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Haunted St. James Hotel in
Cimarron, NM |
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The
St. James
Hotel is said to remain host to several restless
spirits. Both the owners and the guests of the hotel will tell
you that it is haunted with many unexplained events. Several psychics
have visited the hotel and specifically identified three
spirits, as well as many others who just pass through to relive their
experiences.
The second floor of the hotel is the most active, with stories of cold
spots and the smell of cigar smoke lingering in the halls (smoking is not
allowed in the hotel.) A prior manager said that "you never see
them, but you do feel and hear them." Another report from a
former owner, states that she walked into the dining room and saw a
pleasant-looking
cowboy
standing behind her in the mirror on the front of the bar. The
spiritual activity of the hotel has been featured on the popular
television shows Unsolved Mysteries and A Current Affair.
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St. James
Hotel, September, 2008, Kathy Weiser. |
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Room
18 at the hotel is kept locked because it houses the
ghost of an ill-tempered Thomas James Wright, who was killed at his
door just after winning the rights to the hotel in a
poker game. Having been shot from behind, Wright continued on into the room and slowly
bled to death.
Wright’s angry, malevolent ghost continues to haunt the room and he does
not like company. One former owner said she was
pushed down while in the room and, on another occasion, saw a ball of
angry orange light floating in the upper corner. The room
holds only a bed frame without a mattress, a coat rack, a rocking chair
and bureau which has been made a shrine to the
Old West.
Sitting atop the bureau is a Jack Daniels bottle, a basin and pitcher, a
hand of cards, an Ace Copenhagen tin, and several shot glasses. On the
wall is a bad painting of a half-naked woman.
This room is considered by the staff to be the most haunted and people are
rarely allowed to enter the room, much less sleep in it. Rumors
abound that when the room was rented, a number of mysterious deaths
occurred there.
Room
17 is the epicenter of sightings of Henry's second wife Mary Elizabeth,
who is said to remain at the hotel as a protector. Mary gave birth to her
children in the hotel and died there herself in December, 1926. Allegedly, Mary’s rose-scented perfume can often be smelled in her old
room. Sometimes, an insistent tapping is heard when the window is
open and will not stop until the window is closed. On other
occasions, a milky transparent woman can be seen in the hallways.
Another “dwarf-like” old man has also been seen at the hotel. Nicknamed the “Little Imp” by hotel staff, the spirit is said to be very
mischievous, constantly playing tricks and laughing at the staff. On
one occasion, he was said to have stuck a knife into the floor between two
owners of the old inn. Most often, however, he is blamed for objects
that mysteriously disappear, only to be found later in locations that they
absolutely don’t belong.
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Old registers in the historic
St. James
Hotel reflect the
many historic characters who once stayed
there,
September, 2008, Kathy Weiser. |
Other, unknown entities are also said to roam the hotel, creating a host
of paranormal activities. Staff report that items constantly fall
off walls and shelves and electrical equipment at the front desk behaves
unpredictably. Others have reported cold spots throughout the
historic inn, lights that seemingly turn on by themselves, feelings of
being watched by unseen eyes, and cameras that
cease to work inside the hotel,
strangely return to normal after leaving the
St. James.
Kody Mutz, a college student, who has worked summers at the hotel,
reported that in 2002, as he was working at the front desk, he heard a
high pitched shriek coming from the far corner of the lobby.
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Looking up abruptly from his work, he was dumbfounded to see absolutely no
one on that side of the room. Quickly looking around, his eyes rested on
three other quests mingling at the other side of the lobby, apparently
having not heard the loud scream, they were completely unphased.
The hotel is open year around, with 13
historic rooms, named for the famous and infamous people who once stayed
there. An annex was also added to the hotel that houses an
additional 10 rooms. The hotel retains its historic ambiance with antique
chandeliers, velvet drapes, thick carpets covering its old wooden floors,
brocade wallpapering, and many of the original furnishings of the hotel.
There are no phones, radios, or televisions
in the 14 rooms of the main hotel; however, the 10 room annex has all the
amenities of a modern hotel. The old
saloon, which is now used as the hotel's dining room, still holds the
original antique bar, as well as twenty-two bullet holes in the
pressed-tin ceiling. In the hallway of the hotel is a plaque that
commemorates
Clay Allison and the roster of 19 men he was said to have killed, as
well as photographs of the many famous guests that have stayed at the
historic inn. Also in the hallway is the original headstone of
Parson Franklin J. Tolby, the beloved minister of
Cimarron,
who was killed during the Colfax County War.
Checking into this historic place will make
you feel as if you have stepped back in time, as mounted deer and
buffalo
stare down at you from the lobby walls, you view the old hotel ledgers
signed by the its many famous guests, and imagine the sound of tinny music
coming from the antique piano in the corner. Perhaps you too, will be
lucky or unlucky enough, depending upon your point of view, to run into
one of the hotel’s many unearthly guests.
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, updated January, 2009
See Reader's
Stories Next Page
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Contact Information:
St. James Hotel
Route 1 (Hwy 21) , Box 2,
Cimarron,
New Mexico
87714
505-376-2664
866-472-5019
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Also See:
Cimarron - Wild & Baudy Boomtown
Cimarron Photo Gallery
The Largest
Land Grant in History
Santa Fe
Trail - Highway to the Southwest
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Vintage
Magazines -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Vintage Magazines, including True West, Frontier Times,
Treasure and more for our
Old West
and Treasure
Hunting enthusiasts. For most of these, we have only one
available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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