Stanwood Hotel and Saloon
Stanwood, Washington·hotel The Stanwood Hotel and Saloon represents one of the most historically significant and architecturally substantial surviving commercial buildings in Stanwood, Washington. Constructed in 1894 during the period when Stanwood was transitioning from a frontier logging settlement into an established small town with commercial infrastructure, the hotel building exemplifies the substantial construction and architectural ambitions of late-nineteenth-century commercial establishments. The structure reflects the Victorian architectural traditions that dominated American commercial and institutional design during that era, featuring the ornamental details, quality materials, and multi-story construction typical of important hotels and public gathering spaces. The building was designed to accommodate visitors, travelers, and transient residents seeking accommodation and hospitality in a period before modern highway systems and extensive transportation networks. The saloon component served as a gathering place for the town\'s male population, establishing the hotel as a central hub of social and commercial activity within Stanwood\'s developing business district.
During the approximately 130 years since its construction, the Stanwood Hotel and Saloon has undergone various transitions in use and ownership, but has continuously served its role as a hospitality and gathering space within Stanwood. The building has accommodated countless guests, hosted community events, served meals and beverages, and functioned as a meeting place where the transactions, conversations, and interpersonal dramas of a small-town society unfolded. The upper floors contained sleeping quarters for guests, with individual rooms reflecting the modest but dignified standards of turn-of-the-century hospitality. The bar and saloon space served as a public gathering place where commercial transactions, social interactions, and informal justice procedures sometimes occurred. The architectural spaces within the building—the hallways, individual rooms, staircases, and common areas—became saturated with human presence and emotional resonance over more than a century of continuous use.
Beginning in the late twentieth century, staff members and guests at the Stanwood Hotel and Saloon began reporting systematic paranormal phenomena. The most frequently documented manifestations involved the appearance of apparitions dressed in Victorian-era clothing, corresponding to the fashion standards of the 1890s through early 1900s. These apparitions have been observed primarily on the upper floors and in the saloon areas, most commonly during evening and night hours. Multiple independent witnesses, including hotel staff and paying guests, have consistently described seeing figures in period-appropriate clothing moving through the corridors, rooms, and common areas. Extensive paranormal investigations have documented unexplained footsteps and sounds throughout the building, particularly on upper levels. Staff and guests have reported experiencing physical sensations including pushing and pulling forces without visible agency. Shadow figures have been observed moving through doorways and corridors, with manifestations documented using electronic recording equipment and thermal imaging technology.
Paranormal researchers attribute the manifestations to the presence of multiple spirits, identified by name as Margret, Charlie, Carl, and Lily, who appear to be associated with the building itself. These entities seem to continue patterns of activity and presence consistent with their historical relationship to the hotel and saloon during their lifetimes. The apparitions in Victorian clothing suggest these individuals died or became emotionally attached to the building during the late nineteenth or early twentieth century. The concentrated activity on upper floors suggests that these entities may have had rooms or lived within the structure. The physical sensations reported by witnesses suggest spirits capable of manipulating physical matter or interacting directly with the living.
The Stanwood Hotel and Saloon continues to operate as an active hotel and saloon, welcoming both regular patrons and paranormal enthusiasts who specifically seek accommodation in a haunted location. The building has become known throughout Washington state and beyond as a paranormally active historic site where documented supernatural phenomena occur with consistency and clarity. The hotel functions simultaneously as a hospitality establishment serving contemporary guests and as a paranormal historical site where the boundary between past and present, living and deceased, appears unusually permeable.
Apparitions
Shadow Figures
Unexplained Footsteps / Knockings