Tag Archives: pennsylvania

The Singing Ghost of May Yohé Haunting Hotel Bethlehem

Advertisements

In the historic Hotel Bethlehem in Pennsylvania the famous singer and actress May Yohé grew up, singing and dancing to the guests. Her life didn’t end up as glamorous as she lived and it is said that she is still performing in her afterlife where it all started.

In Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, Hotel Bethlehem stands as a historical monument being Pennsylvania’s oldest hotel, a luxurious retreat, and, intriguingly, a haunted haven. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from the USA

Among its many ghostly legends lingering in the hotel’s 125 guest rooms, none is as captivating or as tragic as the tale of Mary Yohe, known to many as “May.” Her story, marked by stardom, misfortune, and nostalgia, echoes through the hallways and ballrooms of this grand hotel, particularly around Christmastime.

Hotel Bethlehem: The hotel of how it looked around in 1930.

The First House of Betlehem

Before it turned into the hotel of today, it was a place of Moravian missionaries. They named their new town Bethlehem on Christmas Eve in 1741. The original 1741 house was built by Moravian missionary Count Nicholas Von Zinzendorf. 

In 1794 they built the Golden Eagle Hotel, still a Moravian building. This is also the building and the time where many of the reported ghosts come from.  

The hotel lasted until 1919 when it was destroyed after having been used as a WWI military convalescent home. Then in 1922, Charles M. Schwab, a steel-tycoon, built the luxurious Hotel Bethlehem we know of today. 

May Yohé Rise to Fame

Mary “May” Yohe was born in April, 1866 and was the granddaughter to Caleb Yohe, who operated the hotel when it was called The Eagle. Born Mary Augusta Yohe, she grew up there and from a young age, she displayed an extraordinary talent for singing and performing and there are recordings of her singing and dancing for the guests in the lobby when she was young. 

The Moravians liked her so much their church got their money out and sent Yohéto Europe for a refined education, studying in Dresden and later at the Convent of the Sacré Coeur in Paris.

May’s abilities quickly garnered attention, propelling her into the limelight. Her voice and charm captivated audiences in Paris and across Europe, where she performed with great acclaim. By 1888 she made headlines in the country as one of the biggest stage stars as well as her love affairs. 

Her beauty and talent even caught the eye of a wealthy British lord, who whisked her away into the aristocracy with a lavish marriage. She married Lord Francis Clinton Hope and he gave her the very famous Hope Diamond that she wore many times. The diamond named after him, was thought to be cursed, something she also alluded to in the screenplay she wrote about it. 

May Yohe: A famous singer and actress is thought to be haunting the Bethlehem Hotel, the place of her childhood.

The Tragic Downfall of the Singer

They married in November 1894. She had gained fame on the London stage in 1893 and 1894, especially in the burlesque Little Christopher Columbus. He led an extravagant lifestyle, which the two continued together, and was discharged in bankruptcy in 1896. She ended up in the papers with her divorce in 1902 after they had both squandered away his fortune and Hope had to sell off the Hope Diamond to pay his debts. 

After this she had a string of marriages and affairs that were unhappy and she was stolen from, gave up a baby for adoption and was left broken and destitute. 

She died in poverty in Boston in 1938, having lost all her money and fame. Her husband sprinkled her ashes into the Atlantic Ocean before following her a few months later. Despite the turmoil and heartbreak, May often reminisced about her early years in Bethlehem, calling them the best of her life.

The Ghostly Presence of May Yohé at Hotel Bethlehem

To this day, the spirit of May Yohe is said to linger in Hotel Bethlehem, her ethereal presence felt by guests and staff alike, often appearing as the little girl she was. Visitors have reported seeing a young woman dressed in elegant attire, resembling the glamorous performer May once was, especially on the third floor. 

Guests claim to hear her sing and that the piano starts playing when there is no one there. She is often spotted near the piano, where she used to enchant audiences with her singing, or pacing gracefully beside the Christmas tree, as if lost in the memories of happier times.

