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Tales of Hauntings What's your favourite?

#1 User is offline   QuickTidal 

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Posted 07 June 2011 - 06:11 PM

I thought I'd start a new thread so we can all talk about our favourite haunting stories. The best ones are the ones that are in your city, or area.

I'll start us off with two of the most famous in Toronto.

The first is The Keg Mansion. One of the best known haunted houses in Toronto is the old McMaster mansion (home of Lord William McMaster, founder of McMaster University in Hamilton), subsequently the old Massey mansion (home to manufacturing magnate and arts patron Hart Massey -- of Massey-Harris, Massey-Ferguson, Hart House, Massey College and Massey Hall, and whose family included Governor General Vincent Massey and actor Raymond Massey), now the Keg Mansion, a mid-scale grill and steakhouse (mine and my gf's fave restaurant as we only live round the corner). Hart Massey amassed a great deal of wealth as an industrialist and then, as his ambitious overworked sons died one right after the other, he was stricken with remorse at the folly of his pursuit of wealth, and the effects of industrialization on the city's less fortunate. At his death, he donated millions -- “for the poor, the sick and those who tend them," as his will stated, "for the young who are willing... to develop their minds.”

The transformation of their home into a steak-and-cake restaurant has apparently done little to quiet the spirits of the former residents. Numerous waiters, hostesses and patrons have encountered the ghosts of young children and domestic staff from bygone times, and more than one person has felt the presence of someone -- possibly Hart Massey's lonely daughter Lillian -- (who's death from illness inspired a grief stricken maid to hang herself off the main foyer bannister form the floor above...one of the ghosts) in the women's washroom on the second floor. One interesting fact: The mansion "has a secret tunnel that connects it to Wellesley Hospital, when the Massey family used it to transport their son for treatment." Which son? Possibly 'sensitive and frail' Fred Victor, for whom the Fred Victor Mission is named. It's a spooky place even to eat in, but that's what makes it so popular. BEyond that, there is the ghost of a man in the parlour room who appears only in your peripheral vision and when you turn to look at him properly he's not there. We sometimes go to other Kegs and one time we asked if our server ate there, and what he thought about the whole thing. Apparently there is a newsletter that emails out amongst the staff and locations where the Keg Mansion always has new stories from staff or patrons about weird goings on. Like weekly he said. I love going there as it feels like you're eating on an old spooky movie set.

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The second place is The Crystal Ballroom of the King Edward Hotel: Built in the 1800's and added to in 1921 the hotel is Toronto's oldest luxury hotel and was frequented by famous film stars in that era. In 1921 they built on the 17th floor (the top) The Crystal Ballroom for the rich and famous patrons to sit in the lap of luxury. It was only used until 1950's before being shut due to not meeting changing fire codes. While the hotel itself is purported to be haunted as a whole, it all seems to stem from the long abandoned ballroom. The floor is not meant to service the 17th floor where the doors used to open right onto the ballroom, but the button is still in the elevators and there's been tell of people getting on the elevators at night and hitting the button for their floor and having the elevator go to 17 and open onto a darkened, abandoned crystal ballroom. There is also a story of guests getting on the elevator only to have their exact floor button already illuminated and pushed. Strange. I keep asking my totally chickenshit gf if we can stay in a room on the 16th floor, right beneath the ballroom floor for a night....but she flat out refuses....the curious person in me totally loves that sort of scary thing so I want to do it.

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There's a lot more in Ontario, like the screaming tunnel out by Niagara Falls, or the Hermitage in Hamilton...but I'll let a few others throw some stories up.

Whatchoo folks got?

This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 07 June 2011 - 06:17 PM

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#2 User is offline   Adjutant Stormy~ 

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Posted 07 June 2011 - 10:02 PM

Not necessarily haunted, but supposedly cursed, nearby is the Winchester Mystery House in San Jose- which was built (and never finished, per the advice of a medium) by the heir of the Winchester gun manufacturing fortune.

After the rest of her family died of various illness, a psychic told her (through the voice of her father) that her only chance of evading the curse is to never finish the construction of her house. It eventually grew to 7 stories (though it's only 4 after an earthquake) and is built utterly chaotically. Stairways to nowhere, windows and doors in random places (on ceilings, etc).

I went there once, and it's pretty trippy.
<!--quoteo(post=462161:date=Nov 1 2008, 06:13 PM:name=Aptorian)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Aptorian @ Nov 1 2008, 06:13 PM) <a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=462161"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->God damn. Mighty drunk. Must ... what is the english movement movement movement for drunk... with out you seemimg drunk?

bla bla bla

Peopleare harrasing me... grrrrrh.

