystery of. .

The Haunted Staircase and the Tugging Poltergeist

The rear staircase is one of the haunted locations within the building and has a lot of documentation and anecdotes. According to both visitors as well as working judges, the staircase is haunted by a poltergeist-like spirit that seems to enjoy tugging at judges’ robes. In addition to targeting judges specifically, visitors have been frightened by the sounds of footsteps walking up and down the stairs in the darkness of night when no one is supposed to be there. 

The haunting was first reported by Judge S. Tupper Bigelow (3 August 1901–13 June 1993), who said he would hear footsteps behind him and feel something pulling at his judicial robe. Perhaps it is also worth noting that this judge was one of the world’s leading authorities on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, author of the Sherlock Holmes mystery novels, and loved a good story and strange occurrence. 

The same experience of the tugging ghost was however also said to have happened to Judge Pete Wilch.

Source

The Condemned Prisoners in Courtroom 33

Although there are several rooms within the building said to be haunted, none more than one of the old courtrooms where some of the prisoners learned their fatal fate. Courtroom 33 is said to be haunted by the spirits of the last men condemned to hang in Canada in 1962. 

Before 1961, murder carried a mandatory death sentence in Canada. In July 1961, the Canadian government adopted a law establishing two degrees of murder: capital murder and non-capital murder. Capital murder carried a death sentence, while non-capital murder carried a life sentence with parole eligibility after 10 years. 

Ronald Arthur Turpin was convicted of killing an officer and was charged with capital murder since the victim was a police officer. The Toronto Star reports Turpin to have said in his final hours “If our dying means capital punishment in this country will be abolished for good, we will not have died in vain.”

Arthur Lucas was the other prisoner executed alongside Turpin. He was convicted for killing an undercover narcotics agent, Therland Crater from Detroit in a Toronto hotel. He is also assumed to have killed 20-year-old Carolyn Ann Newman, Crater’s common-law wife, but was never tried in her death. Lucas was charged with capital murder since the crime was premeditated.

They were tried for separate crimes but had the same lawyer, Ross MacKay, who believed both men to be innocent or acted in self defense. Lucas maintained that he was framed for the murders of Crater and Newman, but also that “he’d done many other terrible things in his so-called career that it was just catching up with him.” 

They were both hanged at the Don Jail. The ghosts of Turpin and Lucas are also rumored to haunt the Old Don Jail, known for its inhumane living conditions and where they served time before their executions. 

Source

Haunted Nights in the Old City Halls of Toronto

On Halloween it has become a tradition for journalists to stay in courtroom 33 to see if they can experience any paranormal activity that is said to exist in the courtroom. In John Robert Colombo’s book Haunted Toronto, he tells of a pair of reporters that almost managed to spend the night but gave in by 4am. But then the reporters experienced what they described as “cool fogs” and weird noises that left them, at times, glued to the floor and they decided to pack up and leave.

Source

Old City Hall is a fascinating and eerie landmark in Toronto’s history. From its stunning architecture to its dark past and ghostly tales, the building has captured the imaginations of visitors and locals alike. In April 2025, the government moved out from the building and it will no longer serve as a courthouse. 

Newest Posts

References:

Old City Hall

Ronald Turpin – Wikipedia 

Arthur Lucas – Wikipedia 

Troubling Encounters With the Ghosts of Tranquille Sanatorium in Canada

Advertisements

Tranquille Sanatorium near Kamloops is said to be one of the most haunted places in Canada. Once a hospital treating tuberculosis, later a place for the mentally ill has a history filled with mystery, tragedy, and an eerie atmosphere that still lingers to this day. Visitors report spooky sightings of ghostly figures wandering the grounds and warning whispers in dark corridors.

Is there something more haunting and creates a more scary atmosphere than the now abandoned sanatoriums that exist around the world? Canada’s historic Tranquille Sanatorium near Kamloops (Tk’emlúps) in British Colombia hides many secrets of its past, including a host of creepy sightings and paranormal activity. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

Located not far from Kamloops in British Columbia, the Tranquille Sanatorium opened its doors back in 1907. By 1910, the hospital was able to accommodate almost 50 patients, 4 nurses, and 12 attendants. By 1932, the Tranquille Sanatorium was able to house over 600 patients and staff and was operating as a fully functioning and self-sustaining community. 

