Tag Archives: ghost story

Lantern Guided Ghost Tour: Cheesman Park (Denver)

On a chilly, dark night we met our long-coated, derby wearing guide. He carried a very squeaky lantern that swung back and forth as we followed him through the notoriously haunted park. And why shouldn’t it be haunted? Today’s lovely spacious green park was once the site of several cemeteries dating as far back as1858 with Prospect Cemetery, but even before that legend held that Native Americans buried their dead here. Federalized in 1872, by then the cemetery was called Denver City Cemetery and contained various religious and ethnic groups. The Jewish section was reputed to be the most beautiful while the Chinese rituals of dismemberment and boilings at graveside drew the Denver curious in great numbers.

One of the first ghosts a visitor might encounter on any given night in Cheesman Park would be the that of John Stiles who suffered the fate of being the first man hanged in Denver. He is sometimes heard saying, “I did it! I did it.” Apparently, he murdered his brother-in-law back in the day and continues to confess to the crime even though he was executed in the cemetery over a century ago.

By the end of the 19th century several other cemeteries opened in Denver and this one fell into severe neglect. With an increasingly negative reputation, those who lived around it sought to have the cemetery converted into a park. The very costly undertaking (pun intended) to remove the bodies began…but not terribly successfully. After a scandal involving defrauding the city with a scheme involving breaking bodies into pieces and creating an endless trail of supposed separate children’s bodies in coffins, the work contract was cancelled. The city pressed forward with the park leaving thousands of bodies in their graves. Today evidence of this can be seen after fresh snow when depressed rectangles appear across fields. Media has captured these images as have individuals strolling the park. It’s a common event. Bones also have been known to float to the surface and are recovered in the park as coffins continue to break down. Construction in the nearby Botanic Garden or city grounds has also produced complete skeletons in lines.     

Our guide pointed out various sections of the old cemetery including the Chinese, Jewish, and Catholic sections. There was once a boot hill, so named because the homeless buried with their boots on and without a coffin, was an area subject to the confounding habit of producing the odd boot or two after weather events. Further along a significant depression in the lawn was once the site of a flood that resurfaced skeletons.  

We happened along a tree-lined path that was a road for Model-T cars for about a year. Apparently there were so many deaths due to the cars racing along at 35 MPH that the city had to intervene. The path is said to be haunted now by those victims, and you can still hear their screams. From that path, we gazed out into the park and were reminded that although the trees which lined the road were planted in straight lines, those out in the park were scattered because it was easier to drop trees into open graves when the city halted the contract to move the bodies than to pay workers to close the graves.

Because the original cemetery area covered more than the park, we had a chance to wander a few of the streets where Denver’s wealthy classes built estates right on top of the old cemetery. One of the most famous of these is the Stoiber Mansion. Today it is surrounded by tall hedges and hard to glimpse. It is said to be haunted by several ghosts. The one that guests repeatedly reported is a waiter in a tux who carries a tray. When you place your drink on the tray, it falls through, and he vanishes. The house also has a connection to the Titanic and the “Sacred 36” (a society card club which Molly Brown wanted to join but was never invited into). Across the street, one of Denver’s earliest newspaper men hosted Presidents TR and Taft. Next door lived the first Governor of Colorado.

A totally unexpected connection was made to the movie The Changeling (1980) starring George C. Scott. A couple of decades ago, in the Humboldt neighborhood, a Victorian house once stood where an apartment building does now. Back in the 1960s, Russell Hunter claimed to have had experiences in the Henry Treat Rogers’ mansion that provide the basis for the movie script. The mansion was demolished in the 1980s and the movie was set in Seattle.     

Cheesman Park has a history worthy of hauntings. We didn’t sense or see anything but just knowing that the grounds are filled with unrecovered and unmarked graves makes me think twice about picnicking or hanging around too long. Wishing you a happy, haunted Halloween!

Have you ever had an encounter with a ghost? Share your story in the comments. I have had several. One I describe in the introduction of my ghost book. Read it on Amazon.

My Ghostly Tale: Timeless Tulips, Dark Diamonds: A Ghost Story

In this chilling ghost story, an act from the distant past is reawakened and afflicts the life of a modern teenage girl.

