Classifieds  Autos  Jobs  Homes  Ad Search  Yellow Pages
RockyMountainNews.com
 HOME NEWS SPORTS BUSINESS ENTERTAINMENT RECREATION LIFESTYLES OPINION
 
Untitled-1

Craft, food and party tips
Put the boo back in Halloween with these decorating and party tips from Home and Garden television.
 Making Halloween memories »
 Costume ideas »
 Craft ideas »
 Autumn night's dream »
 Jack-o'-lantern village »
 Cooking with pumpkins »
 Craft centerpiece »
 Making scarecrows »

 
Below you'll find some of Colorado's most haunted habitats. Tours include video and 360° virtual reality photography.

The Croke-Patterson Mansion
At the Croke-Patterson Mansion, legend recounts tales of suicidal guard dogs, grieving mothers, swinging parties that crash the house one moment and fall silent the next. Secret chambers supposedly entombed the body of a girl, while unexplanable drafts emanate from the castle's depths.
Take the tour »

The Denver Press Club
Few members have escaped the ghosts at the Denver Press Club, ranging from a friendly spirit who visits the neighboring Colorado Press Association building to the eerie presence in the dingy boiler room.
Take the tour »

The Molly Brown House
Benevolent spirits roam the plush interiors of the Molly Brown House. No more than slightly mischevious poltergeists, these alleged ghosts will flicker lights off and on, appear mysteriously in photographs and patrol the hallways.
Take the tour »
The Stanley Hotel
Most famous for the home of Stephen King's The Shining, the Stanley Hotel boasts the most ghosts. From the watchful presence of former residents to the eerie presence of sudden piano music, this mountain getaway can make the hair of the back of your neck tingle.
Take the tour »
The Brown Palace
Unseen but cheerfully voiced children gallop along the hallways of one of Denver's most noted hotels. But the deeper you brave into the building's depths, the meaner the ghouls get.
Take the tour »


The Sugar Building

Ghostly orbs float through the sprawling corridors of this historic office building at the west end of 16th St. Evidence of the building's previous inhabitants can be seen scrawled on the walls. The elevators are particularly eerie.
Take the tour »

Advertisement
Advertisement
SITE SERVICES
PARTNERS
SERVICES
PROGRAMS