Tranquille Sanatorium around 1920

Originally designed to treat tuberculosis known as the white plague back in the days, the Tranquille Sanatorium hospitalized thousands of people over the years. The facility was called the King Edward VII Sanatorium. The community built around the facility had gardens, houses, a gymnasium, a farm, a fire department as well as recreational areas such as an auditorium, a cafeteria, a laundry mat and tennis courts. It even had a school for handicapped children named “Stsmemelt Village” and a community and life grew around the sanatorium outside the hospital as well.

In 1958, the hospital closed and was reopened in 1959 to treat the mentally ill until the late 80s. In September 1991, an Italian developer, Giovanni Camporese, the president of A&A Foods, bought the land to turn it into a resort and renamed it “Padova City” from his hometown. There have been many plans to demolish it, but is for now an abandoned and derelict building and a farming community around. 

source

Many did not survive their stay in this haunted building as the white plague once was the single biggest killer in Canada, and its tragic history has added to its eerie reputation. 

Tranquille Sanatorium: A former TB hospital near Kamloops, with plans to become a sustainable community. Here from 2014. // Source

Paranormal Activity at Tranquille Sanatorium

Although the place is closed off as it is private property, you can still visit to participate in their historic tours. It is said that both visitors and staff at Tranquille Sanatorium have reported a wide range of paranormal occurrences like strange sightings and ghostly images. Moans and groans that from disembodied voices ring through the location and others have even reported seeing apparitions wandering the grounds. Some visitors have even reported feeling like they were being watched or followed by something unseen in the shadows.

One of the more retold rumours is about seeing light orbs and faint floating lights traveling in circles. This is especially reported on happening around the main entrance. Apparently, lights in the sanatorium also go on and off by themselves.

But what or who is behind the haunting rumours? According to the stories, these paranormal occurrences are linked to the dark history of Tranquille Sanatorium and those who lost their lives here as patients are still lingering. 

There are not many names and specific ghosts connected to this place, but they are certainly active, and sometimes even violent. Visitors report a figure pushing past them before disappearing and one even claimed to have been chased out of the hospital by a mist looking like the silhouette of a human. The spirit of a nurse who was supposedly murdered by a patient can be seen in several of the rooms have also made its rounds as a haunted legend. 

The Mother’s Cries on the Eight Floor

Although the stories from the haunted Tranquille Sanatorium can be very vague, there are some rumors that seem to echo through many sources. 

The sounds of children crying can be heard coming from the 8th floor, an area where pediatrics used to be. This is also a place where many people talk about seeing the mysterious orbs that have been observed throughout the sanatorium grounds. They have also claimed to have heard the voices of ghostly children playing in the abandoned children’s ward. 

Another ghost said to appear in these rooms is a female ghost believed to be a mother to one of the children. She can be heard crying for her child and even seen on both the eight as well as the sixth floor. When those seeing her approach her though, she vanishes into thin air. 

The Haunted Tunnels Below

The most haunted place though it is said to be the tunnels that have been dug out underneath the sunken gardens. Not only were these tunnels used to transport food and supplies into the sanatorium, they were also used to transport the dead bodies of the patients to the cemetery. Although it sounds dark, it was actually to spare the living patients the distress of seeing others succumbing to the illness they were battling with themselves. By using the tunnels, the staff would be able to discreetly transport them without anyone seeing it. 

Could these tunnels be haunted now? Throughout the decades, local teenagers have used these tunnels as a hang out and party place, and many of the haunted rumours come from this period.  There are reports that the tunnels below are filled with lonely voices and cries. 

The Ancestral Burial Site

It is not only the dark history of the sanatorium that has made people think it is haunted. Tranquille is a particularly active area when it comes to First Nations history. This land west of Tk’emlúps which is Secwépemctsín for “where the rivers meet”  is also the site of a major Secwépemc settlement dating back thousands of years. The Secwepemc used the area around Tranquille Sanatorium as a fishing and hunting settlement before the first colonists took over the area. Their ancestral burial sites and gravel pits have been found under the structures of the sanatorium. 

