Ramada Inn – Holiday Inn Six Flags
The Ramada Inn at Holiday Inn Six Flags in Eureka, Missouri, occupies a location with roots extending back to the nineteenth-century frontier and settlement history of the region, though the current structure dates to the mid-twentieth century when hotel development in the vicinity of major recreational attractions became economically significant. The property's proximity to the Six Flags amusement park, a major regional entertainment destination, made it an attractive location for hospitality development, with the hotel designed to serve visitors and guests attending the theme park. Like many hotels developed in proximity to major attractions, the establishment functioned as part of the broader infrastructure of tourism and entertainment that characterizes modern American leisure culture. The building itself represents the modernist aesthetics and construction practices of mid-twentieth-century hospitality design, with multiple floors of guest rooms, common areas, dining facilities, and recreational amenities intended to provide comfortable accommodation.
The hotel facilities included standard amenities characteristic of mid-twentieth-century hospitality establishments, including a swimming pool serving as both recreational facility and symbol of luxury and leisure. The pool area functioned as a gathering space where guests, particularly families traveling with children, could enjoy water-based recreation and social interaction. The hallways of the hotel facilitated movement between guest rooms and common areas, creating spaces where hotel guests encountered one another during their stays. The front desk served as the point of initial contact and ongoing interaction between guests and hotel staff, managing registrations, responding to requests, and maintaining the operations of the establishment. Banquet halls provided spaces for meetings, events, and group gatherings, allowing the hotel to serve functions beyond simple guest accommodation.
The history preceding the hotel's construction is interwoven with the longer history of settlement and development in the Eureka area. The specific historical events and tragedies that may have occurred on the property or in its vicinity remain partially obscured by time, though the paranormal phenomena documented at the location suggest significant loss or trauma occurred at or near the site. The property's association with a tragedy occurring in the nineteenth century, reportedly involving a young girl named Aggie who fell from a barn window, suggests that the location carries historical weight extending beyond the twentieth-century hotel construction. The barn and the fatal accident appear to predate the hotel's construction, though the proximity or direct relationship between the original tragedy and the hotel's location remains ambiguous.
The story of Aggie, the young girl who fell from a barn window during the nineteenth century, appears to be the primary historical foundation for the most significant paranormal phenomena documented at the hotel. The circumstances of Aggie's death, while tragic, do not appear to have released her spirit, leaving her bound to the location where her life was ended. Following the hotel's construction on or near the location where Aggie's tragedy occurred, witnesses began reporting encounters with her spirit moving through the hallways, particularly demonstrating vigorous and playful activity consistent with the energy and movement of a young child.
Paranormal investigators and hotel guests have documented substantial evidence of Aggie's presence and activity throughout the hotel. Reports consistently describe a young girl running through the hallways, her footsteps and movements audible to witnesses and creating disturbances in the physical environment. The apparition has been described by multiple witnesses, providing consistent accounts of a young girl whose appearance and behavior suggest a spirit trapped in childhood, unable to mature or progress beyond the moment of her fatal accident. The hallways of the hotel, particularly on the second floor, have become the primary location of Aggie's documented activity, suggesting that certain areas of the building hold particular significance for her presence.
Additional paranormal phenomena have been documented at the hotel, including the inexplicable sound of horses on the second floor at 1 a.m., phenomena whose origins and connection to the property's history remain unclear. A young woman in period dress has been reported floating over the pool area, her apparition appearing in daylight hours and creating visual phenomena documented by multiple witnesses. The woman's clothing and appearance suggest a spirit from an earlier historical era, possibly contemporary with or predating Aggie's death. The presence of this additional spirit, distinct from Aggie, suggests that the location may hold significance in the histories and deaths of multiple individuals across different time periods.
The Ramada Inn has transitioned through various hotel chains and operators across its operational years, though the paranormal phenomena appear to persist regardless of management changes. The consistent documentation of Aggie's presence, combined with the reports of additional spirits inhabiting the property, have established the Ramada Inn near Six Flags as a location of significant paranormal activity and a destination for paranormal research and investigation.
Apparitions
Disembodied Voices
Full-Body Apparitions
Unexplained Sounds