Historic Cavalier to make paranormal experts feel at home

Posted to: Entertainment Spotlight Virginia Beach

Demonologists, renowned paranormal researchers and expert exorcists are just some of those who will be in Virginia Beach during the Eastern Paranormal Investigators Co-Op Conference this weekend.

Famous haunting survivors who inspired the movies “The Sixth Sense” and “Haunting in Connecticut” will also be at the three-day conference that starts Friday.

But perhaps the biggest draw of the event may be the Grande Dame of the Shore herself – the Cavalier Hotel which is hosting the conference.

The hotel, which dates back to the 1920s, has seen a number of famous guests, including seven former U.S. presidents and celebrities such as writer F. Scott Fitzgerald and actresses Judy Garland and Bette Davis. During World War II, the building was used as a naval training center.

Throughout its 83-year history, many famous and not-so-famous guests have come and gone. And, apparently, some have stayed.

“We selected it because of its historical value,” said Teddy Skyler, a Virginia Beach resident and producer for the conference. “But it also has been written up in books as having a haunted history. The ambience is definitely there.”

Although the hotel doesn’t promote its haunted history, ghost stories abound on the Internet, and one Web site in particular – www.scaryforkids.com/haunted-hotels/ – has included it in a list of the most haunted hotels in America.

For anyone interested in hearing some of the stories related to the hotel, local author and storyteller Al Chewning will be at the event.

In addition to conducting ghost walks at the Oceanfront, he has written a book, “Haunted Virginia Beach.”

The book chronicles the hotel’s more famous ghost stories. Chewning said he interviewed former hotel employees, and has heard stories from people who have gone on his ghost walks.

Typically, Chewning said, he starts his tours off by holding up a picture of one of the hotel’s most famous ghosts, Adolph Coors, founder of Coors Brewery.

“I held it up this one day, and this woman just gasped,” Chewning said.

Apparently, the woman had been to a wedding at the hotel in the 1970s. The wedding party had taken pictures that day, Chewning said. It wasn’t until the family was looking at them later that they noticed an unfamiliar older gentleman in some of the snapshots.

“When I held up Adolph Coors’ picture, she shrieked,” Chewning said. “It apparently resembled the face that was in those pictures.”

Coors died at the hotel in 1929, during a stay on the sixth floor. He fell from a window, and since then, guests have reported seeing him in several locations throughout the hotel.

Another spirit that turns up frequently at the hotel is that of a cat. Chewning said guests often call the front desk and complain about seeing a cat in the building. It may be related to another death that occurred, he said, when a little girl drowned in the hotel pool.

“She went in and tried to save her cat, and they both drowned,” he said.

Since then, people have reported hearing water splashing in the indoor pool, when it is empty.

Skyler, who also conducts paranormal investigations, has had her own ghostly encounter while attending a party at the hotel.

“It was a little warm, so I went to the pool area to cool off,” she said. “I heard a splash and the pool water rippled, and I was the only person there.”

There are other stories about the hotel – reports of towels that mysteriously change color and a bellman in his uniform who walks down the back stairway at the hotel – and has also been spotted on the sixth floor, warning guests of ghosts ahead.

“As you pass him, he says, ‘Don’t go up there, there’s ghosts up there,’ ” Chewning said.

Chewning’s book reports other stories, including one involving calls originating from rooms that are closed for the winter season. It’s these anecdotes, Skyler said, that drew her to the hotel.

“They don’t embrace their hauntedness,” she said, “but it’s just the perfect venue for this type of thing.”

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can i get some help?

hello i am a local and have been all my life. i am 17 and see the cavalier sitting menacingly on the hill all te time. if it is at all possible, i would be very appreciative if someone could send me the history of the cavaliers hauntings. i have been to many sites and heard many rumors but i would like to hear the real events that have taken place at this hotel. Any names, dates, records, death certificates, or any other information would be much appreciated. please send this information to my email at gibsonrockerg@aol.com or to white_acdc_freak@yahoo.com. this infromation is not for a news article or for a school paper. i just wish to better infrom myself about this hotel for we have so few haunted buildings in our area.
thank you
-kolbe white

my best friend and i snuck

my best friend and i snuck in there at the end of summer some years ago and crept down into the basement. We heard footsteps coming down a small set of stairs as we dis in the chimney area down there and as i looked to see who it was there was no one. it's a fairly long trek down to where we were so if someone were there i would have seen them. for the period of time we were down there as well, the elevator kept coming down, opening, closing, and going back up. this happened several time with no one there to greet us as it opened. we also found our way to the oooold hunt club room and just had that feeling we were being watched. we sat in the pool area for a while. heard very very faint rippling in the water but not much activity in there that night. it was a good night. just because people speculate that it's haunted doesn't take away from the fact that it is a lovely virginia beach landmark. i mean, look at the thoroughgood house. i've seen and heard PLENTY in that building and it i've never heard anyone ever degrade its integrity as a historical monument. that's just nonsense.

Navy Ships

I loved living in the Hampton Roads area --- actually Norfolk --- for nine years. Still miss the place. While I lived there, we toured a number of the tall ships and historic US Navy vessels during festivals at Waterside. Saw and experienced unexplained phenomena. I actually thought one young man on one of the visiting ships --- I think the Niagara ---- was dressed in character. Found out none of the guides did that. Hope this group has a chance to visit some ships. Wish I were there.

Ghost of Transportation Future

Maybe the convention should convene on the RR tracks east of Newtown Road...plenty of ghosts present and future.

the Most with the Ghost

forget Virginia Beach - they need to go to Norfolk...

http://tidewaterlog.blogspot.com/2009/12/mission-eerie-position.html

Spirits

You should check the Virginia Beach city hall.

Yeah

They should stop by the Nansemond-Suffolk Rescue Squad during their stay. Many weird and freaky happenings there over the years.

Creepy...but ghosts?

I worked there for 3 years 91-93 and never encountered any of the swell people this story speaks of. Yes the building is old and has a great history but haunted, probably not.
I had to roam the building by myself from the basement to the upper floors that were not in use at the time. The basement housed the laundry for our linens to use on the bars. The upper floors were only opened to use as executive party rooms for corporate functions.
I spent tons of hours also in the Grand Ballroom, Pochantos Room, Hunt Club Room and The Pool Area. I had to as I bartended for the functions there, which is really the only use the building had. The guests stayed at the new cavalier across the street mainly.

Please tell me someone is not taking a landmark and making a mockery of it.

hi there

hi im looking for information about the cavalier. Is there anything at all that you found creepy? or ghostly at all? i mean i can understand if you dont believe all these stories that people tell because i am also quite speculative, but is there anything you did experience?

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