Source

The same location that was once Tranquille Sanatorium is now known as Tranquille Farm Fresh, which offers escape rooms and heritage tours, often connected to the haunted rumours for Halloween. For now, further development of the place remains in a place of limbo, where private development, agricultural needs as well as First People rights is trapped in a crossroad. 

Ghost Hunting in the Sanatorium

But is it really haunted? Several blogs have recounted their own experiences of partying and fuelling the haunted rumours with playing and pranking, pretending to be the ghosts. A lot of the modern takes on the haunted sanatorium actually comes from the MTV Show “MTV Fear” that aired from 2000 to 2002. Contestants are blindfolded and led by guides to the supposedly haunted area. Once night arrives, a computer terminal will usually pick one or two colors and assign a dare. This computer also provides the group with background information about the area. Tranquille Sanatorium was chosen as a location in episode 5 of season 2. 

Some teenagers remember the time they were paid in pizza to act as the ghosts rumored to haunt the place. The show had perhaps even created several unique characters that were unknown to everyone before airing the show. They had for instance the wife of one of the doctors, Ellison, who was consumed by tuberculosis haunting the place, and the ghost of the Pig Man as well. 

Question is: Did the show create the haunted rumors, or did the haunted rumors just inspire the show? 

Newest Posts

References:

The buried history of Tranquille 

Tranquille: A Timeline 

Vanishing B.C. Tranquille – Kamloops 

The deep, dark and mysterious history of Tranquille Sanatorium and psychiatric institution | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan’s News Source

Sanatorium near Kamloops one of Canada’s most haunted places – Vancouver Is Awesome

Is Tranquille the victim of wild imaginations? – The Superstitious Times

David Fee – The Shot Down Christmas Ghost on Bastion Square in Victoria

Advertisements

David Fee was just going to Christmas Mass in Victoria, Canada when he was shot down by accident by a man waiting for another. After this, he has been spotted where he died as well as his grave site, especially during the Christmas season.

“Just as the clock was striking midnight, ushering in the joyous Christmas day, a crime as dark, cowardly and mysterious as ever disfigured the history of this province was perpetuated,”
– The Daily Colonist on Dec. 25, 1890.

On a chilling Christmas Eve in 1890, the quaint streets of Victoria, British Columbia, were forever marked by a sinister event that has left its ghostly imprint on Bastion Square. The story of David Fee, whose life was abruptly and tragically cut short, continues to haunt this picturesque area, drawing both curious onlookers and ghost enthusiasts.

A Night of Festivity Turns to Horror

David Fee, a young man of only 21 years, was full of holiday spirit and was in town to visit his parents. After attending a lively costume party, he set off to join his parents for midnight mass at a nearby church. Inside Victoria’s St. Andrew Cathedral there were already prayers and the Christmas caroling had already begun. 

Clad in a white clown costume, he made his way through the festive streets. The bells of the cathedral began to toll at midnight, marking the transition from Christmas Eve to Christmas Day.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from the Christmas season.

At the same time, Clarence Phelan/Lawrence Whelan, a watchman at the cathedral drank whiskey and waited on a man who had told him to take down his Irish Independence flag. He knew the man was wearing a white overcoat.

As Fee approached the corner where the cathedral stood, the atmosphere suddenly shifted from festive to menacing. A figure emerged from the shadows, a double-barrel shotgun in hand. The assailant’s voice broke the stillness of the night with a chilling declaration: “You challenged me!

Before David Fee could utter a word in his defense, the shotgun blast echoed through the night, and he fell to the ground, lifeless. It was said by some that it went off accidentally. The people in the church rushed out and saw him in a pool of blood, covered in powder burns. 

The attacker, it turned out, had mistaken Fee for another man, leading to a tragic case of mistaken identity. He turned himself in and was convicted for manslaughter.

The Haunting of David Fee Begins

From that fateful night onward, the spirit of David Fee is said to have lingered in Bastion Square on the steps of the Cathedral or in Ross Bay Cemetery were he was buried. Many believe that his soul, restless and wronged, continues to roam the streets where he met his untimely end.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

Visitors to the area have reported sightings of a circling mist and a ghostly figure dressed in white, wandering the vicinity of the cathedral and the nearby graveyard where Fee was laid to rest. His spectral presence is particularly strong during the Christmas season, the anniversary of his death.

