Point Pleasant, West Virginia·hotel The Historic Lowe Hotel stands as a distinguished example of early twentieth-century commercial architecture in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, a riverfront community situated along the Ohio River in the Appalachian region. Originally constructed in 1901 as Spencer Hotel, a commercial lodging establishment serving travelers, businesspeople, and visitors to the growing Point Pleasant community, the hotel operated under that designation for several decades before undergoing ownership transition. The Lowe family acquired the hotel in 1929, leading to the name change that persists today. The family's stewardship extended the building's operational and social significance within Point Pleasant, with the hotel continuing to serve as an important hospitality and social venue. Its physical position adjacent to the Ohio River within downtown Point Pleasant contributed to its prominence as a community landmark.
The paranormal reputation derives from manifestations of multiple distinct spectral entities, each associated with particular historical circumstances and exhibiting distinctive behavioral patterns documented through guest accounts and paranormal investigation. The most famous manifestation involves the Dancing Lady, identified as Juliette Smith, appearing on the mezzanine spanning the first and second floors, dancing to music existing only in the supernatural realm. Witnesses describe observing the apparition moving rhythmically as if responding to musical accompaniment, barefoot and graceful, her movements suggesting deliberate performance despite the complete absence of audible music.
Additional paranormal entities include a little girl manifesting as riding a tricycle through second floor hallways, phantom sounds and sensations of a child at play occurring without any living child present. Captain Jim, identified as a riverboat captain lacking lower extremities, appears in particular locations, particularly positioned near windows facing the Ohio River that was his professional domain in life. The Whistling Maid produces distinctive whistling sounds throughout the hotel, particularly concentrated on the third floor, auditory phenomena attributed to a female spirit whose identity and history remain subjects of ongoing research. These apparitional manifestations create experiences for guests and staff characterized by inexplicable footsteps, disembodied whistling, sensations of unseen presences, and visual apparitions of the identified spirits.
The Historic Lowe Hotel has achieved prominence within paranormal enthusiast communities and paranormal television programming as a location of particularly rich and well-documented supernatural phenomena. Guest reviews frequently reference paranormal experiences, with visitors explicitly noting the hotel's haunted reputation as a factor in accommodation selection and reporting encounters with documented spirits. Hotel management has embraced the paranormal reputation as an element of distinctive identity and marketing appeal, positioning the location as a destination for paranormal tourists and enthusiasts seeking authentic haunted accommodations and potential encounters with documented apparitions.
The building's status as one of Point Pleasant's most historically significant structures, combined with extensive paranormal reputation and documented manifestations, has established The Historic Lowe Hotel as a primary paranormal destination within West Virginia's paranormal geography and a recognized location within broader North American paranormal investigation and enthusiast communities.
Unexplained Footsteps / Knockings
Unexplained Sounds