Thursday, June 25, 2026

Ghost-hunting at 1886 Crescent, America’s most haunted hotel

October 30, 2015 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

Comments Off

What is it? A palatial hotel built in 1886, the Crescent is recognised by the National Trust for Historic Preservation as one of the United States’ Dozen Distinctive Destinations. More commonly, it is known as America’s most haunted hotel.

SEE ALSO: Cambodian Pchum Ben festival is a time to feed hungry ghosts

Wait. Where is this place? In Eureka Springs, a small Victorian town in the state of Arkansas, which is known for the Ozark Mountains, caves, hot springs and being the home of Wal-Mart and former American president Bill Clinton. The University of Arkansas’ sports team is named after razorback hogs; this is not New York.

So, is this hotel really scary? Scary enough to justify a two-hour ghost tour of the premises. The tour covers at least seven ghosts apparently seen regularly by visitors, ranging from a little girl who pokes guests in the stomach to nurses pushing dead patients on gurneys down hallways. In 2005, prominent ghost hunters captured what appeared to be a ghostly human image on camera in what was once the morgue. At least once a month a guest will spend the night in the lobby (below), choosing to endure bright lights, uncomfortable Victorian sofas, loud swing music and the piercing yellow eyes of two hotel cats rather than the solitude of their dark room.

Nurses? A morgue? What kind of hotel is this? Although built as a hotel, the Crescent fell on hard times during the Great Depression. In 1937, Norman Baker, a quack, turned the building into a “cancer curing” hospital. He eschewed painkillers and concocted “cures” from watermelon seeds and cornsilk. The ghost tour features a séance in Baker’s morgue and a visit to the “parts room”, where the dubious doc saved human remains in jars of formaldehyde. For obvious reasons, many unhappy ghosts date from the “cancer curing” period.

Hmm. What are the rooms like? Quite pleasant, with Victorian wallpaper and headboards, and modern plumbing and mattresses. Options range from the basic king room (right) to the governor’s suite, which features two king bedrooms, wet bar, tub with jacuzzi jets and a balcony. Luxury Craftsman-style cottages are set apart in woodlands surrounded by walking trails.

I don’t believe in ghosts. Which rooms will convince me otherwise? The most haunted spots are rooms 218, 419 and 3500. Guests in the latter report glimpsing a lady in Victorian lingerie. Nurse Theodora haunts room 419, packing up the suitcases of guests she dislikes. Room 218 is the most notorious. Michael, an Irish stonemason who fell to his death during the hotel’s construction, harasses female guests by grabbing their bottoms or climbing on top of them in bed.

What’s there to do besides chase ghosts? The Crescent offers on-site activities that include yoga, watercolour painting classes, historical tours, afternoon socials and a scavenger hunt for children. The hotel’s New Moon Spa occupies a whole floor of the building.

Ghosts don’t eat, so is the food any good? The Crystal Dining Room is best known for its steaks, fish and pork chops with wine pairings. The champagne Sunday brunch draws locals as well as hotel guests for a huge smorgasbord overseen by black-tie waiting staff. Casual and late-night diners devour gourmet pizzas and calzones while admiring a panoramic view of the Ozarks from the fourth-floor Sky Bar. Yes, fourth floor; again, not New York.

What happens in town? The population of Eureka Springs numbers just over 2,000, about half of whom are artists. Galleries line the town’s winding streets. Expect to see brides, as Eureka Springs is known as the wedding capital of the south. Just outside town, religious tourists flock to the Great Passion Play theme park. This Christian spectacle features a camel and chariot caravan and a Jesus ascending into the sky.

How much will the Crescent set me back? During off-season – January to March – you can get the Governor’s Suite for as little as US$242 a night. Most rooms and suites range from US$200 to US$388 in-season, with cottages costing a little bit more. For more information, visit www.crescent-hotel.com.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

Making Sense of Medicine: Life after breast cancer

October 30, 2015 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

Comments Off

Posted: Friday, October 30, 2015 3:00 am

Making Sense of Medicine: Life after breast cancer

Making Sense of Medicine Bob Keller

The Daily News of Newburyport

If you are a woman, then it’s likely that you know more about breast cancer than I do. Still, as we near the end of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, I offer some thoughts that may not be familiar. For example, you may not know that every year, there are some thousands of men who are diagnosed with breast cancer.

If you have survived breast cancer, which almost 99 percent of early stage patients do, then you have been through the gut-level fear that comes with the initial diagnosis, possibly through the last hope that it will go away without surgery, through the post-surgical feelings of having been assaulted and brutalized, and through the often-repeated nightmares of chemotherapy and radiation therapy. You have still the low-level fear that it could recur or could become ovarian, and in some way, you feel less a woman.

