Book a Spooky Stay at One of California’s Historic Haunted Hotels

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SACRAMENTO, CA [September 30, 2020]—For a hair-raising experience this Halloween, travelers can check into one of California’s historic, haunted hotels.  A handful of historic B&Bs and boutique hotels have spine-chilling ghost stories to tell, luring brave travelers with the chance to encounter spirits who have lingered long past their check-out times.

Strawberry Creek Inn B&B
According to the California Paranormal Investigators group, the main house of the Strawberry Creek Inn in Idyllwild is said to be inhabited by a shy, yet protective female figure named Jane or Janet. While she’s been somewhat vague about her name, this ghostly matron appears to have been connected to the land before the cedar-shingled main house was built in the 1940s. She may have been part of the Cahuilla tribe or early settlers to the region who climbed the San Jacinto Mountains above Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley to escape heat of the desert below. Jane (or Janet) occasionally plays mild pranks on guests (cold spots, moved items, and pictures flying off the wall), but she tends to make herself known through a quiet presence felt by guests who have arrived already believing in her existence. Guests have also had similar experiences at the 1920’s mountain cabin next door.

1859 Historic National Hotel
After staying in the 1859 Historic National Hotel in Jamestown, even non-believers have been known to change their convictions about the supernatural. Many guests have shared accounts of doors slamming, lights going on and off, clothing being dumped from suitcases onto the floor, and a woman's sobbing coming from the hallway in the middle of the night. A ghost named Flo is to blame. It’s believed that her fiancé was shot dead by a drunk man who had stumbled through the front door of the hotel. Flo found her fiancé lying at the bottom of the stairs near the door in a pool of blood. For days she sobbed uncontrollably in her room, and then there was silence. The hotel staff found her dead in her room, wearing her wedding gown, presumably having died of a broken heart. Flo's ghost generally stays upstairs in the hotel, favoring the rooms in the front of the building. Although on occasion, early in the morning, she has been seen downstairs, floating through the dining room and right through the walls.

MacCallum House Inn
Check into room four at the MacCallum House Inn and you may have unexpected company.  According to Mendocino town lore, Donald MacCallum (born in 1880 as the only son of Daisy and Alexander MacCallum) has never truly left. Many guests over the years have testified to strange and unexplained happenings in room four, where Donald slept from the time he was an infant. There have been reports of dresser drawer handles flipping up and down of their own volition and of ghostly figures passing through the room (and other rooms in the main house). Once, a framed picture of Donald’s sister, which had hung for years, fell to the ground and shattered as the general manager was getting supplies out of a storage closet.  No one else was on that floor at that time.  He went downstairs to get a broom to clean up the broken glass, but when he returned a minute later, a picture of a rooster from a guest room had been hung in the place of the girl’s photo.

Queen Anne Hotel
Deemed one of America’s most haunted hotels, the historic Queen Anne Hotel in San Francisco was originally built in 1890 for Miss Mary Lake as a finishing school for girls. The building was sold to another buyer nine years later, and legend has it that Miss Mary Lake was not happy about the sale. She’s spent her afterlife wandering the halls and stairwells of the hotel, primping in the mirror on the second floor, and haunting her former room: the Mary Lake Suite, room 410.  She makes tapping noises, periodically plays the piano, and likes to create mischief for the hotel staff.  Miss Mary’s apparition has been seen so frequently that a popular walking tour, San Francisco Ghost Hunt, used to begin at the hotel.  In-person haunted walking tours are unavailable this season, but virtual tours are being offered instead.

For more information on these and other California boutique hotels and bed and breakfast inns, visit www.cabbi.com.

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California Association of Boutique & Breakfast Inns
414 29th Street
Sacramento, CA 95816-3211
916-554-2673 
www.cabbi.com

Media Contact: Ranee Ruble-Dotts
ranee@papermooncreative.com or 503-395-0023

The California Association of Boutique & Breakfast Inns (CABBI) is the largest and most influential bed & breakfast and boutique inn association in the nation and is the only California bed & breakfast association affiliated with the California Hotel & Lodging Association. CABBI was formed in 1991 to promote the bed and breakfast experience to the traveling public and to educate, support and encourage CABBI members to provide a quality stay for inn travelers.

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