The most chilling encounters involve hearing her voice—faint, yet unmistakably recognizable—singing one of her favorite songs. These ghostly serenades often occur during the quiet hours of the night, sending shivers down the spines of those who hear them.

Every year, as Christmas approaches, it is said that the sightings of May Yohe become more frequent. It is believed that the holiday season stirs her spirit, bringing her memories of joy and sorrow to the forefront. Guests staying at Hotel Bethlehem during this time often hope for a glimpse of the glamorous ghost, or to hear her melancholic melodies filling the air once more.

Read more: Check out more ghost stories from the Christmas season

Other Paranormal Activity at Hotel Bethlehem

Many staff report hearing their name being called when no one is there. Shadows, apparitions and reflections are almost common when staying at hotel Bethlehem. A tap on the shoulder, things falling from desks and electrical appliances not working as it should. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Haunted Hotels

A man known as Frank Smith is wearing a suit and shows up on the third floor and a Moravian settler from the 1700s is said to be moving in the basement. In the basement is also the ghost of one of the former caretakers of the Eagle Hotel who is said to guard things in the basement. Mrs. Hops brought slaves from Virginia and hid them in the basement. She is said to still guard them in her afterlife. 

The Ghost of the Town Guide, Francis

Another ghost said to haunt the Hotel Bethlehem is the ghost of Francis “Daddy” Thomas, who was the Bethlehem’s Town Guide for many years. He was born in Wuttemburg, Germany, but moved to the Colonies when he was 6 years old. As many others in the area, he was very much influenced by the Moravian Bishop Spangenberg. He was known as a fearless man, working as a courier, not even almost deaths could stop him from doing his job. 

After many years on the horseback, he settled down as a cabinetmaker and town guide, marrying Anna Graeff. After he died on April 4th in 1822 at the age of 90, it is believed he is the one haunting the hotel, especially being seen around the Boiler Room of the hotel. 

Mrs. Bring – a ghost without socks

In 1833, the Eagle Hotel as it was known at the time, was still owned by the Moravian Church. They had employed Mr. and Mrs Bong, but had no idea of what kind of people they were. Mr. Bong was an alcoholic who never said no when a guest offered a drink. Many times the bartender had to move him to a nearby bench when he was too drunk. 

Mrs. Bong was apparently good at her job as a host, but too much of a rebel for a church owned establishment. She would often show up not wearing shoes or stockings, shocking guests and the rest of the staff. 

They were fired after six months, but to this day, kitchen staff and dinner guests claim to see a woman in period clothing, not wearing shoes or socks, most often seen around the kitchen or restaurant area of the Hotel Bethlehem.

Paranormal Activity in Room 932

Inside Room 932, there have been many strange stories that have no name or story attached to it. A couple staying there were awakened by a man in front of their bed. “Why are you in my room?” he asked, but as soon as they turned on the light, he was gone. 

There have also been stories about guests seeing a reflection in the mirror that isn’t them, lamps start flashing and paper on the desk comes flying off. One time a guest reported opening the bathroom and saw an entirely different bathroom. There are many pictures from guests where people say orbs appear and is today the most requested room in the Hotel Bethlehem.

The Haunted Hotel Bethlehem

For those brave enough to spend a night at Hotel Bethlehem, the possibility of encountering the ghost of May Yohe, Mrs. Bong without socks or experiencing something strange in Room 932, adds an extra layer of allure to this historic establishment. Whether you believe in ghosts or simply enjoy a good story, the legend of Bethlehem Hotel is sure to leave a lasting impression.

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

Who’s Haunting the Historic Hotel Bethlehem? 

