Uptown Music and Video Store
La Junta, Colorado·church The Uptown Music and Video Store in La Junta, Colorado currently operates as a commercial establishment selling recorded music and motion pictures, yet the building's history and primary original purpose date to an earlier era of religious and community significance. The structure was originally constructed and operated as a Christian church, serving the spiritual needs of the La Junta community and hosting congregational worship, religious education, and community events throughout its early decades of operation. The church building reflected the nineteenth-century ecclesiastical architectural traditions common to rural American communities, with design elements emphasizing its sacred purpose and the spiritual aspirations of the congregation that gathered within its walls. The church occupied a prominent position within the community, both architecturally and spiritually, representing the congregation's collective faith and commitment to establishing religious institutions in frontier and post-frontier communities. Over the course of decades, changing patterns of community development, the establishment of competing religious institutions, and broader shifts in American religious practice led to the church's declining congregation and eventual cessation of religious services.
Despite the conversion of the building from sacred to secular use, the history of religious practice and the intense spiritual experiences that occurred within the structure during its decades of operation as a church appear to have created a paranormal presence that persists to the present day. Three distinct entities are identified in paranormal accounts describing manifestations at the location. The first is described as an enraged parishioner, a former church member whose emotional disturbance and apparent rage are manifested through intense paranormal activity that creates an atmosphere of tension and hostility within specific areas of the structure. The second entity is identified as a cleaning lady, presumably a woman employed by the church during its religious operation, whose manifestations suggest a commitment to maintaining and caring for the sacred space even after death and conversion to secular use. The third entity is described as a former proprietor, presumably a business owner from the building's period of commercial operation, suggesting that tragedy or unfinished business may have bound this individual to the location.
The paranormal phenomena documented at the Uptown Music and Video Store include both visual apparitions and other manifestations characteristic of haunted locations with complex histories. Visitors and staff have reported encountering the apparitions of individuals dressed in period clothing consistent with nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century fashion, appearing suddenly and vanishing when approached or engaged. These figures move through the structure as if unaware of their spectral nature, sometimes interacting with their surroundings as if they still perceive the building as fulfilling its original religious purpose. Disembodied voices have been heard throughout the building, with reports of prayers being recited, religious hymns being sung, and conversations in serious tones that lack any discernible speaker. Some visitors have reported emotional reactions to the presence of these entities, experiencing sudden waves of sadness, anger, or spiritual intensity without obvious cause.
The Uptown Music and Video Store continues to operate as a commercial establishment despite the documented paranormal activity occurring within its walls. The building's architectural features, including structural elements and design details characteristic of late nineteenth-century ecclesiastical construction, remain largely intact despite the commercial conversion, providing physical continuity between the structure's original religious purpose and its contemporary secular function. The paranormal phenomena appear to persist regardless of the building's changed use, suggesting that the spiritual and emotional intensity of religious practice created an imprint on the location that transcends the building's functional transformation. Some paranormal researchers have theorized that the conversion of a sacred space to secular commercial use may actually intensify paranormal phenomena, as spiritual entities experience distress or disorientation at the violation of the space's original sacred purpose.
Apparitions
Disembodied Voices