Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Shadows of the Orange County History Center


If you happen to be in Central Florida and are morbidly curious, take an afternoon trip to the Orange County Regional History Center in Orlando. The classic-revival building, erected in 1927 as a courthouse, replaced the murderous, redbrick, clock tower courthouse (that’s another story). Five stories high, the first floor still has the sally port for prisoners. The sally port is on the same level with the new entrance for museum guests. The original and grand brass deco entrance for the courthouse faces North Magnolia Avenue and serves as décor between levels one and two.

Orange County Court House - Orlando, Florida
Orange County Court House 1927-1997
(State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory, http://floridamemory.com/items/show/160375)


     The museum features exhibits that illustrate the history of Central Florida from its prehistoric period to its modern tourist hub. One constant is the infamous Courtroom B. The room is a time capsule from the 1920’s. It is a beautiful room with ornate lights, carved American Black Walnut walls, and a deco wall mural behind the judge’s bench.  Nothing has been moved or changed since the last trial. The judge’s chair sits oppressively over the defendant’s table, the lower seat beckoning for your warm body. Perhaps it is from an innate fear of being looked upon from above, or the strong emotions that once filled this room hold a sinister atmosphere in which few guests choose to linger, allowing you, alone, to consider the appalling sins adjudicated here. If you are daring enough to sit in the defendant’s seat, you might notice encapsulated scratches on the table. There are many unguarded scrapes, but the scratches on the table are deep, deliberate and determined. They spell the name of the notorious serial killer “Ted Bundy”.  Here he was tried for the murder of 12-year-old Kimberly Leach. He was very proud of himself, proud enough to carve his name as if marking another bit of territory, another conquest. Here Bundy was beginning to lose control of his anger. According to Rachael Bell, Bundy’s 1980 trial was very emotional. Bundy smartly manipulated the system to get himself married here, but he soon would lose his cool demeanor. Prosecutors had presented 65 witnesses and evidence of his final human conquest: the assault of an innocent child. Bundy could sense death approaching him via the judicial system. The charismatic lady killer would reveal his monstrous face in this room, often howling maliciously at witnesses. Wikipedia states, that when the Orlando jury stated its decision, he stood with a face twisted in seething anger and screamed “Tell the jury they are wrong!” 

Theodore Bundy in a courtroom.
Ted Bundy on Trial. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory, http://floridamemory.com/items/show/103267 Photo by Dughi, Donn(Donald Gregory), 1932-2005.

        The hints of past drama fade as you travel to other floors, only to resurface in the excluded access of the sally port, now a loading dock, and the fifth floor, now archives and offices. The fifth floor is only accessible to researchers, History Center volunteers, and employees. My grandmother spent all of her working life in that courthouse and my mother spent several years working there. While she was in college, my mother saw Bundy at the house on College Avenue, before his infamous Florida State University murders. She described him as handsome but menacing. Later, she saw him led through the sally port to the elevator of the Orange County Courthouse. The handsome man she had seen in Tallahassee was now revolting and ominous.

      After it became the Orange County Regional History Center, I would spend a couple of years in that building. I had no idea of the original use for the fifth floor and the loading dock. I often worked alone on the fifth floor, eating in the small cinder block break room or studying in the large sturdy archives. While working there, I always had the eerie feeling of being watched. There seemed to be too many dark shadows in corners. Every room was cavernous and every nook looked like a ravenous animal's burrow. I felt claustrophobic. I suffered anxiety as if I was trapped and I wanted to escape. I wanted to maintain a cool demeanor, but I began to loathe being on the fifth floor. The temperature would drop randomly. You could be sitting there, in a sunny room eating hot soup, and a cold chill would hit you. The staff would tell any new worker to keep a sweater on hand at all times. When I was alone, the doors would rattle as if someone was trying to get out of the small, closet-like, offices. I assumed this was due to air conditioning and bad wiring, until I actually saw something.
      One day, as I entered the archives, I saw a casually dressed young man with red-brown hair sitting in a chair in which nobody ever sat. Surprised to see anyone, I stopped and said “Hello”. The man turned to me, and gave me a mischievous smirk. Then, I heard a loud crash. I quickly turned my head toward the shelves on my left. When I turned back to my front, the man was gone. Several librarians ran in, and after much searching, we found several large boxes, untouched for months, had fallen to the floor. I never saw anything after that, but the sensation of being leered at and the sound of rattling doors never ended. Near the end of my time there, I learned that the North Court Avenue entrance was once a sally port for prisoners who were housed in cinder block cells on the fifth floor. I would be told later that those offices and the break room once made up a cellblock for housing detainees waiting for trial. The sturdy archives room was a group cell. Perhaps, when I stayed late in the evening, those rattling doors were the echoes of men who still desired to break out. If I could hear their voices, were they protesting their innocence? Maybe, when I ate soup by that sunny window, I had sat where Bundy sat, reminiscing about the cold girls he left in the woods. My mother told me stories about the prisoners leaning out their cell windows, whistling at kids to get their attention, then dropping notes making various requests. For many prisoners that would go on to face life and death in prison, it would be their last, albeit not physical, contact with the outside world.  One has to wonder if Bundy ever threw a request down to the young Orlando girls. He definitely had the audacity.
      Many times, the literal parameters or the instigators of actions are lost in time; nevertheless, people who did horrible atrocities were once housed on that fifth floor. Every ghastly action was dissected. Monsters showed their villainous faces. The community was sickened. Mothers wept. All in this little five story limestone building. This building no longer houses prisoners or trials, but if you are curious about the darker side of Orlando, visit the Orange County Regional History Center, located at 65 East Central Blvd. On Mondays through Saturdays, it is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays. General admission is $9 and there are many discounts available.