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

The Christmas Eve Murder That Shocked 19th Century Victoria – Capital Daily 

West Coast ghosts share a haunted history of Victoria and Vancouver 

Victoria walking tour of murder, mayhem and Christmas ghosts 

Discover The Haunting Secrets Of Craigdarroch Castle In Canada

Advertisements

Craigdarroch Castle is an iconic landmark in Victoria, Canada steeped in intriguing history and shrouded by eerie tales of hauntings. It is said to be haunted by the Dunsmuir family who built the castle, and people still claim to see the ghosts of them today.  

Craigdarroch Castle that sits atop of a hill and looks over the city of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. Some locals will even claim that this city is the most haunted one in all of British Columbia, and Craigdarroch Castle might be the most haunted place in the city. 

The National Historic Site has been the subject of numerous legends and stories that makes it one of the most visited haunted places in the country. From grisly tales of hauntings to its intriguing history, discover why this castle is a must-see for all paranormal enthusiasts.

Uncover the history of Craigdarroch Castle

Constructed in 1890 with 39 rooms, Craigdarroch Castle has remained a prominent landmark in Victoria, Canada throughout its long history. Built by Scottish immigrant Robert Dunsmuir on a hill overlooking the city. And what does a Scotsman do when he acquires himself a fortune? He builds himself a castle for him and his family. The castle was home to Robert and his family until 1908, although Robert himself died before he got to see his work. 

After his death his sons and their mother fought about ownership until her death in 1908 and even if the children were born of a wealthy man, there were not a lot of them who grew up to enjoy the family wealth. Architects died, one of the sons died on his honeymoon, one of the daughters died right after her father. This family looked like it was trailed by misfortune, and the only way they got to enjoy the comfort of their home was in death. 

The Ghostly tales behind Craigdarroch Castle

Among the Craigdarroch Castle most interesting features are the stories of strange hauntings that have occurred there over the years. Local legends say that ghostly figures have been seen standing in the windows or deep within its many rooms, while mysterious voices and intangible presences are reported to have been sensed by some visitors. 

Additionally, staff members of Craigdarroch Castle report hearing children crying throughout various parts of the building adding to its haunting allure!

The Child in the Basement

This is said to be the children of Dunsmuirs that never got the chance to grow up, especially their daughter who died right after Roebet did. But she as well as her other potentially ghost friends are still playing in the castle. 

It is especially the cellar that is talked about being haunted by this child. She has been seen standing in the middle of the dark cellar, glaring at the floor, but as soon as anyone comes near, she disappears. 

What is she doing in the basement one might ask, as she probably had her own room that would be much more comfortable to haunt. And the only one with the answer is the glaring child ghost in the cellar. 

Ghosts Haunting the Castle

Tales of unexplainable hauntings have been circulating throughout Craigdarroch Castle since it was built in the late 1800’s. For instance there have been talks about hearing a piano playing in the dead of the night even if there is no piano in the house. 

On the Grand Staircase it is said that Joan Dunsmuir, the wife of Robert, comes strolling down the stairs in her ballgown. What is particularly strange about her story is that she is never ever seen in other parts of the house she lived in for 18 years, nor is she ever seen walking up those stairs. 

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

Haunted Places Series: Craigdarroch Castle | The Inspector Blog 

Craigdarroch Castle The Haunted Place in Victoria, Canada 

The Lady in Red at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver

Advertisements

In the old classic Fairmont Hotel Vancouver a certain Lady in Red is said to haunt the upper floors of the place she used to go ballroom dancing in the 1940s. Still to this day guests report seeing her in the lobby as well as their rooms and she has even been seen passing through walls and locked doors. 

The Fairmont Hotel Vancouver is located in downtown Vancouver, and this haunted hotel is not to be mixed up with the haunted hotel in Ottawa bearing the same name. The place on West Georgia Street opened in May 1939 after being delayed for many years because of the Great Depression. 

Once a Japanese family called up the front desk and asked if they had double booked the room. When they had entered their room on the 14th floor. The front desk said they had not, probably well knowing that the woman dressed in a red dress was not a living guest at the hotel. 

The hotel is known as the Castle in the City because of the modern fairy tale-like tower and is also the home of the Lady in Red said to haunt the hotel. 

