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The Stanley Hotel

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Missy
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« on: November 12, 2011, 11:51:44 pm »

The Stanley Hotel

The Stanley Hotel is a 138-room neo-Georgian hotel in Estes Park, Colorado. Located within sight of the Rocky Mountain National Park, the Stanley offers panoramic views of the Rockies. It was built by Freelan O. Stanley of Stanley Steamer fame and opened on July 4, 1909, catering to the rich and famous, including the Titanic survivor Margaret Brown, John Philip Sousa, Theodore Roosevelt, the Emperor and Empress of Australia, and a variety of Hollywood personalities.[2]

The Stanley Hotel also hosted the horror novelist Stephen King, inspiring him to write The Shining. Contrary to information sometimes published, King was living in Boulder at the time and did not actually write the novel at the hotel. Parts of the mini-series version of The Shining were filmed there, although it was not used for Stanley Kubrick's cinematic version. The hotel and its surrounding lands are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

The Stanley Hotel shows the uncut R-rated version of Kubrick's The Shining on a continuous loop on Channel 42 on guest room televisions.
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Missy
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« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2011, 11:53:17 pm »



The main building of the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, CO
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Missy
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« Reply #2 on: November 12, 2011, 11:54:19 pm »

In 1903, Stanley, who was co-inventor of the Stanley Steamer automobile, came to Estes Park for his health.[4] Stanley suffered from tuberculosis and came West at his doctor's suggestion. The doctor arranged for Stanley and his wife, Flora, to stay in a cabin in Estes Park for the summer. Immediately, they fell in love with the area and Stanley's health began to dramatically improve.[2] Impressed by the beauty of the valley and grateful for the improvement in his health, he decided to invest his money and his future there. In 1909, he opened the elegant Stanley Hotel, a classic hostelry exemplifying the golden age of touring.[4]

After spending the summer in the cabin, Flora wanted a home like the one she had left in Maine. Their home was built about one-half mile west of where the Stanley Hotel would later be built. Today the house is a private residence.[2]

Stanley built the hotel on land that he had purchased from the Irish Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl. Dunraven came to the area in 1872 while on a hunting trip. He built a hunting lodge, cabin, and hotel for his guests and illegally homesteaded up to 15,000 acres (61 km2) in an unsuccessful attempt to create a private hunting preserve. Dunraven was finally run out of the area after trying to swindle folks out of their land and money.[2][4]

In 1907, construction started on the Stanley Hotel. Wood and rock were obtained from the nearby mountains and the hotel was built in the Georgian architectural style, which experienced a revival in the early Twentieth century. Equipped with running water, electricity, and telephones, the only amenity the hotel lacked was heat, as the hotel was designed as a summer resort.[2]
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Missy
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« Reply #3 on: November 12, 2011, 11:54:56 pm »



The Stanley Hotel is a hotel that was the inspiration of Stephen King's book The Shining. The hotel is supposedly haunted and was used to film the mini-series The Shining. The hotel was also on an episode of Ghost Hunters aka T.A.P.S., The Atlantic Paranormal Society.
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Missy
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« Reply #4 on: November 12, 2011, 11:55:48 pm »



Hotel lobby‎
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Missy
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« Reply #5 on: November 12, 2011, 11:56:37 pm »



Vintage Stanley Steamer in hotel lobby
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Missy
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« Reply #6 on: November 12, 2011, 11:57:00 pm »

Hauntings

Many believe the Stanley Hotel is haunted, having reported a number of cases of ghostly activity, primarily in the ballroom. Kitchen staff have reported to have heard a party going on in the ballroom, only to find it empty. People in the lobby have allegedly heard someone playing the ballroom's piano; employees investigating the music supposedly find nobody sitting at the piano. Employees believe that particular ghost is of Freelan O. Stanley's wife, who used to be a piano player. In one guest room, people claim to have seen a man standing over the bed before running into the closet. This same apparition is allegedly responsible for stealing guests' jewelry, watches, and luggage. Others reported to have seen ghosts in their rooms in the middle of the night, simply standing in their room before disappearing.

The Syfy television show Ghost Hunters was invited to investigate the hotel. The manager showed them the various places where these alleged ghost activity has occurred. Ghost Hunters discovered some rational reasons for the various phenomena, such as wind and pipes. However, they could not decipher incidents in the ballroom. Ghost Hunters also claimed to experience other paranormal occurrences, such as seeing people in hallways then hiding and hearing children running and playing on the floor above them. The biggest alleged occurrence was that during changing of the film in the camera, a table jumped two feet in the air. Ghost Hunter Jason stayed the night in the room with the "ghost thief"—he stated that the bed moved, the closet doors unlocked and opened and his thick glass by the bed cracked open on the inside. The Stanley Hotel was also the lockdown site for the TV show Ghost Adventures on October 15, 2010.

