Beaumont Hotel in Beaumont, Kansas stands as a historic structure originally constructed in 1879 as a stagecoach stop during the era when horse-drawn transportation formed the primary means of long-distance travel across the American frontier. The building represents an important artifact of nineteenth-century commercial architecture, designed to provide hospitality to travelers transitioning through Kansas during the period of western expansion and settlement. Built to accommodate the rough practical demands of frontier travel, the hotel featured simple but sturdy construction intended to withstand the dust, weather, and wear associated with constant use by travelers, freight companies, and various transient populations. The architectural style reflects the pragmatic approach of frontier builders who prioritized functionality and durability over aesthetic elaboration. Throughout the late nineteenth and into the twentieth century, the hotel continued operating as a commercial establishment, adapting its services to changing transportation patterns and economic conditions. By the early twentieth century, the primary function evolved beyond simple traveler accommodation, and the building developed a different reputation and purpose within the local community.
During the early twentieth century, Beaumont Hotel developed a particular reputation as a sporting house, operating as an establishment associated with gambling, alcohol, and sexual services that thrived in frontier and near-frontier communities throughout the American West. These institutions, though often clandestine or semi-legal depending on local jurisdiction, became integral to frontier town economies and social life. The hotel's transition to such purposes meant it attracted a diverse clientele including miners, ranch workers, traveling salesmen, and others seeking entertainment and social interaction. Within this context of transient relationships, commercial intimacy, and high-stakes activities, a dramatic personal tragedy occurred that would permanently mark the hotel's spiritual and historical significance. A complicated romantic entanglement developed between a female worker associated with the establishment and a regular male customer named Zeke, a cowboy who frequently visited the hotel for companionship and entertainment. The relationship developed genuine emotional attachment, though its status as a paid arrangement meant its legitimacy and future remained uncertain. A jealous rival or perhaps the woman's husband, perceiving the relationship as a threat to his own claims or honor, murdered Zeke in a violent rage within the hotel. The death was sudden, violent, and unresolved in the emotional sense, leaving Zeke's spirit apparently unable to accept his transition from life to death.
Following the historical murder of Zeke the cowboy, reports of haunting phenomena at Beaumont Hotel emerged and accumulated over subsequent decades. The most persistent and widely witnessed paranormal manifestation involves the appearance of a transparent cowboy figure positioned at the top of the main staircase, a location that may have held significance during Zeke's lifetime or the moment of his death. Witnesses describe encountering the apparition during both day and night hours, though the figure typically vanishes before extended observation becomes possible. Staff members and guests reported experiencing unusual phenomena concentrated around early morning hours, particularly between 2 and 3 a.m., when clock radios and electronic devices throughout the hotel would activate spontaneously at precise times, suggesting intentional manipulation or signaling by a non-corporeal entity. In addition to electrical phenomena, guests and paranormal investigators documented the distinctive sound of spurs jangling in empty hallways and unoccupied rooms, suggesting the presence of a figure in authentic cowboy attire complete with period-appropriate equipment. Loud unexplained bangs echoed through the hotel at irregular intervals, with no identifiable source or cause, suggesting either aggressive emotional expression or attempts at communication. Disembodied voices emerged from empty spaces, sometimes calling out or expressing emotional states consistent with confusion, anger, or distress. Paranormal research groups, including the organization Old School Paranormal operating from Hays, Kansas, conducted investigations in the empty hotel and recorded clear evidence of disembodied voices responding to questions, providing names, and demonstrating awareness of investigators' presence and activities.
The paranormal phenomena at Beaumont Hotel have been consistently attributed to the spirit of Zeke, the cowboy whose violent death within the building apparently created sufficient emotional and spiritual trauma to prevent his successful transition to the afterlife. Researchers theorize that the violence of his death, the emotional intensity of the romantic entanglement that preceded it, and his apparent surprise at the lethal attack combined to create a consciousness trapped in the moment and location of his death. The concentration of phenomena at the top of the stairs suggests this location held particular significance, possibly as the site of the actual murder or the location of Zeke's final moments. The electrical phenomena occurring at specific times may represent attempts by Zeke's spirit to establish communication with the living world using the only mechanisms available to non-corporeal entities. The spurs and cowboy-related imagery confirm that Zeke retains identity awareness and connection to his professional and personal identity as a cowboy. Some paranormal researchers propose that Zeke seeks acknowledgment and justice for his murder, or alternatively seeks to warn others away from the dangerous passion that led to his demise. Beaumont Hotel remains an actively haunted location where documented paranormal activity continues to provide evidence of Zeke's persistent presence and his apparent determination to manifest his existence despite his transition into death.
Disembodied Voices
Unexplained Sounds