Haunted Hotel Bethlehem – Ghosts of Gettysburg 

This 278-Year-Old Hotel Is One Of The Most Haunted Places In Pennsylvania… And You Can Spend The Night 

Haunted Hotels in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 

PAranormal (and True Crime) — Hotel Bethlehem This historically haunted hotel in… 

May Yohé – Wikipedia 

Ghost Stories from the Gettysburg Battlefield

Advertisements

Haunted by eerie stories and mysterious legends, the Gettysburg Battlefield is home to supernatural phenomena like the legendary Ghost of Gettysburg. 

Gettysburg Battlefield has been shrouded in mystery and awed by stories of supernatural sightings. One of the most famous legends is the “Ghost of Gettysburg,” a purported spirit that haunts the historic Civil War battleground. Find out what makes this story so compelling, and explore other unusual tales related to this mysterious place.

The History of Gettysburg

Gettysburg is rich with history and tragedy. During the Battle of Gettysburg, there were approximately 50,000 casualties on both sides in the three days between July 1st and July 3rd 1863. For many it stands as the greatest battle that was during the American Civil War and was a turning point that led to the fall of the Confederacy and victory to the Union.

The Battle of Gettysburg: This is a picture after the first day of fighting on Stevens’ Knoll, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The battle would last for three days and be the bloodiest battle during the American Civil War.

It was fought around the town of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania when General Robert E. Lee felt victory was with the Confederates and marched north. However, the Union was awaiting their arrival and a 3 day battle began across the hills and forest as well as the entire town.  

It remains the bloodiest battle fought during the American Civil War, details of which have been immortalized by many authors throughout history.

Pennsylvania Hall

Of what is now Gettysburg College and during the battle, the college was a place were the battle raged on. The place is today said to be haunted, especially the building on campus named Pennsylvania Hall. Students and teachers alike have shared stories about seeing soldiers walking on campus.

The Ghost of Jennie Wade

The most famous ghost story in Gettysburg is the Ghost of Jennie Wade. In July 1863, a woman named Mary V. “Jennie” Wade was baking bread for the Union troops when she became the only civilian killed during the 3-day battle. Legend has it that her ghost still haunts the town; reports from visitors, who claim to have encountered her, are often heard along with sightings of a female figure near Ziegler’s Grove, where Jennifer was killed.

Specters in Seminary Ridge Hospital

Seminary Ridge Hospital, once the largest hospital in Pennsylvania during the war, is rumored to be haunted by many spirits ranging from former Confederate doctors to injured patients. Reports of ghostly nurses walking through hallways with stretchers of phantom soldiers have been made, and several reports tell of figures assumed to be wounded soldiers searching buildings for aid that never comes.

Haunted Spirits in Meade’s Headquarters

George Meade’s Headquarters, which sit on the roundtop of Cemetery Hill, have been reported to be haunted by the ghost of Major General Meade himself. Witnesses describe phantom figures in the windows, soft voices coming from the direction of his old tent, and shadows that move inside Meade’s old office. 

Other reports tell stories of a spectral female figure said to be wandering around in search of a lost soldier. These stories seem unbelievable but there’s no denying that something odd lurks in this historic area.

Supernatural Occurrences at Little Round Top

Little Round Top has been the setting for a number of supernatural occurrences. Many believe it’s haunted by the ghosts of fallen soldiers, both Union and Confederate. There have been reports of eerie whispers, phantom sounds, and strange glows in the air. Some visitors claim to feel an invisible presence at the top of Little Round Top or strange chills that travel down their spine when they stand on this hallowed ground.

The Devils Den

One of the most notorious places though is The Devils Den, and it is said that the place was haunted long before the Battle of Gettysburg. 

It used to be a Native American hunting ground for centuries. Another battle named The Battle of the Crows was supposedly fought here and in the night you could hear war cries from the Native American according to the early settlers who told ghost stories about the place. Even by the end of the 1800s, the place was called haunted. 

During the Battle of Gettysburg there was a lot of fighting around the den on the second day. After the war, there were countless people that claimed to have seen something supernatural around the bould of rocks. 