Sources:

http://www.ninthcircuit.org/history/courthouses/1927.shtml
http://www.americanghostadventures.com/investigations2009-2010.html
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/serial_killers/notorious/bundy/15.html
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/serial_killers/notorious/bundy/15.html
Images:
http://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/160375
http://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/103267

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Haunted Florida: The Sunland Hospital System


by Victoria A. Lawrence
  
      The guilty fascination with abandoned hospitals is prevalent among ghost hunting shows, horror movies and teenagers without supervision. Go to any school and there will be one kid who knows “the story” about that derelict sanitarium over the hill. It usually involved a spirit of a patient who was brutally tortured by sadistic doctors until succumbing to death. This patient still roams the grounds, looking to capture the soul of unwitting juveniles, just daring them to come at night, alone.



      Orlando, Florida has its haunted hospital stories too. There was more than one creepy infirmary in the city, but the most notorious would have to be the infamous Sunland Hospital. Unbeknownst to many children who tell the tale, there is actually more than one Sunland; it was a chain of hospitals in Florida originally named the W.T. Edwards Tuberculosis Hospitals. The first opened in 1952. They all looked similar; white, five stories high with fewer storied longer buildings branching off the main one, and many windows to facilitate the movement of air, thought, at the time, to be of paramount importance in the treatment of TB. 



      Advances in treating tuberculosis diminished the need for such facilities and in 1968, the hospitals would be taken over by the state, revamped as the Sunland Mental Hospitals. The Sunland hospital in Orlando, the main facility, would be the only hospital that did not share the W.T. Edwards origin. The administrators had the best intentions for the facilities from the start. Mostly occupied by children, the hospitals had playgrounds, picnic areas, accessible swimming pools, gaming areas and frequent visits from special guests, such as the state's governor and Woodsy the Owl. Many of the children were active members in the boy scouts.   

      By the end of the 1970s, many state run facilities found themselves in a difficult situation. Federal funding that assisted state run programs diminished with each administration. Overpopulated and understaffed, hospitals like Sunland quickly became the subject of scandals and horror stories. By 1983, all the Sunland Centers were shut down. While the minors were sent to foster homes, a schoolyard legend states that many of the patients, the less needy and over the age of 18, were released out into the streets. The wards would fall into disrepair, tempting the listeners of ghost stories to explore the ruins. 

Visitors to this location have reported apparitions, orbs and the sounds of voices and crying. At the Orlando location one night, I heard sounds that could be children crying or cats screaming, although it went on continuously the entire time I was there like a banshee coming from trees (note to law enforcers, I worked for the county at the time and had a legitimate reason for being there). Some amateur investigators report seeing solemn faces of children in the windows of the few surviving buildings, intelligent and interactive apparitions of children running on the grounds, or of hearing objects move and seeing locked doors opening and closing inexplicably. Both the websites Ghost Report and author Greg Jenkins (Pineapple Press) note reports of the faint scent of  roses in the playground area. I will admit that while I was there, I did not stop and take the time to smell the roses. 

Photo of the red brick building by Victoria A. Lawrence. 2009.