And while harboring a hope that there will be a return to normalcy, you know that there is no return, only the inevitable encounter with a strange new normal. What is life after breast cancer? It is beyond my experience to talk credibly about this, and so I relate a couple of stories of women who have lived into an even better future.

While different in detail, these and other stories have some commonality: Cancer is a wake-up call, a time to re-vision one’s life choices, a time of transformation and a time to explore new worlds. Some leave long-term stressful jobs or relationships, and others choose to pursue lives they’ve dreamed of for years but been too fearful and insecure to seek. In all cases, this brush with death seems to engender a kind of fearlessness in choosing newness. And, it helps to be loved.

One doctor put it this way to a woman who stayed in the hospital weeping and moaning for two weeks after her surgery: “You can do one of two things. You can sit here and cry and moan, or you can take back your life and be strong and positive.” These women chose the latter.

Debbie

Single mother Debbie Murphy, 39, had her second mastectomy (breast removal) a year and a half ago, and she is now nearing the end of her post-surgical treatment. Feeling low and unattractive and unloved, as is typical in her situation, she sought something, anything, to feel better about herself.

One day, she was inspired to enter Lorna Drew’s “Everyday Superwoman” competition, and she won. Never before considering posing in underwear, Murphy will be the face of Lorna Drew’s 2016 catalog of mastectomy lingerie. How did she screw up the courage to do this?

Her 3-year-old son “inspired me to enter the competition because when I had to shave my hair, he stroked my head and said, ‘You’re beautiful,’” she told Wales Online.

“Hearing your child say you are beautiful with a bald head and no breasts has reinforced that our bodies do not define us as people,” she said. “I wanted to feel feminine and be able to wear clothes that show my figure. I wanted to be able to wear a young person’s matching underwear set.”

Rebecca

At 35, a perfectionist with a fear of flying, Rebecca Loncraine had finished her doctorate in English literature, as well as writing a biography of L. Frank Baum, author of “The Wizard of Oz.” A settled, organized life was on its way for her.

Then the lumps appeared, and she underwent a grueling year of treatment — chemotherapy, surgery, radiation and CT scans that showed no spread of the breast cancer. She wasn’t sure she could write again, as her illness had rendered her almost speechless: “For the past year, I’d been unable to talk about what was happening, I couldn’t even cry sometimes,” she told The Telegraph in the U.K. “I had no idea what to do next.”

What happened next was a chance walk past the Black Mountains Gliding Club in Wales.

“I needed something new, something big and intense,” she said. “I wanted to live boldly, as it might not be for very long.”

What she did was take her first glider-flying lesson, which was so freeing, so exhilarating that she went back for more lessons.

Now 38, Loncraine lives in a converted chapel nestled in the Black Mountains. In the morning, she looks out to see if there’s enough blue sky or cotton-wool cumulus clouds. If so, she’ll spend the day in joy, soaring over the Brecon Beacons in a glider.

If the weather’s not so good, she’ll spend the day inside working on her book about flying or an upcoming talk.

An artistic approach

Looks may not be everything, but for women with reconstructed breasts, it can mean a lot. The one thing that breast reconstruction has never been good at is restoring the natural look of the nipple and areola, the colored area around the nipple. Vinnie Myers is changing that.

Myers is a tattoo artist with offices in Finksburg, Maryland, and New Orleans, Louisiana, who is internationally known for his ability to ink realistic designs. He is now also a legend in breast cancer circles for what has become his specialty: inking areolas and nipples so realistic that they seem like the real thing.

Surviving survivorship

Oncologist and breast cancer survivor Dr. Elizabeth Lynn Meyering advises her patients this way: Stay active with physical exercise, eat healthy — eliminate processed and sugary foods — and sleep naturally.

And, as important, reinvent yourself, have a goal, do things you’ve always dreamed of doing.

Finally, she reminds her patients that they are not defined by their cancer. They are the same people they were before, but with a chance to start a new chapter of their lives.

What Meyering doesn’t mention is that survivors who meet regularly with a support group are more likely to have a successful life after breast cancer. 

¢¢¢

Bob Keller maintains a holistic practice in Newburyport. He offers medical massage therapy for pain relief and advice on muscular balance and diet, as well as psychological counseling, dream work and spiritual direction. He can be reached at 978-465-5111 or bob@myokineast.com.


We have sent a confirmation email to {* emailAddressData *}. Please check your email and click on the link to activate your account.

We’ve sent an email with instructions to create a new password. Your existing password has not been changed.


on

Friday, October 30, 2015 3:00 am.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS