Haunted Places in New Boston, Michigan

    Haunted Places in New Boston, Michigan

    1 haunted location

    MichiganNew Boston
    Waltz Inn – hotel

    Waltz Inn

    ·0 reviews
    New Boston, Michigan·hotel

    At the intersection of Waltz Road and Mineral Springs Road in the unincorporated community of Waltz, Michigan—about twenty-five miles southwest of Detroit in Huron Charter Township—a modest two-story building has stood since the early 1900s, carrying within its walls more than a century of small-town history and a haunting story rooted in love, loss, and an owner who apparently never left. The Waltz Inn began its life not as a restaurant but as a German bier garten and hall, established by Joseph Waltz Jr., the man for whom the surrounding community is named. The elder Joseph Waltz had moved his family from Detroit to a 160-acre plot of farmland along Territorial Road in 1857, settling what would become one of Wayne County's quieter rural communities. When he died in 1865, the land passed to his widow and eventually to his son, who platted the area in 1872 and became a prominent local figure, serving as Huron Township Clerk and Supervisor, Wayne County Superintendent of the Poor, and a Michigan State Representative. Joseph Jr. operated a general store on Territorial Road and opened the bier garten on Mineral Springs Avenue, establishing the building that would eventually become the Waltz Inn. Property records date the current structure to approximately 1912, and it has operated in various capacities—as an inn with upstairs lodging, a tavern, a gathering hall, and eventually a full restaurant—across the generations that followed. The building retains the sturdy, unpretentious character of early twentieth-century rural Michigan commercial architecture, with two rental apartments still occupying the upper floor above the restaurant space. The Waltz Inn's modern identity was shaped most directly by Tom Monastersky, who owned and operated the business until the early 1980s. Tom and his wife Olga lived upstairs in the building, running the inn as both their livelihood and their home. According to accounts preserved in the restaurant's own menu and passed down through subsequent owners, Olga died in the upstairs bedroom, and Tom followed her just two weeks later, passing away in the same room. The proximity of their deaths—two people who had shared the building as both home and business, dying within days of each other in the same space—forms the core of the haunting narrative that has followed the Waltz Inn ever since. The paranormal activity reportedly began shortly after the Monasterskys' deaths and has continued through every subsequent ownership. The current owners, who took over the restaurant in 1984, have acknowledged that strange occurrences are a regular part of life in the building. The most common reports involve classic poltergeist-style phenomena: objects moved from one location to another without explanation, doors opening on their own, furniture rearranged when no one has been upstairs, and lights turning on and off throughout the building at hours when the restaurant is closed and empty. Staff members over the years have described the activity as mischievous rather than menacing, as though someone were playing small pranks—nudging a glass, relocating a utensil, flipping a switch. The ghost is widely identified as Tom, still tending to the business he ran in life, unwilling or unable to leave the building where he and Olga spent their final years together. Some employees and visitors have reported the sense that the upper floor, particularly in the evening hours, carries a feeling of occupation—as if unseen guests were moving through the rooms above the dining area, footsteps and ambient sounds suggesting a building that is never quite as empty as it appears. The haunting at the Waltz Inn also exists within a broader neighborhood of reported paranormal activity. Roughly a block away on Waltz Road, a house that once stood on a lot next to the Waltz Feed Store was considered haunted by its former residents, who described being physically thrown, seeing shadowy figures in bedrooms, and encountering an apparition of a man outside on the street who vanished when looked at directly. That house eventually burned to the ground. Whether there is any genuine connection between the two locations or whether the proximity is coincidental remains a matter of speculation, but the clustering of claims in such a small community has added to the Waltz Inn's reputation as a paranormally active site. The Waltz Inn closed as a restaurant during the COVID-19 pandemic and has not reopened. As of 2025, the property is listed for sale, fully intact with its inventory, kitchen equipment, and carryout liquor license. The building's roof was replaced in 2024. The two upstairs apartments—including the bedroom where Tom and Olga Monastersky died—continue to generate rental income. Whether a new owner will reopen the restaurant and inherit its resident ghost remains to be seen, but the building still stands at its quiet crossroads in Waltz, holding onto a history that stretches back to the German immigrants who settled this corner of Michigan and to the couple who loved the place enough, it seems, to never entirely leave it behind.

    Disembodied Voices
    Object Manipulations
    Shadow Figures
    Poltergeists
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