Haunted Hotels

Want to stay in a real haunted hotel? We have nearly 1,000 haunted hotels that have true reported incidents of paranormal activity. Stay in the Stanley Hotel, where Steven King’s haunted experience was so unnerving he was inspired to write The Shining. Want to stay in what is reported to be the most haunted hotel in America? Book it here or find a haunted hotel near you.

The Haunted Irma Hotel

1192 Sheridan Ave, Cody, WY 82414, USA

Strange noises, bottomless ghostly apparitions, and mysterious footsteps are just some of the unexplained happenings reported here. Located in Cody, WY, Irma Hotel has a long history dating to 1902 when Buffalo Bill built the place (and named it after his daughter).

While ghostly occurrences have been reported throughout the hotel, room 35 is said to be especially paranormally active. In addition to finding rows of glasses moved and hearing jangling spurs in empty rooms, employees have also reported catching an occasional glimpse of Buffalo Bill himself.

Haunted National House Inn

269-781-7374.

102 S Parkview, Marshall, MI 49068, USA

The Haunted National House Inn

The National House was a stage stop for travelers going to Detroit or Chicago and was built in 1835. Before the Civil War, the inn served a different purpose. A hidden room constructed in the cellar made the inn part of the Underground Railroad. The secret room was found years later and during Prohibition hid illegal liquor shipments.

Spirits attach themselves to people, places or objects. When the inn was renovated and antiques placed in the rooms, paranormal occurrences started. Most of the ghostly visitations revolve around the “Lady in Red” who wanders around the inn, apparently going about her routine as she did when she was alive. Ask hotel operators nicely and they’ll tell you about the room that The Lady in Red insists the door be closed at all times.

Who was The Lady in Red?

Many theories of the identity of ghost dubbed The Lady in Red have been tossed around. The most popular are:

  • A resident when the building was converted into apartments
  • A woman traveling on the railroad who met a violent death
  • Someone involved with the mob during Prohibition

Haunted Rooms of the National House Inn

  • Hotel operators say the most haunt activity takes place in the “Charles Dickey Room.” Guests report that pictures have been knocked off the wall, guests have nightmares, and they sometimes smell cigar smoke when no person near has been smoking.