      Another schoolyard legend has it that one intrepid explorer at the Orlando site fell down an elevator shaft at one hospital and died. The dying part was embellished, but in July of 1997, the Orlando Sentinel reports that while playing “hide and seek” with friends, 23 year old Keith Murdock did fall down a shaft and severely injured himself. Keith’s friends left him there in fear of authorities. It would take hours for anyone to find him in the bottom of that shaft. Suffering from several broken bones, including a fractured skull and spinal injuries, he would have to be airlifted out of Sunland to a working hospital. One could only imagine what Keith thought, laying there for hours, abandoned, in the bottom of that dank elevator shaft in the pitch of night. Or what he saw.

      The fall provided fodder for those arguing for the razing of the hospital. Within the next decade, the once gleaming white buildings turned urban legend womb would be demolished. Any traces of the Tallahassee buildings are gone, replaced by apartment buildings. A few of the administration buildings in Orlando still exist and there is now a public park at the original, albeit creepy, Orlando address: 2100 All Childrens Way, Orlando, Florida, 32818. 

      The public park closes at sundown and thrill seekers are not welcome anytime of the day. A note of warning, a few of the surrounding populace lend credence to the legend that many mental patients were simply released into the area. Take care when visiting the Orlando facility and do not go alone.





Photo 1: Florida State Tuberculosis Sanitarium, Orlando, circa 1939, courtesy Florida state archives
Photo 2: View of Governor Claude Kirk visiting a child at Sunland Hospital, Tallahassee, FL, 1968, courtesy Florida state archives
Photo 3: Woodsy the Owl at Sunland Hospital, Tallahassee, FL, courtesy Florida state archives
Photo 4: By me (VAKL) back in 2009. 

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Creepy Abandoned Churches

     How you feel about churches probably has something to do with your upbringing. Some people feel comfort just walking into one, some admire the art and architecture of a more aesthetically-driven time, some feel foreboding or alienation, some feel instantly bored, recalling a childhood of homilies no right-minded seven year-old would suffer through gladly and the joy of kicking one's neighbor, a little violence to relieve the tedium.
      However you feel about working churches abandoned churches can be spooky. For instant chills check out this beautiful compilation of the 7 Creepiest Abandoned Churches from Environmental Graffiti by Yohani Kamnudin, including The First Methodist Church in Gary, IN where scenes from Nightmare on Elm Street were filmed, a spectacular 17th century church in Italy with trees growing out of the top and St. Stephen’s Church, Chicago, which looks like the walls are bleeding. Jesus. 
       The photo provided here is not in the slide show: we found it on Wikimedia Commons, a public domain photo by Charles O'Rear, circa 1973 of an "abandoned church at dusk on north side of Interstate 80," which runs from California to Jersey so it could be anywhere. We're going to guess that a) it was in Indiana, b) that it fell into disrepair and became a hangout for misspent youth who drew Satanic whatnots on the disintegrating walls for fun and that c) caused the local busybodies to annoy a weary town council to order it to be either torn down or turned into a Wawa. What say you? 

Post by EditrixMTraveler

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Haunted Canada: Victoria Ghost Walk


There are almost too many things to love about Victoria, B.C. British Columbia's capital is rich in both First Nations and British culture, dazzling gardens, excellent restaurants and charming walks, from harbor to highway. It’s also full of ghosts.
At least it is according to Victoria’s Ghostly Walks, an excellent way for any Morbid Traveler or curiosity seeker to spend a cool August night in BC (No kidding! They have cool nights in August in Canada! Fabulous) and the most chilling place - not temperature-wise - was unquestionably  Helmcken Alley in Bastion Square. In this former prison the dead inmates were buried onsite in unmarked graves and where they’re still alleged to be. 
MT’s looking for a place to stay in BC might want to try the gorgeous Gatsby Mansions, where  floating heads that appear to guests who take room #5.