More like this

Newest Posts

References

Hauntings at the Weston State Hospital or the Trans-Allegheny Asylum

Advertisements

Many of the patients spent most of their lives inside of the walls of the old and overcrowded asylum then known as Weston State Hospital as well as the Trans-Allegheny Asylum. Some even say that some of the souls will spend the rest of eternity in this old asylum. 

The asylum was first built in the period between 1858 to 1881. During the Civil War it was used as a base for soldiers and the completion of the hospital happened first after the war. 

It was back then known as the Weston State Hospital, although it best known by its original name today: The Trans-Allegheny Asylum.

It opened the doors in 1864 with nine patients and was supposed to be a fresh start to cure the insane? But after it closed the doors, it became known as one of America’s most haunted places. How was it possible? For that we have to go back to when the now haunted asylum opened its fresh coated doors. 

Read about more haunted asylums around the world: Gonjiam Psychiatric Hospital

Advertisements

The New Era for the Insane

The man behind the building that is now filled with rumors of ghosts and ghouls was Thomas Story Kirkbride who is considered to be one of the fathers of the modern American practice of psychiatry. The building was built after what was known as the Kirkbride plans which was the golden standard for mental hospitals in the 19th century. 

The architecture was supposed to be spacious and receive a lot of direct sunlight to comfort the patients. The hospitals were usually built out in green and lush places. The very word asylum used to mean a place of comfort. The idea that they would remove the inflicted person from the environment, would supposedly help cure them. 

But although the base philosophy was moral care and kindness, the reality turned out to be something completely different as the spacious rooms became overcrowded with patients that never recieved their cure. 

Advertisements

The Patients Haunting the Asylum

Although it was seen as an innovative and modern way of dealing with the mentally ill back then, today we look at it as quite barbaric. For instance the patients were admitted with diagnoses like hereditary, menstrual  and even masturbation, as they thought this habit caused mental illness.

Some of the more unusual listings but still accepted as diagnoses were: “novel reading,”  “doubt about his mother’s ancestors,” “marriage of son,” “Salvation Army,” “seduction and disappointment,” among some of the reasons we today would consider just silly. 

And the supposed cure they promised was reported as being at only 26 percent. Many succumbed to the horrible conditions at the hospital, suicide or even murder. Even the methods that were put in to cure your affliction could end up killing you. It is estimated that around 50 000 people died in the hospital while it was operating from 1864 to 1994. 

Advertisements

Horrible Conditions

When the asylum was first built it was supposed to hold up to 250 people. It was built with a lot of space as the idea was that the patients should be able to roam about the premise free as part of their cure. 

But soon the asylum got crowded, at most it had ten times more patients than it should have. By the peak in the 1950s, the asylum housed over 2400 patients. They were sleeping maybe up to five people in dirty rooms on the floor in freezing rooms. The windows were almost blacked out by the dirt and mold with the wallpapers peeling in the decay. 

Advertisements

The care for the patients also declined. And although the hospital philosophy was to use as little restraint as possible, it became increasingly more difficult as the overcrowding kept happening and only getting worse into the new century. And the use of straightjackets, cuffs, bed straps and cribs were frequent. 

It wasn’t only for the patients that the condition was bad. The staff also had its problems. There are several records of female employees being raped on duty. There is also a story about a nurse who went missing. They didn’t find the rotting body at the bottom of an unused staircase before two months passed. 

Lobotomies, Electroshock and Ice Baths

It wasn’t only the rooms and amounts of patients that were a problem at the asylum. It was also the treatments. When it was at its worst, the asylum was also a place where they began experimenting with some experimental lobotomies in the 1930s. 

These lobotomies left the patients, some even perfectly healthy before the procedure, with brain damage and hemorrhages. It is estimated that over 4000 of these experiments were performed at this asylum. 

