We are back again, with more spooky specters and ghastly ghouls just in time for Halloween! Here are more haunted locations that you can visit in North Texas.
Now called the La Quinta Inn & Suites, the Hotel Lawrence in downtown Dallas is home to restless and spooky spirits. Constructed in 1925, the hotel has been a Dallas staple. While hauntings are reported all around the hotel including the lobby and second floor, the most haunted area is the 10th floor of the hotel, specifically Room 1009. In 1947, Jack “Smalley” Jackson was murdered in that room. Another spirit that haunts the room is known as “Mr. Brookshire.” The numerous supernatural reports from the room include Mr. Brookshire keeping the door shut and the guests feeling a towel wrapped around their necks. If you ever happen to stay in Room 1009 and the door seems stuck, remember to ask Mr. Brookshire politely to move out of the way.
The Excelsior Hotel in Jefferson is one of the most haunted hotels in Texas. Built in 1850, it is also one of the oldest hotels in Texas.
While at least three rooms are reported to be haunted, The Jay Gould room is famous for scaring Steven Spielberg. In the 1980s, Spielberg stayed in the room and was frightened because the red rocking chair would not stop moving. He was so rattled that he and his crew left in the middle of the night. Shortly thereafter, he outlined his movie, “Poltergeist,” from the events he experienced in that room.
Don’t ask the hotel staff about ghosts. They won’t talk. But everybody in the town knows about the Excelsior Hotel ghosts.
While the Sons of Hermann Hall is a great bar for drinks and dancing, it is also home to many spirits. The supernatural reports from the building include sounds of children playing, moving furniture, and even one report describing a picture falling off a wall after a spirit slammed a door. If you want to get a drink, dance, and experience these hauntings for yourself, go check out the Sons of Hermann Hall.
Lake Highlands High School in Dallas is home to the spirit of a former student named Elizabeth. In the 1970s, Elizabeth fell to her death on the catwalk in the high school auditorium. It is believed that Elizabeth might have fallen off the stairs or into the orchestral pit. Lake Highlands students’ descriptions of their encounters with Elizabeth include the auditorium’s lights switching off and on and costume racks moving around.
While Miss Molly’s Hotel might have a cool, Western facade, it is one of the most haunted locations in North Texas. While the hotel was built in 1910, the spooky hauntings did not begin until the 1940s. The restless spirits of the hotel are said to be the spirits of murdered prostitutes, a woman who died of lung disease, and a girl who died of typhoid. These spirits’ activities include moving guests’ luggage, leaving coins in random parts of the hotel, and unexplained smells and shadows.
For more haunted locations in North Texas, check out this link.