Unless, of course, you can afford the famous  Fairmont Empress, Victoria’s grand landmark,. Built between 1904 and 1908, the Empress made Travel & Leisure’s Top Ten Hotels in Canada list (only if you click the link you’ll see a picture of the Parliament buildling; we have a picture of the Empress, above). It’s is so luxe some guests have decdied to stay forever. And ever.  
This includes the regal structure’s architect, Francis Rattenbury. Rattenbury. Rattenbury was a star but as his fortunes and marriage declined he took a lover, Alma, into the home he shared with this wife according to The History of Metropolitan Vancouver, and, as I recall, our Ghostly Walks guide. The Rattenbury scandal was too much for the public to take: commissions dried up and eventually “Ratz” and Alma both divorced their spouses and went to England where Alma took a lover, the  18 year-old chauffer, George Stoner who eventually bludgeoned Rattenbury to death in a jealous rage. Alma was acquitted of the crime but committed suicide upon hearing of Stoner’s death sentence;. That sentence was commuted to life, thanks to public sentiment; Stoner served seven years. At the age of 61 he was seen in the audience of a play about his own story. Rattenbury is still seen as well:  his tall, young, mustachioed figure, is said to walk the halls of the Empress, his greatest accomplishment. 
We can tell you for a fact that a smart cocktail on the veranda of the Empress is a delightful way to let an afternoon drift by and we understand their high tea is a world class experience as well. Like all of BC’s capital city the hotel is exquisite and for those who are looking for a little extra paranormal zhuzh the tower in that photograph above is said to be haunted as well.
The Victoria Ghost Walk was one of my favorite evenings out in the city which is saying a lot - I’d do it again in a minute even though I felt like everywhere I went after that was haunted by something. Or maybe I just had such a good time I wanted it to be. When in Victoria you’re going to enjoy walking anyway; get some dark romance and amazing stories on this excellent tour while you do it. 

Oh, the candy apples? There's also a haunted sweets shop on Government Street, but we don't want to have too many spoilers in case you decide to walk the walk. Besides we're pretty sure you can find something that looks like this all on your own...

How much does it cost? Victoria's Ghostly Walks tours are $14 for adults, $12 for students and seniors, $8 for kids, $35 for families and $22 for the Ghost Walks Extreme tour, for which you have to make reservations. Check the website (link above) as dates vary throughout the year or call 250-384-6698.

How do you get there? Victoria is an island so once you get to a closer point, like Seattle. If you go that route you can get there via our favorite method, the Victoria Clipper, which will let you kick back, relax, have a beer, have some food and enjoy a view that will relax you like Valium (they also provide whale watching tours, so if you don't see any ghosts, maybe you can see some whales). Form Vancouver and other places you can try BC Ferries and if you love to fly (like we do) and have some cash (like we don't)  you can go for a small plane, sea plane or helicopter for as low as $200 RT - see VictoraBCCA.com for a list of airlines. The cheapest way to go is going to be ground transportation which you can manage for about $20 yfrom both Vancouver and Seattle - go to Victoria BC Tourism's recommendations page for links.


Post by EditrixMTraveler
All photos by EditrixMTraveler. First photo: Totem poles in Beacon Hill Park. Second photos: Fairmont Empress Hotel. Third Photo:candy apples from a sweet shop - though not the haunted one - on Government Street, Victoria, BC.


Saturday, May 25, 2013

Haunted strip mall





Cemeteries, abandoned churches, murder houses - those are the kinds of places you think are going to be haunted. As I said to a friend when starting this blog .”There’s no such thing as a haunted strip mall.”
Well, when I’m wrong I’m really, really wrong.  
I’d never have thought anything as contemporary as a Starbucks or as practical as an Albertsons would be inhabitable by ghosts and yet both Above the Norm.com and StrangeUSA report that before a particular strip mall in Phoenix was built  the buildings on the site were thought by the locals to be haunted. Photos on Above the Norm show a sunny, bright, cream-pink-and-teal group of buildings, the essence of what we imagine the commercial southwest to look like, but the sunny brightness may belie something darker in many ways. Teens who broke  into the old buildings  at night reported, among other things,  crying and whimpering in dark hallways and three gravestones that only appeared at night time.
It’s hard  imagine ghosts in a place where skinny soy lattes and cake pops  are available….though, come to think of it, haven’t we all haunted a Starbucks from time to time? 

If you have a haunted strip mall story please send it to us at editrixmtraveler@gmail.com. Not that we wouldn’t believe you but we’d like to see the spirit who could keep us away from the clearance rack at Steinmart or Ross. 

Friday, May 24, 2013

5 Haunted Movie Places We Love


Location, Location, Location....realtors know how much it matters and film scouts know it too. A place can be just as menacing a character in a film as the ghost itself - what would the Blair Witch have been without the woods? - so here are five of our favorites, four of which you can still visit. Safe travels!