When Lydia travels to Amsterdam with her parents, bizarre things start to happen. Curtains flutter and unexplained shadows move unnerving her. With Dad interviewing for a job, Lydia is content to dismiss the oddities blaming them on jet lag and her migraine disease. But upon returning home to New York, the experiences intensify.

This is the haunting tale of two girls separated by four hundred years. Lydia is confused and in danger because the ghost of a little Dutch girl, Annika, wants revenge. When Lydia’s life is threatened, she is forced to solve a centuries’ old mystery to uncover the truth about Annika, her story, and how their past and present connect them. Can Lydia learn the truth in time to save herself and help Annika?

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Tulipmania!

Tulipmania! When the world went wild for tulips. The history behind Timeless Tulips, Dark Diamonds- A Ghost Story.

When fourteen-year-old Lydia travels to Amsterdam with her parents, the last thing she expects is the weird incidents that plague her stay. Curtains flutter mysteriously, and unexplained shadows move through the kitchen unnerving her. But Lydia is more concerned with the potential move to upstate New York. She dismisses the odd occurrences blaming them on jet lag and the various symptoms of her migraine disease.

When Lydia’s father lands a new job and the family moves to an area first settled by the Dutch, the bizarre happenings continue. Suffering from migraines has never been easy, but now Lydia has to contend with what she may have inadvertently brought home with her.

BUY the book here: https://bit.ly/4elCeZE

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WHAT I’M WORKING ON

If you follow my blogs, Facebook, or Twitter feeds, I’m sure it looks like I’m not doing a whole lot. But since being back in country (since late Oct.) things have been very busy. Personal challenges continue— my mother died in April and the house hunt continues.

Timeless Tulips, Dark Diamonds, my new book was released this spring. Since the publisher does not have ebook rights, I’ll be releasing an ebook this fall. It will be an expanded version of the print book with additional material. My goal is to release this in time for Halloween since it’s a ghost story. Stay tuned for more on that.

The most coveted tulip during Tulipmania: Semper Augustus- could sell for as much as a grand canal house!

Additionally, I’m working on a new novel that’s about three quarters complete. No title yet. This has been a fun book to work on. It’s required some research into the history of Colorado’s start and the history of tuberculosis (the White Plague). The book is a visionary tale about girl who grows up in a 19th century, Colorado town known for its dry climate and healing waters. With a father in the mortuary business, Tallulah has always been around TB and death. Tally’s mother died when she was born, and she longs to know more about the woman who should have raised her. Two peculiar town residents, who Tally is warned to give wide berth, sisters Dottie and Lottie (rumor has it) can speak to the dead. Can Tally persuade them to help her? I’m hoping to finish this by the end of the year. Add your title ideas in the comments section. PLEASE!!

TB sufferers taking the open air cure.

Another manuscript I’ve been sitting on for a while, I think I’m going to self-publish soon. The Greening of the Laurel is a visionary, YA book in thriller mode.  Ryan’s junior year is turned upside down by a series of bizarre visions and freaky encounters with fire. Eventually, Ryan ends up in the ER. He finally comes face to face with the man who claims to have all the answers. But how can quantum physics and timeless spiritual mysteries be colliding with Ryan at the center of it all? Can he really believe he had a past as a medieval heretic where he hid what has become known as the lost Cathar treasure, a manuscript containing the hidden truth underlying the universe? Can he trust a secret society that claims to need his help if science is to move forward?

photo: Kaktus
(Montsegur- Cathar stronghold until the final battle of 1244)

Not at first, but as events threaten his family, Ryan returns to southern France to find the document he once allegedly hid. In 1244, he watched two hundred of his countrymen burn as he and two others slipped away in the night carrying a manuscript the world desperately needs. Surrounding Ryan are members of the Green Laurel, back to ensure his safety. Also, back are the dark forces of the Church who want nothing more than to exterminate the remnants of the Cathars and the truth the future requires. Without the manuscript, science cannot advance. A single unified theory will never be found and, all along, Ryan’s very existence remains in peril.      

And although I’ve never had any luck with picture books, I’m currently circulating a manuscript with agents starring Mona Lisa. A cute story, but no bites yet!  

Click below to find my published books.

https://amzn.to/30oq1NL

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