With Halloween stories
being conjured left and right I thought I’d share one of the local ghost stories. While not a scary tale, Miss Kate takes her haunting responsibilities seriously.
Sheridan, Wyoming, nestled snug in the valley of the Bighorns,
has its fair share of things that go bump in the night…And I’m not just talking
about when the Burlington Northern goes through town at 1:00 in the
morning. Residents and visitors have reported specters of women “of an
undesirable nature” roaming the rooms of Hotel Rex, where they used to do a lot
moaning for a different reason. The disgraced son-in-law of Buffalo Bill
Cody is said to haunt the Sheridan Inn where he took his life, or it was taken
from him as some people speculate.
There is one spirit who found a home at the Sheridan Inn in life
and is determined to remain there through the next. Miss Kate, as she is
affectionately known around these parts, is by far the favorite apparition of
Sheridan.
Catherine Arnold stepped off the train in Sheridan, Wyoming in
1901. She was a bright eyed twenty-two-year-old from Virginia. Kate walked
across the dusty road from the Depot to the Sheridan Inn, once known as the
finest hotel between Chicago and San Francisco. Once her feet crossed the
threshold of the Inn, it seemed nothing and no one could keep the young lady
and the gabled inn apart.
Miss Kate (courtesy of the Sheridan Heritage Society)
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Miss Kate was beloved by staff and guests of the hotel. In her
sixty-four years at the Inn, she served as seamstress, desk clerk, housekeeper,
hostess and babysitter. She kept a flower garden behind the Inn, which
benefited diners at the Inn’s restaurant as they graced the tables. Though she never married, it seems Miss Kate had a crush on a local man. This we found when the Museum I work for took possession of many of the Sheridan Inn’s items and found an old ice cream carton decorated as a gift (to be used as a trash can) for the gentleman. After years of faithful service Miss Kate was forced to leave the Inn in 1965, when developers purchased the Inn with plans to tear it down. Locals saved the Inn and it was purchased and used for dining and dancing. |
Through boom and bust, Miss Kate has remained at the Inn even as
it recently sat empty for a many months. Under new ownership the Inn is
being restored to accommodate guests, parties and receptions.
Miss Kate’s presence has been felt on a daily basis. She is
known to repeatedly turn the lights off and on and open and shut doors.
Her presence is strong on the third floor, near her room, with cold spots being
felt on that floor and throughout the Inn. One local, reported seeing
lights on and curtains open on the third floor, when they drove by at two
o’clock in the morning.
As a personal aside: My first year at the Museum, we were
asked to remove all artifacts from the Inn and keep them safe until someone
saved the Inn and bought it. We arrived at the Inn and the director had
kindly purchased coffee and doughnuts for us. After we ate, he announced:
“Okay, this is how we’re going to dismantle the contents.” The lights
went off. No one moved, and no one said the name we were all thinking.
The lights came back on and we got to work. We agreed to blame a faulty
electrical system.
The Sheridan Inn plays a small role in many of my manuscripts,
but not in my ghost story, THE BALLAD OF ANNIE SULLIVAN. For Hank and Annie’s story, I
chose the backdrop of the Bighorn Mountains and a lone cowboy at cow camp.
After interviewing local cowboys, who spent some summers alone on the
mountains, I started thinking about how that could start playing with a
person’s mind…and how they might start imagining things…or not. And if
you’re going to have a crazy story, the Renner clan is the family to choose.
So, if you liked RACE TO MARRY, you’ll enjoy catching up with Cal and Josie and
meeting Hank, one of the boys they adopted.
Hank Renner enjoys
summers and early autumns when he can escape his large family and spend time
alone at the cow camp in the Bighorn Mountains. That is, until he starts seeing
a beautiful woman with flaming red hair and brown eyes, who disappears as quick
as the Wyoming sunshine. Questioning his sanity, Hank begins a search that just
might lead him to his heart.
Annie Sullivan wants only one thing more than revenge for a rape and murder that occurred ten years ago…Hank Renner. Haunting the mountain, she’s kept watch over the handsome cowboy. But this year she did something she’s never done before, something that could change everything. She’s let the man see her—and exposed her soul.
Two lonely souls search for the truth that could solve a murder and a love that could resurrect their hearts.
Annie Sullivan wants only one thing more than revenge for a rape and murder that occurred ten years ago…Hank Renner. Haunting the mountain, she’s kept watch over the handsome cowboy. But this year she did something she’s never done before, something that could change everything. She’s let the man see her—and exposed her soul.
Two lonely souls search for the truth that could solve a murder and a love that could resurrect their hearts.
Kirsten Lynn is a Western and Military Historian. She worked six years with a Navy non-profit and continues to contract with the Marine Corps History Division for certain projects. Making her home where her roots were sewn in Wyoming, Kirsten also works as a local historian. She loves to use the history she has learned and add it to a great love story. She writes stories about men of uncommon valor…women with undaunted courage…love of unwavering devotion …and romance with unending sizzle. When she’s not writing, she finds inspiration in day trips through the Bighorn Mountains, binge reading and watching sappy old movies, or sappy new movies. Housework can always wait.
Remarkably, I have heard about this story of Kate and her haunting of the Sheridan.
ReplyDeleteI think it must have been so much fun to have been a part of the saving of artifacts from the hotel. I love ghost stories even though I don't believe in ghost stories. Interesting though that the lights went off while you were there. It's more exciting to think that it was Kate and not faulty electrical wiring.
A lovely article, Kirsten. I wish you all the best.
Thanks for stopping by, Sarah. Yes, Miss Kate is quite the legend around here. Like you, I don't know as I believe in ghost stories but they sure are fun.
DeleteReal Ghost Stories Thanks for taking the time to discuss this, I feel strongly about it and love learning more on this topic. If possible, as you gain expertise, would you mind updating your blog with extra information? It is extremely helpful for me.
ReplyDelete