1. The Overlook, The Shining 





     Few haunted places in film had quite the grand, menacing, human presence of The Overlook from Stephen King’s famous novel.  In real life it’s The Stanley Hotel in Colorado and the story ABC News tells is that Stephen King and his wife Tabitha checked into room 217 for a one-night stay. The supernaturally prolific author had some ghostly encounters, inspiring the blockbuster novel and film (a reedy TV movie version was filmed at the Stanley making one wonder less about ghosts and more about why people remake perfect films). Founders F.O. and Florida Stanley are said to still inhabit the hotel in a friendly way and About.com says the fourth floor, formerly the servants quarters, is the most haunted part of the building. 
Tony wants to go visit The Stanley, Mrs. Torrence. Tony wants to stay there forever. And ever. And ever. 




2. Hill House,  The Haunting (1999)
     Before you even start, I KNOW it wasn’t as good as the original with Julie Harris & Russ Tamblyn and if you really want a treat get yourself the actual book, The Haunting of Hill House  by Shirley Jackson or audiobook, read by Bernadette Dunne
    Whatever the faults of the remake the special effects were fab and the house was a special effect unto itself.  The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations lists three for this film, most notably the exterior of the gargantuan, psychically intimidating Hill House exterior. That’s Harlaxton Manor, Lincolnshire, now Harlaxton College, private but open for private tours. The kitchens, WGML says, were from Belvoir Castle and were also used for one of my all-time favorites, Young Sherlock Holmes (that’s two perfect films listed in one post). 
Finally WGML lists Florida as one of the locations, a note verified by IMDB, but it doesn’t say where, which is too bad, since I have a lot easier access to Florida than I do Lincolnshire. WGML does helpfully add what train to take from London to get to Belvoir Castle but not how to get a free ticket to England so you can catch that particular choo-choo. Working on that.


3. Practical Magic  
The faded old Victorian two-story on a hill by the New England sea - my dream house and very possibly yours, too, and it wasn’t even real! The wonderful website Hooked on Houses explores the home of the Owens women which turns out to have been an exterior-only, set in Washington State and torn down after filming was over. Their enchanting interiors, too, were filmed on an LA soundstage - even novelist Alice Hoffman was impressed.
     Sadly, then, this isn’t a haunted house you can visit, but I included it because I love both the house and the movie - on a bad day who doesn’t wish they could just live in a houseful of margarita-drinking witches? And if you haven’t read the book do yourself a favor and pick it up - Alice Hoffman’s prose are the real magic.

4. The Ennis House, Los Angeles, CA
       
The location for the original version of The House on Haunted Hill, (1959) directed by the great William Castle and starring the legendary Vincent Price. It certainly isn’t your typical spooky old wooden, two-story house but a Frank Lloyd Wright design which I can only describe as deco-Mayan and which has been the location for numerous other films -  KCNET has some pics from a few of them including Blade Runner, Black Rain and even a satirization in South Park

1. The Exorcist stairs, Georgetown, Washington D.C.

Never did I think a staircase would have it’s own Yelp! page, but anything having to do with The Exorcist deserves special treatment. The film, after all,  had them lining up for blocks in 1973 when it was released,  was the first horror film to be nominated for an Academy Award and remains one of the most influential films ever made. In fact, watch any film about possession or demonism - or any paranormal docu-show dealing with them - and you’ll likely find that what it’s possessed by is William Friedkin’s genius.



       The lethal staircase looks as creepy as ever and has a pretty terrific photo gallery on Yelp (click the title link) - it’s pretty staggering that a staircase can have so many moods, from downright frightening at night to goofy when people take snaps of themselves laying ‘dead’ at the bottom of it to just a staircase when there are dogs on it. Thoroughly worth a click-through and if you have a pic of yourself here send it to us! 

Not that we want to see you dead at the bottom of the stairs. You’re not on our list. 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Sage advice


Yesterday my neighbor was burning sage, a new age and old world way of getting rid of of bad spirits. The scent reminded me of the last couple of times anyone I knew did house cleansings with sage and I  realized something disturbing. Within the past several years two friends of mine did house cleansings with sage…..and I never went back to either house again.
So if sage burning works does that mean I’m the evil spirit? 

Here’s a great blog post  about how to use sage: Mercado’s Life Lessons: Sacred Sage. In case you ever want to get rid of me.

Picture from a 14th century book described on Wikimedia Commons as being in the public domain.