Ursula Bielski, Paranormal Author And Historian, Talks Chicago's Haunted Hotspots

Paranormal Historian Talks Chicago's Most Haunted Hotspots
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With Halloween right around the corner, the purveyors of candy, costumes and intense lawn decor aren't the only ones working longer-than-usual hours to help spread the spooky spirit of the season.

Here in Chicago, Ursula Bielski, an author and historian recognized as one of the city's principal authorities on all things supernatural and paranormal, is surely logging quite the overtime. In addition to authoring a series of books about local haunts, Bielski also founded Chicago Hauntings, which offers historically-based ghost tours of the city year round.

HuffPost Chicago recently spoke with Bielski about what makes the Windy City such an optimal home for paranormal enthusiasts.

The Huffington Post: Let's get down to business because I'm sure this is a busy time with you. How do you deal with that sort of seasonal uptick of interest in what's become your passion -- the paranormal?
Ursula Bielski: It's funny because when I was growing up, October was my favorite month and I looked forward to it and getting ready for Halloween, going to lots of haunted houses and all that fun stuff -- and now it's really work! It's pretty exhausting and gets more so each year because there's such a heightened interest in all things paranormal over the last 10 years or so probably.

A lot of people are interested year round in ghosts and hauntings and the paranormal, but this is the time of year that those who may not always be interested begin to think about it. So this is our opportunity to get more information across to those people, telling them more than just the spooky story. We try to really bring the history to life and memorialize the people that have died at the places we visit on our tours and the places I write about.

HP: I imagine a lot of that additional interest has come with the proliferation of things like "Ghost Hunters" and "Paranormal Activity." How does the way that paranormal research and hauntings more generally are portrayed in those sorts of programs impact how people approach your work?
UB: I've had a lot of difficulty in the last few years with the expectation of people who come on a tour and want you to whip out all your gadgets. I've never been too fascinated with gadgets to begin with. I love science and technology and think it's cool that people create equipment specifically to hunt ghosts. But this whole thing, these 25 years now, has always been about the person, the person's experience, how it relates to our history and culture and how it ties generations together.

I learned a very hard lesson when I was just starting out in college in 1988 and began formal investigation as part of a team as an undergrad history major. I went to some places around Chicago with a psychology student doing parapsychology work and it was my job to interview people who had experiences at these sites prior to the visits. I would talk to a dozen or more people who had profound experiences at these sites. And then we'd go in with the gadgets and if the leader found no so-called "evidence" of anything out of the ordinary going on, it would be announced that the place wasn't haunted and that would be that.

That emphasis on scientific evidence bothered me from the beginning. Ghosts and hauntings can't be studied the way science wants, so it doesn't make much sense to try and study these things with instruments when we found out a long time ago, back to the beginning of parapsychology, that it doesn't work.

(Scroll down to learn more about what are reportedly some of Chicago's most haunted places.)

HP: You've been doing this work for some time and are incredibly prolific. What has motivated you to stay in Chicago and study this subject here, versus anywhere else in the country? What makes our city so special when it comes to these phenomena?
UB: There's a lot of different aspects to that. First of all, there is so much water in the area. Researchers have found that places with a lot of water tend to see more reports of phenomena, which may have something to do with the theory that these phenomena are electrical -- water is a great conduit. Somewhere like Chicago -- with Lake Michigan -- and other cities on great bodies of water -- like New Orleans or Salem, Mass., the British Isles or Key West -- have more than their fair share of stories.

There's also talk about the Native American connection. There were so many people displaced during the time of settlement in Chicago. There's a long history in Native American folklore that a lot of the land was cursed as a sort of revenge for that removal.

But the main reason, we think, is the long history of trying to sort of rewrite history and forget about tragic events that have occurred. There's a far-reaching idealistic, hopeful and innovative mentality here in Chicago that is always forward-thinking, which is a great thing and has allowed Chicagoans to accomplish incredible things. But it also kind of sweeps aside the terrible things that have happened at times. The intentions are good, but if you don't remember people that have died in tragedies -- especially those that happened due to negligence or greed -- the ghosts will come around. Here in Chicago, you can go from site to site to site where huge tragedies took hundreds of lives and there's no plaque, statue or memorial of any kind there -- and that's done on purpose.

HP: With so many stories of experiences with ghosts in Chicago, there are bound to be a few that get blown a bit out of proportion. Are there any particular haunted spots in the area where you feel the legend and its actual history have become particularly separate?
UB: Absolutely, I would say probably the main one is Bachelor's Grove Cemetery. It's known as one of the most haunted places in the world and we're not really sure what actually happened there. There seems to have been some kind of horrific event in the past that's led to all these urban legends. The legends are very far from the original stories such as an apparition of a house seen for many years going back to at least the '50s, stories of phantom cars, a two-headed man, a woman in white.

