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    Chicago’s downtown offers spooky history

    By By neaside,

    13 hours ago

    By Elisa Shoenberger

    Downtown Chicago has a rich history of ghost stories and and many popular landmarks have spooky tales associated with them.

    A famous site is the Iroquois Theater, now the James M. Nederlander Theatre , 24 W. Randolph. Hundreds of moviegoers, mostly women and children, perished in a horrible fire during a Christmas musical in 1903.

    Many people died in an alley behind the theater when the panicked crowd ran out the upper-level fire escape doors and fell to their death because fire escapes had not been installed.

    There have been reported sightings of ghosts in the alley as well as the theater.

    One reported haunting is inside the theater. Adam Selzer, a local historian, said theater workers report a backstage toilet that flushed by itself and the sound of a little girl giggling.

    However, Selzer explains, people assume that all the ghosts behind the Nederlander theater are from the Iroquois Theater Fire.

    “Plenty of other people got killed there,” he said. The street, known as “Hairtrigger Block,” was filled with gambling halls.

    Selzer has led ghost tours all over Chicago. This fall he’s running haunted river cruises as well as tours of Lincoln Park Zoo.

    Selzer said he does his research “to get the history right.” While studying haunted places, he’s found the stories can change as they are passed along.“

    “Like a game of telephone,” he said.

    Selzer said some stories involving Congress Plaza Hotel are more legend than history. However, he said, the location’s proximity to the Auditorium Theater offers some “gruesome” history. Many opera singers who stayed in the hotel ended their lives there.

    Selzer said he once heard a gunshot in the hallway behind the Congress ballroom while leading a tour. They never found the cause.

    Other haunted places include the site of the S.S. Eastland Disaster on the Chicago River at Clark St. and Wacker Dr., where 844 people perished when the boat capsized in 1915, and the site of Fort Dearborn at Wacker Dr. and Michigan Ave. where soldiers died in the Battle of Fort Dearborn.

    Originally posted on October 1, 2019

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