There was also a spread of electroconvulsive therapy and hydrotherapy. Hydrotherapy was widely used in the first half of the 20th century and was a cold bath where the patient had to sit for hours, sometimes even days. 

Electroshock Therapy was given up to several times a day and some also suffered permanent brain damage from it in the long run.

The End of the Asylum

Although some were considered cured and helped during their stay at the hospital, many patients held great resentment towards the place and the staff. One even tried to burn it to the ground in 1935. 

Advertisements

The asylum closed its doors for patients first in 1994. In 2007 it opened its doors for tourists and was renamed to Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum which was the original name when it first opened its doors. Here they host tours and overnight stays to tell the story, both the medical and the supposed paranormal ones. 

Ghosts Reported of in the Asylum

Lily

One of the most talked about ghosts in the old asylum is the little girl, Lily. The story differs slightly from who tells it, from her being a patient from the Civil War era that died from pneumonia when she was 9. Some even say that she was born in the asylum. 

She usually plays in a room on the 4th floor in Ward R. This was once a place for violent women. She is often seen in her playroom, where you can hear her both crying and laughing.

Advertisements

There have been several claims to exactly who she is. In one paranormal investigation series, she featured in one of their episodes. There the psychist Tammy Wilson met a girl around nine years old wearing a white dress. Her mother started with the letter E came to the hospital already pregnant. Her parents died though and both her and her daughter had to live their remaining days at the asylum. 

According to the producers, they actually found records of a woman beginning with an E and gave birth in the 1920s. Could it be Lily?

Big Jim

One of the more scarier ghost is Big Jim, said to have murdered another patient with a bedpost. He is said to haunt the third floor together with a murdered man who was bludgeoned to death after the murdered failed to hang him. 

James

A ghost who is said to have died of a heart attack in the bathtub. 

Advertisements

Ruth

On the first floor of the building you can find the ghost of former patient Ruth. She haunts this place which is called the Civil War Wing. Apparently she hated men and used to throw things at them, someone says she still does it to this day. 

Nurse Elizabeth

Another ghost that is haunting the third floor is that of Nurse Elizabeth. Not much are known of her. 

Civil War Soldiers

From its story stretching all the way back to the civil war, there wouldn’t be a story complete without a soldier ghost. Although not specified as being from the civil war in all the sources, there is a ghost named Jacob who are haunting the hallways of the fourth floor. 

Advertisements

Slewfoot

One person nicknamed Slewfoot is said to haunt the upper floors. He is said to have committed many of the murders in the upstairs bathroom and supposedly haunts the area. 

Other Ghosts

In Ward 2 on the second floor there is a room where a man was stabbed 17 times by another patient and still haunts it. In another room there were two patients that hanged themselves from the curtain rods and have been seen as shadowy figures.

Advertisements

More like this

Newest Posts

References

Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum one of WV’s most haunted spots (FlipSide)

 THE CIVIL WAR-HISTORY AND HERITAGE TRANS-ALLEGHENY LUNATIC ASYLUM

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/ghost-tour-mental-hospital

Weston State Hospital

I Spent the Night in a Haunted Asylum and I Still Can’t Explain What I Saw – Washingtonian

Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum and the Haunting Enigma of Lily

Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, Weston, West Virginia – Legends of America

The Hauntings of Eastern State Penitentiary

Advertisements

If there is one place a haunting is taking place, it is prisons. So much regret, vengeance and the hunt for justice and despair is echoing through the walls. And the ghost of Eastern State Penitentiary is said to haunt the place, even after it closed down as a prison.

The Eastern State Penitentiary is a massive building. All stone, rising from the ground like an old fortress in Philadelphia, built to keep people inside.

The Eastern State Penitentiary has housed some of the most scary criminals, like Al Capone for example. Hard boiled criminals shut away for a long time. The people outside these walls will never know. Perhaps they are happy about it. As long as they are locked away, they say. They deserve it all, they say.

Read Also: Check out all of our ghost stories from Haunted Prisons from all over the world.

