Monday, August 12, 2013

August's SPIRITS with SPIRITS


GHOULA meets for cocktails in haunted places on the 13th of each month. “SPIRITS with SPIRITS” is a casual social gathering of regional ghost hunters and those that just like ghost stories. Open to all, from the curious skeptic to the passionate phantom pursuer. Make friends, and toast a ghost! Let's put the “Boo!” back into “booze.”

All those who attend will receive a free (square) G.H.O.U.L.A. button. If you already have one, please wear it so others can find you, without asking the staff about our group.

THE DATE: August 13th, 2013 (Tuesday)
THE PLACE: The Hollywood Bowl
2301 N Highland Ave, Los Angeles (Map)
THE TIME: 8:00pm to the witching hour

"Playful ghosts have interrupted our tour"
-Haunted Mansion, Disneyland

NOTICE:
GHOULA is doing something a little different this month (we just couldn't resist this unique opportunity). We have wanted to do a SPIRITS with SPIRITS at the Hollywood Bowl for years, but since it would be hard to coordinate a meet-up there (parking, seating, tickets, etc.), everyone will be on their own for this 13th. So, if you want to go to one of the great outdoor venues in the world and enjoy an evening of death-themed classical music, bring a bottle of wine (preferably from one of California's haunted vineyards), and go to the Bowl on Tuesday to see Verdi's Requiem. (the same spooky show will repeat on Thursday). Otherwise we will see you all next month on a special Friday the 13th edition of SPIRITS with SPIRITS.

THE GHOSTS:

Despite Hollywood's elite shelling out big dough to sit up front near the "shell," GHOULA believes the best seats at the Hollywood Bowl are the ones at the far back, and as high up as you can go (sections V, W, and X). The reasons for this are many. The seats are cheaper. The atmosphere is more casual and laid back. The sound is said to be better given the natural acoustics of the sloping terrain (the reason the Bowl is there). The view of the Hollywood sign and the city is great (which can't be seen from the expensive seats). But, the best reason of all is the "nose-bleed" seats are said to be haunted...

It has been said that late at night, after the concerts, and after the patrons have left, staff members (clean-up crews or security) will see a man sitting alone on a bench at the far end of the Bowl, and naturally according to the tale... when that staff member makes the trek up there to tell the person to go home, the man vanishes into thin air.

Who this spirit is, and why he haunts the top of the hill is a mystery. But what makes him interesting is the possibility that this male apparition may be connected to the Hollywood Bowl's greatest mystery... The Curse of the Cahuenga Pass.

Back in the days before "Hollywood," when the area was just known as the "Cactus Patch," a poor Mexican sheepherder buried a cache of stolen gold and jewelry in the Cahuenga Pass. The only reference points to the location of this hidden treasure is that it was up a hill above a tavern (roughly located where Highland Ave meets the 101), and it was buried in six hole all equidistant from a "Fresno Tree" (also known a Western Ash Tree).

The circumstances behind how this traveling peasant was in the possession of this great wealth is a long and complicated story, and the details can be read about elsewhere on the Internet, or in historian Horace Bell's "On the Old West Coast." However, simply put, the gold and jewelry were stolen from churches in Mexico during military campaigns, and then went through a series of hands (all of whom died under mysterious circumstances) until it was buried in the Cahuenga Pass. It is said that all those that either seek or handle these riches meet an untimely end. The lonely sheepherder, himself, revealed what little info we have on his death bed. Since then, a few others have searched for this treasure, and have met tragic fates before they could enjoy the spoils.

The most colorful legend connected to the curse is that a Basque farmer accidentally discovered one of the packages of gold, and split town. Fearful that someone may rob him, he had secret pockets sewn into his clothes, that equally distributed the jewelry and gold coins all over his body. As he stood against the rail of a steamship as it approached Spain, he accidentally fell overboard, and because of the weight of all the booty in his suit, he sank like a rock and drowned.

Many believe the location of the buried treasure is where the Hollywood Bowl is today. Is it possible that the "X section" marks the spot? Could this male ghost at the top of the hill be one of the many victims of this legendary treasure?

Incidentally, this land was once owned by "Greek George," who is most famous for harboring the notorious bandit (and possible inspiration for "Zorro") Tiburco Vasquez when he was captured and hanged. Did Vasquez hide in this area as well as some believe? Could this site possibly be one of the many places supposedly where Vasquez hid his stolen gold? What are the chances that two famous lost treasures are buried under the Hollywood Bowl? Maybe the ghost is Vasquez?

Additionally, it has been said that on nights when the Bowl was empty, the noted (and notorious)actor John Barrymore, used the deserted seats as his secret drinking spot. His chronic alcoholism most likely led to his death in 1942. Could his ghost be the man seated alone?

So, come out to picnic and enjoy the music at the site once known as "Magic Valley," because of its strange acoustic quality that causes even whispers spoken dozens of yards away to seem as if they were disembodied voices whispering in your ear... If you dare.


(to read about last month's haunted location... )
(to see a map of previous SPIRITS with SPIRITS locations... )

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Highlights from July's SWS!


