Haunted Hotel in the Boston Area #1: Hawthorne Hotel
18 Washington Square
Salem, MA 01970
Hawthorne Hotel is arguably the most famous hotel in Salem. It is a roughly fifteen minute drive to the Hawthorne Hotel from Boston. It opened on July 23, 1925 and has since received such guests as the cast of the Bewitched television show, U.S. President George Bush and Bette Davis. The hotel is, of course, named after the town's famous author, Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Legend has it that the Hawthorne Hotel was built on an apple orchard that was once owned by accused witch, Bridget Bishop. Bridget was one of the individuals who were wrongfully executed during the Salem Witch Trials. There have been reports that the sweet smell of apples sometimes lingers in the hotel, despite the fact that no apple trees remain on the property. Other paranormal activities such as eerie sounds have also been reported at the Hawthorne Hotel.
Haunted Hotel in the Boston Area #2: Omni Parker House Hotel
60 School St.
Boston, MA 02108
The Omni Parker House Hotel in Boston opened in 1855. It is located just outside of Boston Common is less than two blocks from the Massachusetts State House. The hotel's restaurant is almost as famous as the hotel itself. It is the home of the world's first Boston Cream Pie and it is also the place where the future U.S. President John F. Kennedy proposed to the future First Lady of the United States, Jacqueline Bouvier. This hotel is great for people who want to step out of their hotels into the historic streets of Boston during the day, eat the delicious food of the hotel's historic restaurant in the evening and be spooked by the hotel's ghost at night.
Harvey Parker, the original owner of the hotel and restaurant is said to live there still, in ghostly form. Sightings of this long-dead man have dwindled in the past 20 years. However, there have reportedly been several sightings of him on the tenth floor of the hotel. Parker's ghost is supposedly polite and unobtrusive, aside from his habit of making unannounced appearances in guest's rooms on the tenth floor.
Haunted Hotel in the Boston Area #3: Colonial Inn
48 Monument Square
Concord, MA 01742
The Colonial Inn is located roughly 30 miles outside of Boston. The original building of the Colonial Inn was a home built in 1716. In 1775, part of it was used as a munitions storehouse by the Massachusetts Militia. In fact, those munitions were in the house when the British came looking for the militia's supplies on April 19, 1775. The building was turned into an inn in 1889. It took on its present name at the turn of the 20th century. Since that time, it has received such guests as U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, Shirley Temple and Faye Dunaway.
One of the rooms of the original house on the site is now Room 24 of the Colonial Inn. There have reportedly been sightings of a ghost in that room. Paranormal investigators have hinted that other rooms in the inn may be haunted, but there have been no sightings in other rooms, according to the inn's website.
If you are looking for a trip back in time that might give you a chance to meet a ghost from a time long past, these are the hotels to visit in the Boston area. Even if you do not get to see a ghost, you will most certainly see shadows of the past lurking in the corners of these historical buildings. There is no shortage if history in the direct vicinity of these hotels either. In Salem, you can tour the town that was home to the most vicious witch-hunt in U.S. history. In Concord, you can see the battlefields where the first shots of the American Revolution rang out and in Boston, the Freedom Trail runs right past the Omni Parker House Hotel.
Sources
The Haunted History of Salem, Massachusetts, retrieved 7/27/10, haunted-places-to-go.com/salem.html
About Concord's Colonial Inn, retrieved 7/27/10, concordscolonialinn.com/concord-ma-lodging-about-the-inn.asp
Boston Omni Parker House Hotel, retrieved 7/27/10, expedia.com/pub/agent.dll/qscr=dspv/htid=23415/crti=2/hotel-information
Omni Parker House-Haunted Tales, retrieved 7/27/10, omnihotels.com/Exclusiveoffers/HauntedTravelParkerHouse.aspx
Published by Shelly Barclay
Shelly Barclay writes on a variety of topics from animal facts to mysteries in history. Her main focus is military and political history. She is the Boston History Examiner, Military History Examiner and the... View profile
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Guide to Annual Halloween Activities in Salem, Massachusetts
Salem is famous for the Witch Trials of 1692. They have preserved the buildings andhistory for everyone to emjoy.
- A History of the Salem Witch Hunts and the Salem Witch Trials This article provides an overview of the historical context for the outbreak of the Salem Witch Trials by placing it within the larger context of the European witch hunts.
- Legal Procedures Used During the Salem Witch Trials The court procedures used during the Salem Witch Trials were fueled by hysteria, gossip, lies, and vindictiveness. Loosely based on Biblical law, the accused were not given counsel, and were found guilty because of ou...
- The Truth About the Salem Witch Trials The Salem Witch Trials were a terrifying time in American history. There were 20 deaths that were the result of accusations made by some young female villagers. The allegation? Witchcraft.
- A Brief History of Salem Witch Trials Here is some background information on the Salem Witch Trials.
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14 Comments
Post a CommentLove Haint stories!
Good read!
You are a most wonderful tour guide!
I am such a chicken for haunted houses!lol
I have always wondered what it's like to spend the night in a haunted building.
Nice job with this article.
Don't tell anyone, but I am a skeptic, Mark. I would probably go to sleep reading a Stephen King novel.
Might want to sleep with the lights on in those places.
Don't believe in ghosts, but love old places.
cool :)