Rocky Mountain Paranormal Research Society conducted an investigation into the various claims made about the property. They found nothing paranormal but many natural reasons for the claims: a raccoon climbed in a upper window during the night and loose window panes as well as many amateur "ghost-hunters" prowling around the property looking in windows during the wee hours of the morning. Page 23 of RMPRS's investigation into the Stanley Hotel shows the lightweight, unstable table that the Ghost Hunters claim "jumped two feet in the air" during their investigation.

After hearing claims that paranormal activity at the hotel are due to the geological makeup of the property, Rocky Mountain Paranormal contacted the USDA for information on the site. The scientists' conclusion, based on a satellite survey of Colorado, showed "nothing unusual about the aeromagnetic data in the area of Estes Park as compared to that general area of the Rockies". After this request for geological information, the government sent soil scientists to do a thorough soil survey on the property. The results showed the soil is mainly "crumbled schist" containing nothing radioactive. No large deposits of quartz, limestone or magnetite were evident.[5]

Stephen King got the idea for The Shining after staying in room 217 in the almost empty hotel on the night before it closed for an extended period.

In Skeptical Inquirer's “Naked Skeptic” column by Karen Stollznow she discusses RMPRS's investigation of The Stanley Hotel, “During the investigation, The Rocky Mountain Paranormal Research Society researched popular beliefs and claims; they solved some mysteries, they performed valuable outreach, and they maintained the historical integrity of the Stanley Hotel. However, they didn’t discover any anomalous phenomena. They found a leak in the ceiling but no ghosts. But this is no reason to give up the ghost (investigations). “[6]
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Missy
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« Reply #7 on: November 12, 2011, 11:57:44 pm »

Popular culture

The neoclassical hotel was the inspiration for the fictional Overlook Hotel in Stephen King's novel The Shining. While he and his wife were staying at the Stanley, King conceived the basic idea for the novel. The 1997 television miniseries version of The Shining was filmed at the Stanley, and it has been used as a location site for other films as well, most notably as the "Hotel Danbury" in Dumb and Dumber.[7]

In May 2006, investigators with The Atlantic Paranormal Society (TAPS) investigated the hotel for the SciFi program Ghost Hunters. TAPS returned to the hotel on October 31, 2006 for a live, six hour follow-up investigation. Premiering in July 2010, Ghost Hunters Academy had the finale of the second season take place in The Stanley Hotel. In November 2008, UK channel LIVING broadcast Most Haunted's investigation of the hotel.[8]

Ghost Adventures also filmed an episode there in the 4th season.
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Missy
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« Reply #8 on: November 12, 2011, 11:58:24 pm »



Front of Stanley Hotel in Winter, Feb. 2011
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Missy
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« Reply #9 on: November 13, 2011, 12:00:05 am »



The music room from The Stanley Hotel, Estes Park, CO showing snow.
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« Reply #10 on: November 13, 2011, 12:00:53 am »

References

   1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2008-04-15. http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/All_Data.html.
   2. ^ a b c d e [=2007-05-10 "Rocky Mountain Legends"]. LegendsOfAmerica.com. =2007-05-10.
   3. ^ "About The Stanley". StanleyHotel.com. http://www.stanleyhotel.com/about.html. Retrieved 2007-05-09.
   4. ^ a b c "Rocky Mountain National Park - Culture". US-Parks.com. http://www.us-parks.com/rocky/culture.html. Retrieved 2007-05-10.
   5. ^ "Investigations of the Stanley Hotel". Rocky Mountain Paranormal Research Society. 2008-10-15. http://www.rockymountainparanormal.com/smallstanley.pdf. Retrieved 2011-03-07.
   6. ^ Stollznow, Karen (December 21, 2009), "The Stanley Hotel: An Investigation", Skeptical Inquirer, http://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/show/stanley_hotel_an_investigation/, retrieved March 7, 2011
   7. ^ "Stanley Hotel Ghost Story ". Allstays.com. http://www.allstays.com/Haunted/co_estespark_stanley.htm. Retrieved 2007-05-09.
   8. ^ "New Most Haunted - Tuesday 11 November - Programme Details". Radio Times. http://www.radiotimes.com/ListingsServlet?event=10&channelId=197&programmeId=87760564&jspLocation=/jsp/prog_details_fullpage.jsp. Retrieved 2008-11-01.

[edit] External links

    * Official Website
    * Rocky Mountain National Park - Culture
    * The Stanley Hotel Haunting Report - including photographic proof
    * Ghosts and Hauntings of Estes Park, CO
    * Stephen King - The Overlook - The Stanley Hotel and Ghosts
    * The Stanley Hotel on SpookyMountainNews
    * Spirit Talk: The Stanley Hotel
    * Colorado Hauntings
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