In the court system it is said that the punishment is suppose to fit the crime. One can wonder if the criminals got a punishment worse than the crime itself. This is Eastern State Penitentiary, Philadelphia.

The Eastern State Penitentiary is reportedly a haunted prison and the location has made an appearance of many of the paranormal ghost hunting shows like Ghost HuntersGhost Adventures and BuzzFeed Unsolved.

Haunted Isolation in the Early Days of Eastern State Penitentiary

When the Eastern State Penitentiary was built it was the most expensive building in the USA. opened in 1829 they brought isolation to new heights. Not only were they to be separated from people from the outside. In this prison, the idea was that they would be separated from everything.

The Prison of Isolation: the Eastern State Penitentiary practice isolation for the prisoners because they thought it would help reform them and help them spiritually.

The prisoners that were sent there, really did everything in isolation. They lived alone, worked out alone and ate alone. Even when they were transported from place to place they were doing it all alone.

When a prisoner left his cell, an accompanying guard would wrap a hood over his head to prevent him from being recognized by other prisoners. Everything was done in isolation.

Read Also: Another haunted prison known for its horrible conditions is the The Ghosts From Security Prison 21 in Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum

It was all done it good faith at the start as the though of reformation instead of punishment was strong in the initial prison design. The idea was that silent contemplation was meant to be helpful in the prisoners rehabilitation and road to a crime free life. Instead, it ended up as a particular form of torture. The cells were made of concrete with a single glass skylight, representing the “Eye of God”, suggesting to the prisoners that God was always watching them.

But this was a long time ago, right? It was to people in a different time. They wouldn’t do this to people today, right? Well, the prison didn’t close its doors until the seventies. They had to do something with the isolation because of overpopulation from 1913. Too many prisoners to keep them separate. But is wasn’t necessarily to the better and the prison operated all uptil 1971.

Eastern State Penitentiary Famous Inmates

Although it in the earlier days of the prison, it housed mainly petty criminals incarcerated for various robbery and theft charges like muggers and purse-snatchers. first-time offenders often served two years.

But as the prison operated for a long time, the Eastern State Penitentiary housed many of the well known prisoners that had done serious crimes and served long sentences like the bank robber Willie Sutton that served 11 years in the prison and was one of the prisoners that tried to escape after digging an underground tunnel in 1945. or the American gangster Al Capone, also known as Scarface who was known for being Public Enemy No. 1 in his time. They served her after the isolation concept of the prison stopped.

Read Also: Check out perhaps the most famous haunted prison with the most famous ghost prisoners: Unveiling the Dark History of the Tower of London and its Ghosts 

In Al Capone’s case, it can seem like the prison was a haunting experience for him as well. He spent 8 months in the prison from 1929 and had many benefits and even his cell was decorated with luxury of fine furniture, oriental rugs and a personal radio, making it a cozy room almost. Even with all of his privileges, he had trouble sleeping and was heard at night, screaming that the ghost of someone named Jimmy had to leave him alone. The guards also claimed to her him have full conversation with this Jimmy as well.

Scarface in Eastern State Penitentiary: Alphonse “Scarface” Capone got his first taste of prison life in Philadelphia. When he was arrested outside a movie theater for carrying a concealed, unlicensed .38 caliber revolver. Capone’s arrest came at a time of escalating mob violence in Chicago, and he was often accused of hiding in prison intentionally.

Even after he got out from prison he saw this Jimmy and even hired a medium to get rid of it, but according to the story and the rest of his story, it didn’t look like it worked.

It is believed that the Jimmy, Al Capone though he was haunted by was Jimmy Clark, one of the people that Al Capone had killed during the Valentine’s Day Massacre.

In the end he was even committed to a mental hospital because of his visions and mental health. Whether it was because he was really haunted, or rather because of his syphilis is hard to tell.

