Haunted Places in Steilacoom, Washington
2 haunted locations

Bair Drug and Hardware Store Museum
The Bair Drug and Hardware Store Museum in Steilacoom, Washington stands as one of the Pacific Northwest's most historically significant commercial buildings and simultaneously as a location notorious for persistent and well-documented paranormal phenomena that have attracted serious paranormal researchers and casual ghost enthusiasts for decades. The building itself was constructed in 1895 by W. L. Bair, a pharmacist of considerable enterprise and vision who recognized the commercial potential of Steilacoom, a rapidly developing town benefiting from the terminus of an electric streetcar line and increasing regional connectivity. Bair established his pharmacy and general store as a comprehensive commercial enterprise designed to serve the diverse needs of the local community, offering pharmaceutical goods, hardware supplies, sundries, and various merchandise categories that made the establishment an essential hub of town commerce and social gathering. The building's architectural character, reflecting the utilitarian commercial aesthetics of the 1890s, proved sufficiently enduring and well-constructed that it has survived more than a century of continuous occupation and remains standing as a notable landmark within Steilacoom's historic downtown district. In the years following his initial establishment of the pharmacy and hardware store, W. L. Bair—known colloquially as "Cub" to those familiar with him—developed a reputation as a meticulous, demanding businessman intensely invested in the operations and performance of his commercial enterprise. His involvement in every detail of store operations, his exacting standards, and his apparent inability to delegate or relax his oversight suggest a man whose identity became inseparable from his business. Bair remained actively engaged in the pharmacy and hardware store operations throughout his life, attending to inventory, customer service, and the countless details that occupied the attention of a proprietor determined to maintain the highest standards. Whatever the circumstances of his death or the transition of the business to subsequent ownership, Bair's fundamental attachment to his store and his apparent unwillingness to sever his connection to the enterprise he had built apparently persisted beyond the boundary of his mortal existence. The Bair Drug and Hardware Store Museum now operates as a combination museum and bistro restaurant, allowing modern visitors to experience the physical spaces where commercial and paranormal history intersect. Yet from the perspective of those who work within the building or who conduct paranormal investigations on the premises, the space remains fundamentally haunted by the presence of its original proprietor—W. L. Bair, or "Cub" as he is known in paranormal researcher accounts, continues to apparently oversee operations with the same meticulous attention and exacting standards he maintained during his living years. The phenomena attributed to Bair's ghost are consistently characterized by a kind of petulant, selective judgment regarding modern changes made to his beloved store—equipment failures occur at dramatically elevated rates, with refrigeration units, electronic mixers, and other mechanical devices apparently sabotaged or disrupted by unseen intervention. Small objects migrate inexplicably throughout the building, relocated to unexpected locations as if by an invisible hand determined to communicate its presence through minor acts of relocation and rearrangement. Perhaps most dramatically, instances have been documented where cookware and serving equipment have been affected by what appears to be malicious manipulation. Kitchen oven temperatures have allegedly been increased without human intervention, resulting in burned pastries and ruined preparations—acts that some paranormal researchers interpret as Cub's disapproval of menu choices or preparation methods. Multiple instances have been reported where bottles of salmon sauce have allegedly levitated from shelves and crashed to the floor, a phenomenon so consistent that some restaurant staff have speculated that Cub particularly disapproves of this specific ingredient or its integration into the establishment's culinary operations. Alongside these object-focused phenomena exists the consistent report of a disembodied female voice calling out names of staff members who no longer work at the establishment—a mysterious woman whose identity remains unconfirmed but whose presence has been documented by multiple independent witnesses over years of operation. The Bair Drug and Hardware Store Museum has become a destination for paranormal enthusiasts, tourist visiting Steilacoom's historic downtown, and those seeking to encounter genuine haunting phenomena in an authentically historic setting. The building continues to serve its community as both a museum preserving late nineteenth-century commercial life and as a functioning restaurant where diners may experience both historical ambiance and the unsettling possibility of encountering evidence of supernatural presence. For those who believe in the persistence of consciousness beyond death, the Bair represents a particularly compelling case study—a location where a man's devotion to his work apparently transcended the boundary of death itself, where the spiritual remains of W. L. Bair apparently continues to exercise dominion over the physical spaces he constructed and so meticulously controlled during his living years, manifesting his continued presence through electrical failures, object displacement, and mysterious vocalizations that remind modern occupants that ownership and attachment to place apparently survives the cessation of biological life.

E.G Rogers Restaurant
The E.G. Rogers Restaurant occupies what was originally the Captain Edwin R. Rogers House, a three-story historic mansion in Steilacoom, Washington, reflecting the architectural ambitions and commercial success of nineteenth century maritime and mercantile ventures in Pacific Northwest communities. The structure was constructed during the mid-nineteenth century as a private residential mansion for Captain Edwin R. Rogers and his family, with the building's scale and architectural detail reflecting substantial wealth accumulated through maritime trade and commercial activities. During its extensive operational history spanning one hundred twenty-two years, the structure underwent numerous transformations in use and occupancy, functioning sequentially as a private residence, a hotel, a rock and mineral museum, and ultimately as a restaurant establishment, reflecting the evolving economic conditions and commercial opportunities within the Steilacoom community. The paranormal phenomena documented at the E.G. Rogers Restaurant appear directly connected to traumatic incidents and tragic deaths occurring within the building's walls or on the surrounding property during its earlier operational phases as a hotel and boarding house. The most extensively documented paranormal presence involves the spirit of a male apparition, identified through investigation as a former boarder or guest of the hotel who died in violent circumstances involving a physical altercation or fight within the building. This male spirit manifests as a visible apparition and generates additional paranormal phenomena consistent with conscious spiritual presence attempting to communicate or remain connected to the location of his death and unresolved trauma. An additional significant paranormal presence centers upon a female spirit identified as Catherine Webster or Catherine, wife of Captain Rogers, appearing as an apparition dressed in white or period-appropriate clothing consistent with the nineteenth century era of her lifetime. Catherine's paranormal manifestation appears concentrated in specific areas of the building structure, suggesting either attachment to familiar spaces or unresolved issues connected to her experience during the Captain Rogers House era. The building's proximity to the historic gallows location used for public executions in Steilacoom during the territorial era suggests that the location's history encompasses capital punishment and violent death, potentially contributing to the intensity of paranormal activity within and around the premises. Paranormal investigators have documented photographic evidence of unexplained electronic interference with electrical systems and security equipment, manifesting as lights turning on and off without apparent cause or malfunction, and security alarms activating spontaneously despite locked entrances and secured building perimeters. Disembodied voices have been recorded through electronic voice phenomena investigations, documenting paranormal communication attributed to the male boarder victim or other spirits associated with the building's traumatic history. The combination of the building's role as a hotel where transient residents and temporary occupants stayed, the documented violent death within the structure, the building's proximity to execution grounds, and the consistent reports of paranormal activity establish the E.G. Rogers Restaurant as a significant location within Washington State's paranormal landscape. The haunting appears to reflect the continuing spiritual presence of individuals whose deaths occurred under traumatic or violent circumstances, with ongoing manifestations suggesting incomplete resolution or persistent attachment to the geographic location of their demise.