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In 1974, famed US horror writer Stephen King and his wife Tabitha lived for a year in Boulder, Colorado. In late October, they spent a night in the mountain resort town of Estes Park, 40 miles northwest of Boulder. They checked into the historic 155-room Stanley Hotel – and found that they were the only guests for one of the last nights of the hotel’s season.
King’s imagination went wild as he wandered the abandoned hallways, ate alone in the grand dining room and talked up the bartender. By the end of the night, he knew he had enough material to start writing his next book.
The
Shining, published in 1977, quickly became a horror classic, in no
small part due its scarily secluded setting: a snowed-in hotel with a
haunted history, hidden away in the Rocky Mountains.
Ghosts of the past
Though King called the hotel in his book The Overlook, the fictional Overlook and the real-life Stanley not only look alike, with sprawling front porches and crisp Georgian architecture, but both were completed in 1909. Founder FO Stanley, who invented one of the era’s best selling steam-powered cars, The Stanley Steamer, in 1897, came to the Rocky Mountains from Massachusetts in 1903 to find treatment for his tuberculosis. He and his wife Flora fell in love with the region and founded the hotel six years later. During its early heyday, the resort hosted celebrities including former US president Theodore Roosevelt, Titanic survivor Molly Brown and Emperor Hirohito of Japan.
Though King called the hotel in his book The Overlook, the fictional Overlook and the real-life Stanley not only look alike, with sprawling front porches and crisp Georgian architecture, but both were completed in 1909. Founder FO Stanley, who invented one of the era’s best selling steam-powered cars, The Stanley Steamer, in 1897, came to the Rocky Mountains from Massachusetts in 1903 to find treatment for his tuberculosis. He and his wife Flora fell in love with the region and founded the hotel six years later. During its early heyday, the resort hosted celebrities including former US president Theodore Roosevelt, Titanic survivor Molly Brown and Emperor Hirohito of Japan.
Listed
on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977, the Stanley has
retained many of its original features, including the entrance’s
sprawling veranda, its founder’s favourite billiard room and the grand
staircase that graces the lobby.
The Stanley’s original MacGregor
Ballroom, with its raised stage and large windows showcasing expansive
mountain views, was reincarnated in the pages of The Shining. Late one
night, main character and hotel caretaker Jack Torrance finds himself at
a magnificent masked ball attended by 1940s-styled guests – even though
he, his wife and son are the hotel’s only inhabitants, and all the
roads to the hotel are blocked by snow.
Apparitions are nothing
new for the Stanley’s ballroom. People report seeing the keys on the
room’s piano being pressed with no one there, and hearing music fill the
space. Hotel historians believe the musician is Flora Stanley herself:
she loved the piano and often played it for guests.
Room 217
“It was a perfectly ordinary door, no different from any other door on the first two floors of the hotel,” King wrote. “It was dark gray, halfway down a corridor that ran at right angles to the main second-floor hallway. The numbers on the door looked no different from the house numbers on the Boulder apartment building they had lived in. A 2, a 1, and a 7.”
“It was a perfectly ordinary door, no different from any other door on the first two floors of the hotel,” King wrote. “It was dark gray, halfway down a corridor that ran at right angles to the main second-floor hallway. The numbers on the door looked no different from the house numbers on the Boulder apartment building they had lived in. A 2, a 1, and a 7.”
In the book, the room beyond door 217 turns out to be
far from ordinary – it is the site of a gruesome haunting. In real life,
it was the room where King stayed.
Long before King’s stay, the
room had a history. In 1917, the chief housekeeper Elizabeth Wilson was
lighting the hotel’s acetylene lanterns during a storm in case the
electricity went out. When she went to light the one in what is now room
217, the lantern exploded, blasting out the floor beneath her feet and
sending her falling down to the storey below.
She survived (albeit
with two broken ankles). Even so, guests of 217 report her spirit stops
by on occasion – usually to tidy things up, sometimes putting stray
items away or unpacking a suitcase.
The hauntings, both the
fictional and the ostensibly real, hardly deter guests. In fact, room
217 is usually booked months in advance. That said, the fourth floor
rooms receive the most reports of unusual activity, from the sounds of
children playing in the halls to lights turning off to faces appearing
in windows.
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