(The haunted underground garage.)

So, at July's "SPIRITS with SPIRITS," while enjoying one of the best views in Los Angeles, a waiter shared some additional stories. First of all, he confidentially mentioned that the Bonaventure actually has a high death count (in addition to the previously mentioned murder), including a man, who in attempt to win a radio contest, tried to jump across an opening to get to a radio station employee first, and instead fell five stories to his death in the lobby.

He also claimed that the elevators (all of them) seem to have minds of their own. Supposedly, sometimes the buttons light up by themselves without anyone pressing them. Additionally, the elevators have a tendency to mysteriously stop on the 19th floor. The elevator doors open, and no one is there. He also claimed that the elevator repair company has tried to solve this issue many times without success.

(to read about more ghosts at the Bonaventure Hotel... )

Thursday, July 11, 2013

July's SPIRITS with SPIRITS


GHOULA meets for cocktails in haunted places on the 13th of each month. “SPIRITS with SPIRITS” is a casual social gathering of regional ghost hunters and those that just like ghost stories. Open to all, from the curious skeptic to the passionate phantom pursuer. Make friends, and toast a ghost! Let's put the “Boo!” back into “booze.”

All those who attend will receive a free (square) G.H.O.U.L.A. button. If you already have one, please wear it so others can find you, without asking the staff about our group. (i.e. LOOK FOR SOMEONE WITH A GHOULA BUTTON)

THE DATE: July 13th, 2013(Saturday)
THE PLACE: The Bona Vista Lounge (34th floor of the Bonaventure Hotel)
404 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles (Downtown) (Map)
THE TIME: 8:00pm

THE GHOSTS:

Local architectural critic, Edward W. Soja described the post-modern design of the Bonaventure Hotel as "a concentrated representation of the restructured spatiality of the late capitalist city: fragmented and fragmenting, homogeneous and homogenizing, divertingly packaged yet curiously incomprehensible, seemingly open in presenting itself to view but constantly pressing to enclose, to compartmentalize, to circumscribe, to incarcerate." Or, as another local architectural critic, Charles Moore, put it more simply "The place is as frustrating as a Piranesi prison drawing."

It's easy to get lost in this 1970's futuristic downtown landmark with so many identical areas and repeating patterns. The only way out appears to be through the ceiling via the glass elevators. Yes, the elevators are the star attraction of this building (check out the plaques at each identical elevator listing their movie appearances). Some say they were inspired by the (spirit-designed) open-air elevator shafts of the Bradbury Building a couple of blocks away. For others, breaking through the glass ceiling brings to mind the "Wonkavator" from "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory." Their ability to travel along the exterior skin of the hotel (past the windows to the suites) also earned them an entry into the book "L.A. Bizarro" as "L.A.'s Premier Moving Peep Show." We, at GHOULA, prefer to think of these elevators as a metaphor for the ascent to heaven, after one dies. Even the 80's TV show, "It's a Living," (set in the bar on the roof) eludes to life and death in its title.

Speaking of dying and/or being trapped in brutalist prison-like architecture. The Bonaventure Hotel is home to at least one trapped spirit... in the underground parking garage.

Given that Southern California is the car-culture capital of the world, one would think that parking garage ghosts would be more common, and yet this is the only one we have heard about. There is a haunted parking lot a couple of blocks away on Main Street, but this oddly seems to be the only haunted garage. Although, the "darkness" in this dimly-lit space has been attributed to grisly murders that occurred on the 24th floor in 1979, involving bodies being chopped into pieces with a meat cleaver, there is another possible explanation for the Bonaventure's underground ghost...

The hotel sits on top of Los Angeles' original subway route, a portion of a Pacific Electric "Red Car" line that went underground. During the hotel's construction, the old subway tunnel was caved-in to build the foundation (and parking garage). However, a section of that original tunnel still exists, starting from the Subway Terminal Building (417 South Hill Street) and ending at the Bonaventure. Hidden from the public, this tunnel can be accessed from the Terminal Building and from the nearby Biltmore Hotel. Those that have entered this forgotten corridor have claimed to have seen a little red-hared girl, maybe 7 years old. No one knows her identity or why she wanders these tracks. According to local lore, those that have seen this little girl are so frightened by the sight that they mark the spot where they saw her (with a spray-painted cross) to warn others. Supposedly, this otherwise empty tunnel is filled with painted crosses, lining the walls.

Could the "presence" that frightens garage attendants be the ghost of this frustrated redhead, forever sealed into that abandoned tunnel, her own underground tomb?

Come out to LA's largest hotel (over 1300 rooms), and drink a toast to LA's scariest readhead... if you dare.

(for more info about this ghost, check out "Gourmet Ghosts" by James Bartlett...)

(to read about more ghosts of this bar... )
(to read about last month's haunted location... )
(to see a map of previous SPIRITS with SPIRITS locations... )

(to see more photos of the old subway... http://io9.com/5912316/shadowy-scenes-from-the-abandoned-los-angeles-subway-system)