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Haunted: The Hayloft Restaurant



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 02-03-2004, 12:31 AM
jmcquown
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Default Haunted: The Hayloft Restaurant

Dog3 wrote:
The Lizzie B bread and breakfast got me to thinking about other
haunted places that now serve food and/or offer lodging. This one
looks ripe for a good meal and a bloody murder in the middle of the
night. Unfortunately it burned to the ground in 1998 and I can not
find anything that shows it has re-opened.

Michael

Link: http://www.prairieghosts.com/hayloft.html
Excerpt:
"The Hayloft Restaurant in Plymouth is a rather unique restaurant in a
state that features a number of unusual eateries. The Hayloft was
originally built in the 1800's, but until the early 1970's it was not
a restaurant at all, but a functional barn. The Hayloft is not a
rustic and popular eating establishment, but it does boast one other
thing that many other Indiana restaurants do not.... it's own
resident ghost."


Oh, pshaw! There are plenty of haunted inns and such...

Martha Washington Inn, Abingdon, Virginia - "The most romantic ghost is that
of the young lady named Beth that haunts Room 403. Staff have seen
apparitions of a woman enter the room, or see her sitting near the bed, and
have heard faint violin music."

Red Brook Inn, Old Mystic, Connecticut - "Guests who have stayed in the
North Room of the Crary Homestead have seen a white-haired elderly woman
wrapped in a black shawl."

The General Wayne Inn, Merion, Pennsylvania - A séance held in 1972 revealed
many ghosts still wandering around the inn. The most witnessed ghost is that
of a Hessian soldier, one of a group of German soldiers hired by the British
in the Revolutionary War. He is seen most often in the basement, but has
been spotted in other areas as well."

Grace Hall, Selma, Alabama - "Guests have seen a woman in a long white dress
with a little black dog. It seems the ghost is Miz Eliza, the lady of the
house in the late nineteenth century."

Where my parents live there is an old church which was used as a field
hospital in the Civil War... people still hear the whispers of dying boys
asking someone to contact their "mama".

Jill (loves ghosts!)


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 02-03-2004, 02:02 AM
T E
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Haunted: The Hayloft Restaurant

This restaurant has been featured on the Food Network speciall 'haunted
eats'.
Also, the Maccus Red Fox where Jimmy Hoffa had his last meal -15 min.
drive from where I live-is reported to have goings on after hours
claimed by cleaning crew.
http://www.detnews.com/2000/features...e01-137845.htm

  #3 (permalink)  
Old 02-03-2004, 02:57 AM
jmcquown
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Haunted: The Hayloft Restaurant

T E wrote:
This restaurant has been featured on the Food Network speciall
'haunted eats'.
Also, the Maccus Red Fox where Jimmy Hoffa had his last meal -15 min.
drive from where I live-is reported to have goings on after hours
claimed by cleaning crew.
http://www.detnews.com/2000/features...e01-137845.htm


Oh, I love the photos from the Whitney! I'd love to eat there. Thanks for
sharing.

Jill


  #4 (permalink)  
Old 02-03-2004, 06:17 AM
jmcquown
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Haunted: The Hayloft Restaurant

Dog3 wrote:
The Lizzie B bread and breakfast got me to thinking about other
haunted places that now serve food and/or offer lodging. This one
looks ripe for a good meal and a bloody murder in the middle of the
night. Unfortunately it burned to the ground in 1998 and I can not
find anything that shows it has re-opened.

Michael

Link: http://www.prairieghosts.com/hayloft.html
Excerpt:
"The Hayloft Restaurant in Plymouth is a rather unique restaurant in a
state that features a number of unusual eateries. The Hayloft was
originally built in the 1800's, but until the early 1970's it was not
a restaurant at all, but a functional barn. The Hayloft is not a
rustic and popular eating establishment, but it does boast one other
thing that many other Indiana restaurants do not.... it's own
resident ghost."


Haunted Savannah
The city's long history has also given Savannah a wealth of legends -- many
associated with eighteenthcentury pirates who visited Savannah's bustling
port. The aptly named Pirates House restaurant, which flies the skull and
crossbones above its front doors, and the Shrimp Factory are two of
Savannah's most popular haunted eateries. Guests at the Kehoe House bed and
breakfast have also been known to encounter ghosts.
The Kehoe House was built in 1892 by iron magnate William Kehoe. It has been
used for various purposes since the family sold the home in 1930. For a
time, it was a funeral parlor. More recently, the luxurious three-story home
was turned into an opulent bed and breakfast. More than half-a-dozen guests
have reported ghostly encounters since then. All the incidents have occurred
in two rooms: 201 and 203. Some patrons have reported seeing the image of a
young girl dressed in servant's clothes, while others have seen the
apparition of an elderly lady wearing a shroud over her head.

Jill


 




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