The Legend of the Lady in Red

The story of the ghost of The Lady in Red is that a woman dressed in a long and fancy red dress is supposedly haunting the 14th floor of the hotel, although she has also been seen in other places of the hotel. 

Today, most of the staff at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver know of her and in the hotel bar they even have named a drink after her, at least around Halloween season. 

The Dancing Socialite with a Tragic Death

In life she went by the name Jennie Pearl Cox and she stayed at the hotel many times with her husband Harold according to the stories. She was a Vancouver socialite that attended hotel events and dances in the 1940s when the hotel was new and fresh. 

Her stay at the hotel ended abruptly though when she was 25 years old and she got into a car accident in 1944 at the corner of Burrard and Georgia and died, but never really checked out from her favorite hotel.

The Haunted Hotel

Soon after her death the ghost of the Lady in Red started appearing in the lobby in the stairway and dancing in the ballrooms, especially on the 14th floor as many guests learned of the hard way according to the stories. 

She can be seen walking through walls and locked doors as well and has become a well known ghost in residence at the hotel. 

Not everyone is as used to seeing her as the senior staff at the hotel and when the tv-series X-Files were filming in Vancouver, one of the crew even claimed to have seen the ghost of a woman wearing a red dress.

The Ghost Captured on Camera

A couple of years ago, the legend got another boost when one of the upper floors’ windows got covered in red, but it was perhaps not the most convincing evidence, even if it made the news. 

But was she even real like Jennie Cox? Or was she as real as the red dress that turned out to just be a tarp covering the window?

Some say she is just a figment of the hotel’s imagination, imagined to help promote the hotel and it is just an urban myth as there are no grave stones, birth certificate or even pictures from this socialite to claim she actually existed. 

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

The Lady in Red The Ghost of the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver – SunCruiser 

‘Lady in Red’ ghost sighting? Vancouver man shares spooky photo 

Fairmont Hotel Vancouver – Luxury Hotel in Vancouver(Canada)  

Hotel Vancouver 

The Creepy History of The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory

Advertisements

Take a journey through the macabre and spooky history of The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory in Vancouver, a family restaurant where you get a ghost story served with your meal. 

Right before opening time, a waitress was walking in the back of the restaurant to check if all the tables were set. She suddenly saw a little boy under one of the boots and went over to him to see if he was alright. Suddenly the books on a bookshelf fell out with a bang and she looked away for a couple of seconds. When she looked back at the boy under the table he was gone. 

She had just seen one of the residential ghosts she had heard stories about in all her years working there, and now she had seen the ghost herself. That was her last shift at the Old Spaghetti Factory. 

Are you ready to explore the chilling history of The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory? The haunted restaurant is located in Vancouver in Canada, and these eerie walls have been home to tales of ghosts, ghouls, and strange occurrences throughout the years as well as pasta. 

From strange noises and flickering lights to sightings of mysterious shadows, there’s no telling what secrets this haunted restaurant has hidden away.

The Old Spaghetti Factory in Vancouver

Located in Vancouver, The Old Spaghetti Factory is well-known for its alleged hauntings and is located in the cobbled streets of Gastown, the oldest parts of the city. 

The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory opened its door in 1970 and is located in the Malkin Building on 53 Water Street in Vancouver, Canada. The building has been a staple of the local landscape since 1887. 

Its mysterious energy and eerie vibes have attracted many people to investigate its depths – some of whom claim to have experienced terrifying supernatural encounters while they were there and the former owner of the building, William Harold Malkin is said to haunt, not only the building, but Gastown as a whole.

The Haunted Old Tram, Number 53

Inside of the restaurant there are many old and vintage decorations, like an old trolley cart from 1904 that used to be on the streets of Vancouver. 

One of the most notorious tales that haunt The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory is that of the old trolley car, Number 53. At first glance it looks like it is just a part of the restaurant’s rustic decor, but this is the thing that makes it so haunted.

Some people claim that it is the ghost of the conductor that once worked in the tram that is haunting the restaurant and the tram he once worked in and that the hauntings first started when they put the tram inside of the restaurant. 

Many visitors to The Haunted Old Spaghetti Factory have reported seeing a strange ghost in uniform inside of the tram after closing time. 

