Museum of Colorado Prisons
Cañon City, Colorado·museum The Museum of Colorado Prisons occupies the historic Canon City Penitentiary facility in Canon City, Colorado, a former correctional institution that operated as an active prison for many decades before being repurposed as a museum and historical attraction designed to educate visitors regarding the history of incarceration and the operation of the American penal system. The penitentiary was constructed during the nineteenth century and served as a significant correctional facility throughout its operational history, housing individuals convicted of serious crimes and sentenced to extended periods of incarceration, sometimes including sentences of life imprisonment or death sentences requiring execution within the facility's walls. The building's architecture reflects design principles specific to correctional facilities of its era, featuring secure construction, limited points of entry and exit, cell blocks configured to facilitate surveillance and control of the imprisoned population, and administrative and utility spaces organized to support the complex logistics of operating a large custodial institution. The physical plant of the facility remains largely intact despite decades of dormancy and the transition from active correctional use to museum operation, preserving the spatial configurations, architectural features, and material conditions that characterized the facility during its period of active use as a prison. The decision to preserve the facility as a museum rather than demolish it reflects recognition of the building's historical significance and its value as an educational resource for understanding American penal history and the conditions of incarceration that characterized correctional facilities of the historical period in which the penitentiary operated.
The paranormal phenomena occurring at the Museum of Colorado Prisons represent some of the most dramatic, intense, and physically alarming manifestations documented at any haunted location, phenomena that transcend the relatively passive visual or auditory manifestations characteristic of many haunted sites and instead involve active physical contact and aggressive interaction between the paranormal entities and living visitors to the location. The spirits believed to haunt the museum are characterized as extremely vocal and extremely physical in their manifestations, entities that possess both the awareness and the capacity to communicate with and directly physically affect living persons who visit the facility. The specific entities haunting the museum appear to include the spirits of multiple female prisoners who died during the facility's operational history, spirits whose presence and activity within the facility is documented through numerous accounts of paranormal manifestations and through reports from paranormal investigation teams who have conducted investigations at the location. One particularly active entity reportedly inhabits cell number nineteen in the facility's cell block, a spirit identified as a female inmate who occupied that cell during her incarceration and who appears to remain attached to the location of her imprisonment through some form of spiritual bondage or unresolved attachment to the location. The paranormal phenomena attributed to this entity and other female prisoner spirits include the painful and disturbing experience of visitors having their hair pulled by unseen forces, an aggressive form of physical contact that exceeds the boundaries of passive haunting and constitutes direct violent assault upon living persons. Additionally, visitors have reported experiences of being physically pushed or grabbed by invisible forces, phenomena that similarly represent active aggressive interaction rather than passive manifestation of spiritual presence.
Paranormal investigators conducting formal investigations at the facility have documented instances of orbs appearing in photographs, luminescent manifestations of energy that are frequently interpreted as photographic evidence of spiritual presence or consciousness. Additionally, paranormal investigations have captured audio recordings of disembodied voices, screaming sounds, and coughing noises that seem to emanate from empty cells and abandoned areas of the facility, sounds suggestive of profound physical distress and psychological anguish. The odor of tobacco smoke has been reported by multiple visitors and staff members in specific areas of the facility despite the prohibition of smoking and the absence of any apparent source for such olfactory phenomena, a sensory manifestation that suggests the presence of entities whose consciousness retains memories and behavioral patterns from their former lives. The cold spots that persist in specific areas of the facility represent another category of paranormal manifestation, localized areas of intense temperature reduction that appear spontaneously and vanish without apparent explanation. The Museum of Colorado Prisons has deliberately embraced its paranormal reputation by hosting paranormal investigation events that invite ghost hunters and paranormal enthusiasts to conduct investigations within the facility, an active engagement with the haunted reputation of the location that acknowledges the documented paranormal phenomena and provides an opportunity for serious paranormal researchers to investigate and attempt to understand the nature of the entities haunting the former correctional facility.
Cold Spots
Phantom Smells
Apparitions
Light Anomalies