Place of Torture at Eastern State Penitentiary

One should think that when you get your judgement, that is it. This is your punishment. But no, once inside the prison walls, the punishment for minor offences can get you in a lot of problems, and in a lot of pain. One example of the punishments that were around was to chain the tongue of a prisoners to his wrist.

As well as their habit of isolating the prisoners, a form of torture in itself, the prisoners were also subject of being subdued in freezing water, being strapped to a chair for days and and putting the worst behaved prisoners into a pit called “The Hole”, an underground cellblock dug under cellblock 14 where they would have no light, no human contact, and little food for as long as two weeks.

Torture in the Prison: Although the initial thought of the punishments was to help the prisoners reform and grow spiritually, the fact was that many of the prisoners serving time for petty theft were subjected to harsh torture.

All of these past history and ways of life have helped to form the narrative that some of the former prisoners must surely haunt the place that put them through all of this.

Haunted Places in the Eastern State Penitentiary

There are many location inside of the prison who is said to be more haunted than others and the people that used to serve time there as prisoners or worked there as prisoners have all stories to tell. Even those working there now as staff or visitors claim to have experienced paranormal activity, everything from hearing footsteps, whispers, seeing visions or even hearing wailing from the painful past of the prison. .

On Cellblock 12 it is reported on echoing voices and cackling coming from the walls. Another common story heard from the Eastern State Penitentiary is like the ones from Cellblock 6, a place that is known for reports of people seeing the apparition of shadowy figures that flutters across the halls.

The Hauntings of Eastern State Penitentiary: Many of the locations of the prison is haunted according to old as well as new staff, visitors and prisoners alike. They talk about seeing strange apparitions in the halls and the cells and hearing strange voices and noises coming from places were no one is.

Cellblock 4 has a reputation of being haunted by the apparition of ghostly faces appearing. The most famous story about this haunting comes from the maintenance man, Gary Johnson who worked there in the 1990s. He had just opened an old lock in the block when he felt some sort of force took hold of him, making him unable to move. A horrible negative energy filled the cell and the visions of these tormented ghost faces appeared on the cell walls.

As well as the cell blocks were there were held countless of prisoners over the years, there are also reports of what look like former guards haunting the place. In the towers there have been reports about people have seen something that look like the ghost of a guard. What is strange about seeing a figure here however is that there are no physical way of getting up to those towers for a living person.

On the second floor there used to be a cellblock for women when the prison was in operation. Today there is a sighting of a woman wearing white sitting in the last cell that have been seen so often that she has gotten the name: The Soap Lady.

Eastern State Penitentiary’s History in the Museum of Ghosts

Today it’s more like a museum, were we can walk over the faith of these people on ghost trips to a few coins, capitalism at its best. The museum now also caters to the paranormal atmosphere of Eastern State Penitentiary and offers a haunted house attraction during halloween season. And although many of the prisons like Eastern State Penitentiary have started to rethink prison tourism, this is the sort that sells the tickets.

Read Also: Another haunted prison you can visit is Ghost Stories of The Haunted Prison Alcatraz.

The hauntings however, is said to be there for free as well as Hollywood made and what is an actor and what is an actual ghost is said to have hazy line.

Al Capone’s Cell: Not every prisoners got to have a luxurious cell as the one Al Capone had when he stayed in Eastern State Penitentiary. According to legend though, there was something that seemed to haunt Al Capone when he stayed in his cell at night.

The most normal things we can hear at the Eastern State Penitentiary when the darkness falls is the laughter of some that isn’t there, shadowy figures sneaking over the walls. You can also hear the footsteps that never reaches you. Because even in death, the prisoners in kept in isolation. They are not to see, and not to be seen, ever again.

More like this

Newest Posts

References:

Al Capone – Wikipedia

Eastern State Penitentiary – Wikipedia 

History behind the walls: How Philadelphia’s most famous haunted house began

https://omgfacts.com/article/1202

The Haunted Eastern State Penitentiary