The Little Red Man Pulling Pranks

Another ghost that is said to haunt the restaurant goes by the name of The Little Red Man or Looky-Loo and is the mischievous ghost with auburn hair or red clothing, depending on who tells the story.

He is said to be running around the kitchen and creeping out the staff by calling out their name. He has also been known to scare women in the restroom.

The Young Boy Scaring Staff to Quit their Jobs

The third ghost is said to be a young boy around 11 or 12 with blonde hair wearing blue overalls. The staff have eventually named him Edward and he runs around in the restaurant after closing time or is seen trying to bend the cutlery or unscrew the light bulbs. 

“We asked, ‘Can you swing a lamp or move some cutlery or move a chair right now to prove that you are here?’ Five seconds later a fork lifted up off the table, swiveled around, and dropped back onto the table. A lamp started swinging and chairs collided. This was all visible and audible to us,” Kris Newson, a former staff member in the restaurant, said in an interview.

One story goes that a waitress saw the young boy on her first closing shift and got so spooked out by the experience that she quit that very day. 

The Girl with the Balloon Looking for her Mom

There is also a legend about a young girl sitting by herself at a table, holding a balloon that no one knows. A friend of the general manager is said to have talked with her for a long time and said she had told him she was looking for her mother. But when another came over to the table, she apparently vanished right then and there. 

The Dark Vortex the Reason for the Paranormal Happenings?

Once the restaurant had a psychic that came and inspected the place to understand why there was such a presence of ghosts there. The psychic claimed that the ghosts were attracted to the place because of a vortex in the back of the restaurant as well as the spirits attachment to the decor of the restaurant. 

Some say the concentration of ghosts in this single restaurants is because of the long history of both the building and the area. 

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

Haunted Tales From The Old Spaghetti Factory – Gastown 

This Vancouver Restaurant Is so Haunted That Staff Have Quit After One Shift 

This Gastown restaurant is the most haunted place in Vancouver | Dished 

Ghost Tales from Keg Mansion in Canada

Advertisements

Keg Mansion, located in Toronto, Canada, has gained notoriety for its captivating and chilling tales of ghostly encounters. Steeped in history, this iconic mansion is believed to be haunted by restless spirit of a maid who met her untimely demise by hanging herself within the mansion’s walls. It is said that her tormented soul still lingers, leaving an eerie presence that can be felt by those who dare to venture into the mansion.

The Keg Mansion is a historic Toronto landmark, has been home to several mysterious tales of ghosts and hauntings since it was built in 1867. This iconic building boasts an intriguing history, spanning the 19th and 20th centuries, making it one of the most haunted places in Canada.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Canada

Today it is used as a restaurant known as Keg Steakhouse on Jarvis Street at Wellesley, but it used to be the home of one of the most prominent families in Toronto. But who is the one said to linger within the walls of the great mansion?

The Maid in the Attic at Keg Mansion

In the late 1800s it was owned by the Massey family, the most prominent families in Toronto. Lillian Massey was the daughter of Hart Massey. She was also the person running the mansion and named the estate Euclid Hall. Lillian Massey fell ill and she eventually died in her childhood home in 1915 and from then on the tragedies just kept on coming. 

The Keg Mansion: The building is know a steakhouse restaurant. The Keg Mansion was formerly known as “Euclid Hall” and is today thought to be haunted. // Source: Wikimedia

According to the stories, it was Lilliam Massey’s maid who went and hanged herself inside of the mansion. Apparently the maid walked up the main hall of Keg Mansion, up the stairs to the oval vestibule and she brought her own rope she made a noose she hung over the wood railing. She was found hanging above the foyer, right by the grand staircase. 

No one close to the maid, or other staff working at Keg Mansion really knows why she did it. Some claim it was out of grief because of the death of her employer, some say that she feared a big secret about her lover would come out after Lillian Massey’s death. 

Shadowy Figures Following Visitors Throughout the Home

Either way it is said that after her untimely death, people that have visited the Keg Mansion as well as the staff working there have claimed to have seen the ghost of the maid haunting the mansion she once worked and died in. According to the people that claim to have seen her, she is still hanging in the middle of the room where she died. 

