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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Welcome to America’s Haunted Road Trip

Introduction

BARS AND RESTAURANTS

CHAPTER 1 Bridge Café

Bridge Café is said to be the oldest bar in continuous operation in New York City. As you’re enjoying the signature pineapple martini, you might hear a picture falling off the wall or the ghost of Gallus Mag pounding across the floor upstairs.

CHAPTER 2 Brooklyn Inn

The Brooklyn Inn is a cozy place at the corner of Hoyt and Bergen Streets, complete with a mysterious ghost lurking at the end of the bar.

CHAPTER 3 Ear Inn

A ghost named Mickey may give you a pinch or a shove as you sit at the bar of the Ear Inn.

CHAPTER 4 Manhattan Bistro

The ghost of Elma Sands might dine with you here. If you order a bottle of wine, it may serve itself by flying off the shelf.

CHAPTER 5 McSorley’s Old Ale House

A traditional Irish pub with a nontraditional ghost or two, plus the famous McSorley’s cat.

CHAPTER 6 Old Bermuda Inn

Mysterious fires and a glowing light in the window signify that Martha Mesereau is waiting for her husband to come home from the Civil War.

CHAPTER 7 One If By Land, Two If By Sea

This romantic restaurant is home to the ghosts of Aaron Burr and his daughter, Theodosia.

CHAPTER 8 White Horse Tavern

Have a drink at the same bar as Dylan Thomas did—but don’t consume as many whiskey shots as he did, or you too will end up haunting the tavern.

CHURCHES

CHAPTER 9 St. Mark’s in-the-Bowery

The ghost of “Peg-Leg Peter” is just a hobble behind you here.

CHAPTER 10 St. Paul’s Chapel

A site of shelter after the September 11, 2001 attacks, St. Paul’s also has a headless body buried in its graveyard. The ghost returns regularly in search of his head.

CHAPTER 11 Trinity Episcopal Church and Graveyard

Alexander Hamilton is buried here, and his spirit wanders the graveyard periodically in search of his nemesis, Aaron Burr.

HISTORICAL SITES

CHAPTER 12 Conference House

Captain Billopp still guards his former home, The Conference House, with the help of some British soldiers who were buried in the basement.

CHAPTER 13 Ellis and Liberty Islands

Twelve million people arrived at Ellis Island hoping to become Americans. Many were admitted, while many others were sent back to their countries of origin. Either way, their ghostly sounds and sights linger here.

CHAPTER 14 Richmond Town

Richmond Town is a collection of several historical buildings from various locations around New York City. Ghost children still attend school at Voorlezer’s House, while disembodied footsteps are heard at Guyon-Lake-Tysen House.

CHAPTER 15 Snug Harbor

These days, Sailor’s Snug Harbor is known as Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Garden. But the name change hasn’t dampened the enthusiasm of the ghosts who frequent the Music Hall and the Matron’s House.

CHAPTER 16 Van Cortlandt House

Trapped in an endless cycle, the ghost of a Hessian soldier repeats his death at Van Cortlandt House. Ghostly sounds of jingling keys are heard, along with disembodied footsteps.

MUSEUMS

CHAPTER 17 Alice Austen House

This historic home, known as Clear Comfort, overlooks the river. It’s a beautiful spot to enjoy a picnic—but be mindful of the ghosts of Alice Austen and her great-grandmother.

CHAPTER 18 Garibaldi-Meucci Museum

Garibaldi converted this home into a postmortem shrine to his friend Antonio Meucci, whom many say was the true inventor of the telephone. Today, Meucci is still trying to make one last long-distance call from beyond the grave.

CHAPTER 19 Merchant’s House Museum

Gertrude Tredwell lived and died in her father’s house, and apparently she still hasn’t left. Her father, Seabury, makes his presence known as well.

CHAPTER 20 Morris-Jumel Mansion

Years after her death, Eliza Jumel admonished noisy children visiting Morris-Jumel Mansion.

PARKS

CHAPTER 21 Fort Wadsworth

No battle ever took place at Fort Wadsworth, but suicides and accidental deaths add up to one haunted fort on Staten Island.

CHAPTER 22 Washington Square Park

What was once a Potter’s field or paupers’ cemetery is today a scenic park at the heart of the New York University campus.

CEMETERIES

CHAPTER 23 Woodlawn Cemetery

This sprawling cemetery in the Bronx has the graves of famous people such as Herman Melville and Henry LaGuardia. Beyond the history of gravestone reading, there is the accent on the paranormal with the capturing of EVP at this cemetery.

Spotlight: Hart Island

Off the Coast of City Island in the Bronx is the largest Potter’s field for the City of New York. The 800,000 bodies buried on this lonely one-mile island do not rest peacefully.

Spotlight: How to Investigate a Cemetery

A practical model for setting up and conducting your own cemetery hunt.

THEATERS

CHAPTER 24 Belasco Theater

The ghost of David Belasco, “The Bishop of Broadway,” activates elevators and manifests solidly enough to congratulate performers.

Spotlight: Theater Myths and Traditions

Superstitions and traditions abound in the theater. Learn the basics before investigating a haunted venue.

CHAPTER 25 Cherry Lane Theater

The ghosts of poet and playwright Edna St. Vincent Millay and actress Kim Hunter keep current actors on their toes.

CHAPTER 26 New Amsterdam Theater

The beautiful actress Olive Thomas Pickford appears regularly at the New Amsterdam Theater. That’s impressive, considering she died in 1920.

CHAPTER 27 Palace Theater

The ghosts of children and performing pooches appear to Palace Theater crew and patrons.

Spotlight: Times Square

Times Square, at the heart of the theater district, is home to one of the best examples of a crisis apparition.

CHAPTER 28 Paradise Theater

The ghost of a suicide victim haunts this gorgeous theater in the Bronx.

CHAPTER 29 Public Theater

The Public Theater has a full cast of spectral actors and actresses, not to mention the ghost of author Washington Irving.

Spotlight: Radio City Music Hall

Famous for its Christmas show and the Rockettes, Radio City Music Hall has a ghost lurking in its art-deco halls and lobbies.

HOTELS AND APARTMENT BUILDINGS

CHAPTER 30 Chelsea and Algonquin Hotels

From the punk-rocking ghost of Sid Vicious at the Chelsea to the “Vicious Circle” at the Algonquin, these hotels are proof positive that some guests check in but don’t check out.

CHAPTER 31 The Dakota

This luxury apartment building on the Upper West Side is home to many of the rich and famous, both alive and dead.

CHAPTER 32 Fordham University

Several buildings on the Rose Hill campus in the Bronx have more than just students and professors inside. Ghostly sounds and sights are part of the curriculum.

Spotlight: Various New York City ghosts

Some ghosts have a need to possess; others just want to be heard. You may encounter both types around New York City.

Visiting Haunted Sites

Bibliography

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Ghosthunting New York City

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