There's a lot of reports of things that seem to be people getting carried away with their imaginations, though that's not to say that there's something profoundly paranormal about it. There's something very odd about Bachelor's Grove and there are very subtle things that go on there that really make you think about whether the legends are really true. It makes even skeptics think twice.

HP: Of all the places you've investigated and written about in the area, do you have any particular "favorites" so to speak? Places that, no matter how many times you return, still are unsettling?
UB: There are a few of them. One places I've probably been to 2,000 times and still get choked up at during tours is the site of the Iroquois Theatre fire, where the Oriental Theatre is today. In 1903, 602 people died there, a lot of them children, during a matinee performance. It's a terrible tragedy and it could have been prevented -- but a lot of it had to do with greed. I think there must be something more there that affected me more than all the other places we go with similarly horrific stories.

Another site that baffles me and some good friends of mine is in Libertyville, called "The Gate" in the Independence Grove Forest Preserve. It's an old stone gate out in the woods along one of the paths. There is a legend that at one point earlier in the 20th century, a girls' school was there. Some terrible tragedy occurred there and usually the story you hear is that one of the workers at the school went crazy, beheaded a number of children and put their heads up on the gate post. They tore down the school, the story passed into oblivion and there are no records of the school. It's one of those things that nobody talked about. Clairvoyants and psychics who know nothing about the story have said they hear children screaming and laughing and physical artifacts found at the site seem to be from a school like this.

HP: When you're not busy leading tours or writing, what's one of your favorite places in the city to go and kick back?
UB: My home away from home is the Portage Theater in Portage Park. They have so many different events, conferences, concerts, plays and all kinds of really cool old films, including lots of horror films. A lot of it is free and the manager Dennis and his wife Linda are so great. There's a bar there with a concession stand and I just love it there. I try to go as much as possible.

HP: And, since it is the season for horror, I'm curious: What are your favorite films from the genre?
UB: My two favorite movies are the original "The Haunting," which is based on Shirley Jackson's novel "The Haunting of Hill House." The 1960s version with Julie Harris. I think it's still the best ghost story ever put on film, it's really, really well done. And another of my favorites is the old, old horror movie back in the '30s called "The Old Dark House." It's got Boris Karloff and all these great old actors: Gloria Stuart, who played the elderly Rose in "Titantic." It's very atmospheric, a really fun one.

Ursula Bielski will be giving a lecture at the Skokie Public Library on Monday, Oct. 29 and is hosting a number of other events around town in the weeks ahead. Click here for more information on Bielski's Chicago Hauntings tours.