Read More: Check out all of the ghost stories from Haunted Houses around the world

Reports have even been made of shadowy figures that follow visitors throughout the home and sudden bursts of unexplained energy. While some might not believe in ghosts, many who have visited Keg Mansion can attest to the fact that something definitely feels strange in the area. 

Some believe it is the ghost of Lillian Massey herself that are still watching over the home she devoted herself to. 

The Unexplainable Presence of a Little Boy in the Stairwells

The tragic tale of the hanged maid is not the only ghost story coming out from Keg Mansion though. There are also stories about what sounds and looks like the ghost of children roaming the halls. Legend has it that the ghost child or children roams the mansion’s stairwells and is particularly fond of visitors who are brave enough to make their way upstairs. 

It is said a little boy fell down the stairs and died from the fall, and his spirit has been seen forever since in Keg Mansion. Families that come to eat there have experienced their children wanting to play with the boy in the stairs only becoming terrified because even the little children notices something is wrong. 

Those who have been here say they can feel the presence when descending the stairs; however, no one has ever been able to explain just who or what it is. No matter which room someone is in at Keg Mansion, if you listen intently you can hear soft footsteps following your every move.

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

I Work In a Haunted Steakhouse

This Toronto Restaurant Is Haunted By Active Ghosts And Customers Have Actually Encountered Them Before – Narcity 

Haunted Places Series: Keg Mansion | The Inspector Blog

The Mysterious Haunted History of the Fairmont Chateau Laurier in Ottawa

Advertisements

Take a closer look at the paranormal activity linked to Ottawa’s iconic Fairmont Chateau Laurier and the unique stories told about its hauntings. 

For 100 years, the legendary Fairmont Chateau Laurier has been the site of strange and unexplained occurrences behind its Tiffany stained glass windows. The old hotel with over 400 rooms is said to have some guests that never really checked out.

From sightings of a ghostly woman in white to mysterious objects moving on their own, there are numerous tales of paranormal activity connected to one of Ottawa’s most iconic landmarks. 

PS! It is not to be confused with the Fairmont hotel in Vancouver, which has its own haunted legend about the Lady in Red.

History of the Chateau Laurier

The Fairmont Chateau Laurier is a luxurious hotel built in the early 20th century as a symbol of Ottawa’s success and prosperity.

Grand Trunk Railway president Charles Melville Hays commissioned Château Laurier, and construction occurred between 1909 and 1912, but never got to live to see the opening himself as he died on the RMS Titanic on 15th of April when he was returning to Canada for the opening. Today it is said he is haunting the hotel that he never got to witness its opening of. 

Since its opening in 1912, it has played an integral role in Ottawa’s social scene and political landscape, hosting many important figures from the past and present.

Sightings and Urban Legends Related to the Hotel

Even throughout its storied history, unusual and mysterious events have taken place in the Fairmont Chateau Laurier. Some of the rumors of paranormal activity are more mainstream and related to typical ghostly sightings, noises, and other phenomena. 

Others appear to be grounded more in urban legend than founded fact—stories that could be attributed to the hotel’s romantic atmosphere or a bit of dramatism based upon its location near city cemeteries.

What is peculiar about this hotel though, is that there is a striking amount of vague feelings and senses rather than specific stories with not much details. Could it just be the atmosphere of the place that makes you feel so? Or perhaps there is something about the place or the building that plays a ghostly prank on your nerves?

The Strange Happenings on the 7th floor

But let us have a look at what the rumors are saying, and try to pinpoint the few clues that exist. 

First, there have also been many deaths connected to the hotel, especially suicides of people that have jumped from the upper floor and many chalk up the strange happenings on the upper floors of the restless spirits of these people. 

For many years the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation CBC had a radio studio on the 7th and 8th floor of the hotel for more than 80 years. The people that were working there reported about strange things happening in the nearby suite. 

The Ghost Child

Among a general uneasiness, the feeling of being watched and creepy sounds and shakings in the rooms there have been spotted things as well people believe to be ghosts. 

There have also been reports about the ghost of a child still roaming the hall. 

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

Château Laurier – Wikipedia 

Haunted Castle | Michel Loiselle Photos 

Fairmont Château Laurier’s Invisible Guests – M.A. Kleen