Also people with big noses aren't jews, they're just french

EDIT: We has editted so mucj that5 we're not quite sure... also, leave britney alone.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#3 User is offline   QuickTidal 

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Posted 07 June 2011 - 11:43 PM

View Postadjutant stormy, on 07 June 2011 - 10:02 PM, said:

Not necessarily haunted, but supposedly cursed, nearby is the Winchester Mystery House in San Jose- which was built (and never finished, per the advice of a medium) by the heir of the Winchester gun manufacturing fortune.

After the rest of her family died of various illness, a psychic told her (through the voice of her father) that her only chance of evading the curse is to never finish the construction of her house. It eventually grew to 7 stories (though it's only 4 after an earthquake) and is built utterly chaotically. Stairways to nowhere, windows and doors in random places (on ceilings, etc).

I went there once, and it's pretty trippy.


I've always wanted to visit the Winchester Mystery House. I saw a documentary on it once and found it fascinating!
"When the last tree has fallen, and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no." ~Aurora

"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon
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#4 User is offline   Illuyankas 

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Posted 07 June 2011 - 11:54 PM

Avoiding the whole subject of ghosts not existing (because they don't, seriously) did the rest of her family die shortly after constructing a house? If not, was this house being built when they died? Not finishing the house didn't exactly stop them dying, she really should have thought things through.
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#5 User is offline   POOPOO MCBUMFACE 

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Posted 08 June 2011 - 12:10 AM

I think my favourite haunting story is a personal one, from a childhood friend. The entire family was and is batshit crazy, and they believed that their old house was haunted by the ghost of a miner who'd died... somewhere around there. Now, my town used to be a mining town up until the Milk Snatcher destroyed Scotland's industries with her draconic fire (actually I think it ran out of coal/steel a while before), and it's probably reasonable to assume that a miner had died in the area at some point. But no, this miner ghost did not content itself with merely turning off the television and mucking with the oven (though it did these things a lot), but in fact came to visit them. When my friend's older brother broke his arm, the miner ghost came in and sat at the edge of his bed every night to guard him, for as we all know, broken arms are potentially fatal in this day and age. The ghost did not even relinquish its grip after they moved away; for years afterwards, whenever they drove past their old home, the miner ghost would reach out and cause their car to stall, attempting to drag them back into his icy grip.
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#6 User is offline   QuickTidal 

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Posted 08 June 2011 - 12:12 AM

View PostIlluyankas, on 07 June 2011 - 11:54 PM, said:

Avoiding the whole subject of ghosts not existing (because they don't, seriously) did the rest of her family die shortly after constructing a house? If not, was this house being built when they died? Not finishing the house didn't exactly stop them dying, she really should have thought things through.


Let's not get into whether ghosts exist or not...as it's not an argument you or I can win...since you can't prove to me they don't exist and I can't prove to you they do. Why did I KNOW it'd be you who brought that up though Illy? LOL!

On topic:

The whole story is actually that Mary Winchester was the widow of the guy who invented the Winchester Rifle..."the gun that won the west" they called it....well her belief was that the ghosts that haunted her were the ghosts of all the men and women who were killed by her hubby's invention. Therefore she continued to build long after everyone else was dead to confuse the spirits that haunted her...which is the reaosn for stairways to nowhere, windows in the floor ect...to confuse them so they'd leave her alone. In fact she built until some time in the 30's when the construction only stopped because she died...there are rooms in the house that are still in some mid-state of construction because of that.
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"Someone will always try to sell you despair, just so they don't feel alone." ~Ursula Vernon
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#7 User is offline   Beezulbubba 

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Posted 08 June 2011 - 12:29 AM

Around my parts there are:

* Emma Crawford: her ghost haunts the Red Mountain in Manitou Springs.
* Stanley Hotel: it inspired The Shining by Stephen King.
* Cattle mutilations: stories of alien surgery on cattle around these parts (the surgery was done with precision and bloodless) back in the 70's.
* San Luis Valley: seems to be a convergence of energy there that attracts UFOs.
* Sitings of Bigfoot up the Uintah pass up to Pikes Peak: A fella that has a cabin up there supposedly sent some hair left behind to a lab to be analyzed (when the creature ransacked his cabin) and the hair was not definitively identified (except that it was hominid in origin).
* Frozen Dead Guy: Actually I don't think there is any paranormal aspect to this. Just some folks keeping their grandpa on ice. Every late winter there is a "Frozen Dead Guy Days" celebration.

Research any of these for yourself and form your own opinion.

#8 User is offline   Gothos 

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Posted 08 June 2011 - 07:58 AM

.pl ain't much with hauntings, to be quite honest. There are some tales of hauntings on some castle ruins here and there, but nothing as amusing as the piles of tales from the west, I'm afraid.

That restaurant and ballroom look wicked, I'd love to go there. I think I'd spend a night in that ballroom.
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