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Before You Go

Chicago's Most Haunted Places
Jane Addams Hull House(01 of09)
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Believed to be haunted even before Jane Addams repurposed it as a settlement house, the Hull House is most famous for the "Devil Baby," a child rumored to have been born in 1913 with cloven hooves, horns and reptillian skin after his father welcomed a curse from the devil. Jane Addams' wrote about the persistent folk tale in The Atlantic in 1916 after countless visitors had come to see the baby, rumored to be locked in the home's attic after failed efforts to baptise him. (credit:Jane Addams' Hull-House Association)
Eastland River Disaster Site(02 of09)
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Requirements for increased lifeboat quantities following the Titanic disaster contributed in part to a devastating accident on the Chicago river that would be one of the most deadly the city has seen. An overloaded luxury steamship, the S.S. Eastland, had been chartered by the Western Electric Company of Hawthorne to take employees to a summer gala, WTTW11 reports. But while docked in the Chicago River, the boat slowly rolled over, trapping many of the 2,500 passengers. Ultimately, 844 were killed, many of them children. Ghosts can be seen wandering in or near the river, and at a nearby site that today hosts Harpo Studios, where many bodies were laid out as they were recovered. (credit:Mary Fairchild)
Site Of The Murder Castle(03 of09)
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Called "America's First Serial Killer," druggist Herman Webster Mudgett, alias Dr. H.H. Holmes had already been connected to several mysterious deaths and disappearances when he built an enormous structure on 63rd St. in Englewood that would come to be known as his "Murder Castle," Harper's reports. Holmes, fascinated by the human body, customized the building's basement with "operating tables, a crematory, pits containing quicklime and acids, surgical instruments, and various pieces of apparatus...resembling mediaeval torture racks," Harper's reports. Both for insurance and other financial schemes and his personal interests in medical experimentation, Holmes is believed to have killed more than 20 victims, mostly women, disposing of their bodies in his various basement devices or selling them on the black market. His story is the basis of Erik Larson's Devil in the White City. (credit:Flickr: Zol87)
Excalibur Nightclub(04 of09)
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Chicago nightclub Excalibur is hard to miss due to its looming gothic architecture--which isn't all that remains from when the building was host to the Chicago Historical Society. Victims of the Eastland disaster in 1915 were reportedly brought to the building, being used as a makeshift morgue, and some say they've never left. The site had previously held a building destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire, where several women were said to have died, including the famous Lady in Red ghost. Excalibur reports cold spots, breaking glasses, and alarms set off while the building is empty, and hosts seances and other events intended to help connect with the many spirits trapped there. (credit:Richie Diesterheft)
The Museum of Science and Industry(05 of09)
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The Museum of Science and Industry, originally built as the Palace of Fine Arts for the 1893 Chicago World's Fair, is the only surviving structure from that exposition, which is said to draw many ghosts who died during the event, Chicago Hauntings reports.. The museum, which is situated along the shore of the Jackson Park lagoon, looks more like an ancient Greek temple than it does a center of science and technology. Perhaps it is that feeling of antiquity that draws the ghosts. One of the museum's most famous ghosts is that of Clarence Darrow, the celebrated lawyer whose battle with William Jennings Bryan in 1925 over the issue of teaching evolution in schools--a trial known as the Scopes Monkey Trial--has become a landmark case in the annals of jurisprudence and was also the inspiration for the play and movie, Inherit the Wind. Darrow figured prominently in many other high-profile cases, including the 1924 Leopold and Loeb case, in which he defended two stone-cold teenage murderers of a fourteen-year old boy and won them life imprisonment instead of the electric chair. Darrow lived in the Hyde Park neighborhood that includes the museum. He died in Chicago in 1938 and his cremated remains were scattered in the Jackson Park lagoon as he had requested. Every year a wreath-laying ceremony honoring Darrow is held at the bridge spanning the lagoon. In 1957 the bridge was dedicated in his memory and is now known as the Clarence Darrow Memorial Bridge. (credit:Kim Scarborough)
Congress Plaza Hotel(06 of09)
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The Congress Plaza Hotel, built to accomodate traffic during the World Fair in Chicago, and later said to be a hotspot for gangsters including Al Capone, has seen its fair share of violence and gore, and as a result, is said to have several frequently-appearing apparitions. A longtime security guard described to Yahoo! Travel frequent sightings of the ghost of a young boy in the north tower whose mother threw him off the roof before taking her own life and jumping, a female ghost in the banquet room who whispers in the ears of anyone when enters alone, and the shadowy outline of a woman in room number 441, where security is called more than any other room in the hotel. (credit:Rob Pongsajapan)
Site of Fort Dearborn(07 of09)
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One of Chicago's highest death tolls took place before the city itself materialized, during the War of 1812 at Fort Dearborn. After being told to flee the fort as British forces advanced, retreating Americans were attacked by Potawatomi Indians loyal to the British, according to Creepy Chicago. Many were slain brutally with tomahawks and other hand-to-hand combat weapons--148 people total, including 12 children. Ghost-like figures reportedly appear frequently in photos taken in the area surrounding the fort's original site, which is marked with plaques along its perimeter in the Loop. Captain Wells, who lead the fort and survived the ambush, only to be killed later during a failed revenge attack, is the namesake of nearby Wells St. in Chicago. (credit:Matt Janicki)
Graceland Cemetery, Inez Clark Statue(08 of09)
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Graceland Cemetery on North Clark St. in Chicago is notable as the final resting place of many famous Chicago figures including John Kinzie, Marshall Field and George Pullman, as the historic site of the city's oldest crematorium, built in 1893, and for the ominous "Eternal Silence" monument perched on the tombstone of Dexter Graves, according to the cemetery's website. But it is possibly most famous for the statue of a six-year-old girl who was killed by a lightening bolt in 1880, named Inez Clarke. Chicago Now reports that the girl's parents commissioned a statue in her likeness that was placed on her grave, with a glass box around it to protect it from the elements. But many cemetery employees and visitors have reported finding the box empty, or seeing the girl move about, especially during thunderstorms. (credit:Richie Diesterheft)
Death Alley(09 of09)
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The alley behind the current Oriental Theater is said to be rife with ghosts from a fire at the site, then called the Iroquois Theater, on Dec. 30, 1903. Packed with nearly 2,000 people, the theater, advertised as "absolutely fireproof" despite tremendous violations of safety codes including emergency doors that were locked, became a virtual flame-filled death trap after faulty wiring ignited the building. In the ensuing panic, many were killed by flames, asphyxiation or trampling, trapping many patrons inside the building. In all, 602 people, including 212 children, were killed, according to Weird Chicago. It took police and fire crews nearly five hours to recover bodies from the building, and many were stacked in the alley, waiting to be transported and identified. Faint cries, cold spots and the touch of unseen hands are frequently reported in the rarely-used alley. (credit:Jim Reynolds)