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'Ghost Hunters?' Meet Detroit's haunted spots

Did you ever think that Detroit's Whitney restaurant was haunted? Yeah, us too.

The Whitney restaurant. The mansion built by David Whitney in the late 1800's is said to have spirits lingering around. photo taken Monday, October21,2013. Jessica J. Trevino/Detroit Free Press (Photo: Jessica J. trevino)

Did you ever think that Detroit's Whitney restaurant was haunted? Yeah, us too.

So who you gonna call? The SyFy channel.

"Ghost Hunters," which airs on SyFy, will feature the Whitney in an upcoming episode titled “Phantom for the First Course.” The episode airs Wednesday, and the restaurant will host a Ghost Hunters Viewing Party that evening from 6:30-10 p.m. Tickets are $75 per person, which includes a three-course dinner and outdoor theater-style seating with the show starting 9 p.m. Taxes and gratuity are not included; special drink prices will be offered.

For those who are into eerie dining, here are a few details about the storied Whitney, and more examples of Michigan's spirited dining. This text ran in the Free Press several years ago, some of the names may have changed, but the spooky factor lives on.

The Whitney

Built for lumber baron David Whitney Jr. between 1890 and 1894, the legendary mansion is said to be haunted by Whitney and his first wife, Flora.

According to psychic-medium Kristy Robinett, Flora always wanted to live in a mansion but died before the home was finished, leaving Whitney to raise their four children. A year after Flora's death, Whitney married her sister Sara.

"So it's actually Flora that haunts the mansion because her sister Sara was the one that got to live in the mansion," Robinett says.

But, Robinett says, Whitney's spirit is also there because he died in the mansion. "The story is he had a heart attack when one of the daughters told him she was marrying and moving to Europe."

The Whitney's grand exterior and interior is one of great opulence, but it also feeds into its eeriness. Within the castle-like mansion's 21,000 square feet are 218 windows, 20 fireplaces and an elevator - that has been known to operate on its own.

David Duey, the Whitney's director of operations, has witnessed the elevator traveling between floors and the doors open and close with no visible riders. "This has been caught on security cameras at night when there is no one in the building," he says.

(4421 Woodward Ave., Detroit; 313-832-5700; thewhitney.com)

The Holly Hotel

Sounds of a child's footsteps, glasses falling off shelves and disembodied voices. These are just a few of the eerie occurrences reported at the historic Holly Hotel, which is believed to be haunted by three main ghosts.

One is the ghost of John Hirst, the original owner who built the hotel in 1891. "With him you will get apparitions," says general manager Tricia Antrobius, 31, of Holly. Sometimes, she says, there'll be "a very strong hint of cigar smoke throughout the restaurant as Hirst was a heavy cigar smoker."

Then there's the lady of the house, Nora Kane, who Antrobius says lived at the hotel and was the hostess.

"We have guests send us pictures all the time showing a pale-face woman in a dark dress with dark hair" who appears to be the ghost of Kane, says Antrobius. Kane is often seen on the hotel's second floor, Antrobius says, and people say they get a hint of perfume or floral scent before they see her.

The third resident spirit is said to be that of a little girl who was trampled by a horse at the stable next door in the early 1900s. Antrobius says no one knows her name but that rescuers brought the girl to the hotel in an unsuccessful attempt to save her. It was there that she died. Some suspect the girl may have been Kane's daughter because a photo of Kane in a black mourning dress hangs in the hotel foyer.

(110 Battle Alley, Holly; 248-634-5208; hollyhotel.com)

The Mission Table and the Jolly Pumpkin

(formerly the Bowers Harbor Inn)

Originally built in the 1880s, the inn was a summer retreat for Chicago lumber baron J.W. Stickney and his wife, Genevive. It's located on West Grand Traverse Bay on the Old Mission Peninsula.

"They believe it's Genevive that haunts the inn and you can see her face in the mirror," says Robinett, who has been to the inn several times.

The story is a scandalous one that surrounds Genevive, a jealous woman who struggled with her weight. Stickney had an elevator installed to help her get around and he hired a nurse to care for her. When Stickney began an affair with the nurse, Genevive became jealous and fearful that her husband would leave his money to the mistress. And, that he did, leaving the fortune to the nurse and only the inn to Genevive.

"Some believe the situation drove Mrs. Stickney into severe depression that eventually led her to hang herself from the rafters of the elevator shaft," according to the restaurant's website.

There are reports of the elevator moving on its own, lights turning on suddenly and people spotting Genevive's face in a mirror.

(13512 Peninsula Drive, Traverse City; 231-223-4222; missiontable.net)

The Grill House

Built in 1836 as a stagecoach stop, the Grill House also was used as a sawmill, says owner Marcia Wagner.

And it's here that a man they've named Jack haunts the house. Legend has it that Jack was killed in a barroom brawl in 1847 in one of the front dining rooms.

"He's buried somewhere on the property without a tombstone," Wagner says.

Through her research, Wagner found that at that time many lumberjacks were drifters.

"So when Jack was killed, no one investigated who he was," Wagner said. "He was a drifter and just buried."

The Wagners have owned the restaurant for 15 years and Marcia says she has seen Jack twice. She describes him as being about 6 feet, 2 inches tall with dark hair and wearing dark pants. "Both times that I've seen him it's in the dining room next to the one he was killed in," Wagner says. "I can hear him walk around on the wooden floors."

Jack also is famous for turning on water faucets and lights. And, according to the Grill House website, "on rare occasions, a single shot of whiskey, Jack's drink of choice, will even be found sitting on the Rock Bottom bar, acting as a haunting reminder of our supernatural companion."

(1071 Thirty-Second St., Allegan; 269-686-9192; grillhouse.net)

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