|
|
|
JEFFERSON HOTEL
by Clayton Stapleton
Sunday July 24, 2005 12:19:52 AM CDT
 |
Jefferson Hotel
125 W. Austin Jefferson, TX 75657
|
|
|
|
|
JEFFERSON, Texas - In East Texas near
the Louisiana border is the historic town of Jefferson, named
after the third U.S. President, Thomas Jefferson, when Allen
Urquhart and Daniel Alley founded it in the early 1840s. There are
84 Texas Historical Commission medallions signifying historic
locations within the Jefferson city limits. This community once
resembled Louisiana and Missouri more than it did its own Texas
neighbors to the west; instead of cowboys and ranchers, there were
riverboat captains, dockhands, and lumbermen. Marion County became
part of the United States territories in the 1803 Louisiana
Purchase, and the town of Jefferson received a great influx of
early immigration because of the "Great Raft," a routed waterway
into the Cypress Bayou that allowed the steamboats to reach
Jefferson. The steamboat came up the Mississippi River into the
Red River, through Caddo Lake, and up Big Cypress to what was
known as the "Turning Basin." The first steamboat, the Llama,
reached Jefferson in late 1843 or early 1844. Jefferson
experienced its heyday after the Civil War ended, as people came
in from the devastated southern states to seek new lives.
|
|
 |
|
Looking up the stairs from the lobby; the upstairs of the hotel
was a bordello called the Crystal Palace when the hotel was
called the Grigsby Hotel. This is the stairway where some have
heard unseen people walking up and down in the middle of the
night.
|
|
|
The building located at 124 West Austin Street
began as a cotton warehouse in 1851. When the steamboat port
closed in the 1870s, the building was transformed into a hotel.
Over the years the hotel has gone by several names, including the
Hotel Jefferson, the Grigsby Hotel, and the Austin Street Hotel.
Michael and Elise Lakey are the
current proprietors of the beautiful 152-year-old hotel. While
visiting Jefferson last month for a Big Foot conference, I stopped
by to visit and found the staff very open about the paranormal
activities at the hotel. They even told me about their personal
experiences with the unknown while working in the building. When
you visit, don't forget to ask the front desk clerk to let you
read the hotel journal, where visitors write about their
paranormal encounters while staying at the hotel. The
following is taken from a brochure from the hotel lobby entitled
1"Ghostly Tales of
The Jefferson Hotel":
Some of the most
reported similar occurrences:
Whispers from nowhere, orchestra music from a
closed dining hall, knocks on walls and Victorian head-boards, the
smell of cigar smoke in the smoke-free building, faucets opening of
their own accord and doors pulling back when pulled shut.
Guests who have been the only people checked into
the hotel reported footsteps walking the halls in the middle of the
night. Even though the hall is carpeted, the sound is often the
click-clack of a hardwood floor.
Children have been heard laughing and romping throughout the hotel in
the middle of the night. A child calls for mama, a baby cries, but no
children were staying in the hotel!
|
Years ago, a former desk clerk named Michael was ending
his shift. It was in the middle of a slow week and there were no
"paying" guests staying at the hotel overnight. Michael made his
rounds upstairs, turning off lights and locking rooms before leaving
for the night. He was closing the last door in the long, dark hallway
when the doors started opening and slamming shut all at once!
Lights turned on and off as Michael dashed downstairs and phoned his
friend Phyllis, a desk clerk at the Excelsior Hotel across the street.
Phyllis reports that Michael was in a complete panic when he called,
screaming that he was alone in the hotel but all "heck" was breaking
loose upstairs! He could hear doors slamming and the sound of
footsteps and someone dragging furniture. Michael locked up and waited
in the street for his ride home that night.
While this writer visited the hotel, I sat in the lobby and spoke to
the night desk clerk. She told me that on many nights, guests who
experienced a paranormal event would come down and spend the rest of
the night on the lobby chairs rather than spend another minute in
their haunted rooms. Some have even checked out!
The desk clerk also mentioned that on quiet nights, she sometimes
hears people walking down the stairs and waits to see if she can help
them, but no one ever comes down to the lobby—at least no one who can
be seen. Many guests have taken photos and shared some of them with
the hotel. A folder is kept behind the front desk containing some of
the photos showing ORBS and strange mist.
So is the Jefferson Hotel the most haunted hotel in America? Maybe
not, but it should be in the Top 20 at least. If you’re ever in East
Texas and want to stay in a beautiful 152-year-old hotel, stop by 124
West Austin Street in Jefferson and spend a night in the Jefferson
Hotel. |
|
|

The Comment Forum -
Post your comments here
 |
SOURCES |
| |
1. |
"Ghostly Tales of the Jefferson Hotel" - A brochure
from the Jefferson Hotel lobby. |
| |
2. |
Witness
- Front Desk Clerk at the Jefferson Hotel. |
| |
3. |
Witness - Guest staying at the
Jefferson Hotel. |
| |
|
|
 |
RELATED STORIES FROM
THE INTERNET |
| |
|
The
Jefferson Hotel - Visit the Hotel's web site. Contact them
by email
stay@historicjeffersonhotel.com . |
| |
|
Photos - A former guest of the Jefferson Hotel took
photos and posted them on a web site. |
| |
|
Turning Basin Bayou Tours - Take a trip down the river and
learn about the old Riverboats that visited Jefferson so many
years ago. |
| |
|
Jefferson, Texas - Marion County Chambers of Commerce web
site. |
| |
|
HAUNTED TEXAS VACATIONS - Lisa Farwell's wonderful book.
Check out her website -
GHOSTLY
GUIDE |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

©2003 WhatWasThen.com All Rights Reserved |
|