Freaky Friday: University of Tampa

September is National Piano Month, so it made sense for my weekly ghost hunt to result in the mysterious melodies of an unknown pianist. Students at the University of Tampa created this video to recount such a spooky tale from a local hotel.

I think they were inspired by elements of the movie ‘The Ring’ when making this film. Do you agree? Do you know of other campus ghosts at the University of Tampa? Share them with us in the comments below!

More Freaky Friday

Freaky Friday: Emporia State University
Freaky Friday: University of South Carolina
Freaky Friday: College of the Canyons
Freaky Friday: West Virginia University
Freaky Friday: Park University
Freaky Friday: Texas Tech

Freaky Friday: William & Mary
Freaky Friday: Columbia University
Freaky Friday: University of Rochester
Freaky Friday: East Tennessee State
Freaky Friday: Washington State University
Freaky Friday: USF Tampa
Freaky Friday: Pacific University
Freaky Friday: Franklin & Marshall
Freaky Friday: University of the South
Freaky Friday: Point Park

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Freaky Friday: Emporia State University

I came across numerous stories of flickering lights, unexplained noises and mysterious figures while researching this week’s Freaky Friday tale. Read on for the spookiest stories from Emporia State University.

Albert Taylor Hall

Emporia’s largest auditorium, Albert Taylor Hall plays host to concerts, speakers and public events and is also home to a well-known campus legend. Many students have reportedly seen an unidentified hooded figure in the auditorium. The most chilling story was recounted in Spotlight from an article originally printed in the student newspaper the Bulletin.

A student had forgotten his backpack in the auditorium and went to retrieve it when everyone else had gone home. He spotted the motionless figure at the back of the stage as he made his way to the front of the auditorium and the next time he looked up, only seconds later, the figure had moved to the front of the stage. As he grabbed his bag and turned to leave, he chanced one last glance back toward the stage and to his astonishment, the figure had silently moved off the stage and in front of the orchestra. Scene shop manager Kyle Land, who recounted this story to the Bulletin, said the jump would have been “over the 10-foot deep orchestra pit from a standstill – an impossible jump.” There was no documentation on Emporia’s website about what happened after the jump, but we are willing to bet the student didn’t stick around long enough to find out!

Bruder Theatre

The tunnels beneath the Karl C. Bruder Theatre proved the perfect hiding spot for a prank-seeking student. Concealed underground, the student set traps in the theater consisting of wires and cans to alert him when someone was in the room above him. Those who set off the trap went on to report seeing shadowy figures in the theater, not knowing they had been set up. According to the housing coordinator at the time, Bill Hartman, the student was eventually caught and confessed to the prank.

Do you know of other mysterious accounts from Emporia State University? Does your school have an even more creepy tale? Share your stories with us in the comments below.

More Freaky Friday

Freaky Friday: University of South Carolina
Freaky Friday: College of the Canyons
Freaky Friday: West Virginia University
Freaky Friday: Park University
Freaky Friday: Texas Tech

Freaky Friday: William & Mary
Freaky Friday: Columbia University
Freaky Friday: University of Rochester
Freaky Friday: East Tennessee State
Freaky Friday: Washington State University
Freaky Friday: USF Tampa
Freaky Friday: Pacific University
Freaky Friday: Franklin & Marshall
Freaky Friday: University of the South
Freaky Friday: Point Park

Full posts →

Freaky Friday: Franklin & Marshall

In light of the 4th installment of “Scream” (opening today), we have been feeling the need for a few scary stories. Allow us to introduce our new series: Freaky Friday. Each Friday, we will be telling the tales of spooky myths from college campuses across the country.

Without further ado, we bring you the ghost stories from Lancaster, Pennsylvania’s Franklin & Marshall, according to the F&M Library.

The history of Diagnothian Hall leaves it full of ghost stories.

Diagnothian Hall

Currently the F&M Registrar’s office and lecture hall, Diagnothian Hall was originally home to a Civil War hospital.  The building is now home to many-a-ghost story:

Around 2am one night, a music professor was listening to a recording of “Red Cross Nurse” when he heard moans, rattles and other sounds of a person in pain coming from the lobby on the other side of his office wall. When he went to investigate, the lobby was empty.

A few years later, “Haunted Landscape” was on the same professor’s stereo late one night when he heard the same sounds as before. He later made the connection between the war-themes of the songs he was playing and the building’s history as a Civil War hospital.

Other people that have worked in the building have reported occurrences of doors slamming when the building was empty and other odd noises. Creepy!

Don't get on the elevator at this library-- Who knows where you'll end up?

Shadek-Fackenthal Library

Now this is scary– 3 days prior to his death in 1950, Dr. Harvey Bassler wrote a letter to his farm’s caretaker telling him where to find the money he was owed after Bassler reportedly had premonitions of dying in a car crash. On March 14th of that year, Bassler and Rudolph Hommel were on their way to the library when they hit the open door of a parked car, causing their car to launch into oncoming traffic, striking an oil truck head-on.  They both died in the crash.   

Bassler had been in the practice of using the northeast corner of what was then Fackenthal’s Library to organize his large collection of artifacts. After his death, reports of strange occurrences began cropping up, including elevators landing on the wrong floors and books found out of place in the bookstacks. Since renovations and the addition of the Shadek wing in the early 1980s, reports have subsided, but there is still the odd time when spooky sounds have been heard in the library, leading the campus to believe that Bassler’s spirit remains in the library.

Does your school have a spooky myth or scary story? Leave a description in the comments below and you could see it featured here!

Sleep tight.

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