KANE
MANOR
Location: Kane Manor is located in the palatial and residential district of Santa Rosita, California, a suburb of San Diego. It is a privately owned residence and because of that fact, the address is best kept undisclosed. Nevertheless, over the years, some resourceful entrepreneurs have discovered the location over the years.
Description: Kane Manor (nee Voorhees Castle) is a two-story stone and brick mansion resembling a castle with a round driveway, enclosed courtyard, turrets and backyard veranda bordering nearby Santa Rosita State Park overlooking the Pacific coast. The interior resembles a museum of fine antiques, parquet floors, grand mahogany furnishings and opulent New England furniture from the East Coast. The house is also riddled with secret rooms, passageways and hidden compartments and rests upon the catacombs of excavated Spanish ruins from the Eighteenth Century dating to before Santa Rosita was founded. A courtyard fountain now concealed in the bowels of the house has been restored to working order.
Ghostly Manifestations: The story of Kane Manor was first documented as a
haunted house in 1953 by reputed parapsychologist Plato Cyrus Zorba, but
unfortunately, in nowhere of his description or research of the house does he
clearly or accrately identify the location of the mansion. In the years
following Zorba’s death, many of his so-called studies became debunked,
discredited or just outright dismissed as fraudulent. In trying to locate Kane
Manor, modern parapsychologists debated the opinion that Kane Manor was
actually the amalgamated creation of Plato Zorba merging the details and
histories of Hill House in Massachusetts, the former Vannacutt Sanitarium north
of Los Angeles and the Belasco House in Maine.
In 2001, however, Professor Walter Oldman,
chose Voorhees Castle in Santa Rosita east of San Diego as a parapsychology
case study for his psychology class under the auspices of a study on insomnia.
A year earlier, eleven-year-old Megan Voorhees was the victim here of an
alleged but never confirmed case of demonic possession before dying of a freak
unexplained heart attack. In researching the house, Oldman came to the
undisputed realization that Voorhees Castle and the suspect Kane Manor were one
and the same. Regardless of his band of amateur ghost-hunters, Oldman still
endeavored to document the manor’s supposed ghosts.
According to Plato Zorba’s original notes,
many of which seem far-fetched and exaggerated, Kane Manor was possessed by
demonic injuries and the interior was known to restructure itself. Rooms
sometimes vanished and were replaced by windows or hallways, a trait in common
with Seattle’s Rose Red Mansion. There are rooms to the center of the house
with windows overlooking the backyard despite the fact that halls and corridors
surround these rooms. In fact, while Zorba was visiting the house in 1953, he
was confused by the fact that after searching through an attic room, he ended
up in a north wing bedroom without any conscious memory of traveling the
distance himself. While trying to trace his own steps, he became lost in the
north wing while he should have been within a few steps of the balcony over the
foyer at all times.
Hugh Kane’s antique toy collection sometimes
took a life of their own. A life-size clown doll has inexplicably moved from
room to room and has persistently been returned to its place in the attic
playroom. When Justin Hanson showed Cindy Campbell through the house in 2001,
it was discovered sitting in a chair in the upstairs north corridor. After the
house became a property of Howell Industries, Thurston Howell IV discovered it
sitting at the desk of Kane’s secret study behind the wall of the music room.
Cindy Campbell herself seemed located at the
center of several phenomenon during Professor Oldman’s covert investigation.
She thought she heard child-like voices in the house and was even unconsciously
beckoned to the concealed study by forces she didn’t understand. The sounds of
children giggling were even heard one night when everyone was talking in the
downstairs parlor and no one was upstairs. An overall feeling of dread and
sensation of not being alone followed everyone at one time or another. Another
student named Alex Martin felt someone touch her in an intimate area while she was
alone in her room.
Faint images of other people sometimes can be
seen wandering through the house. Strange people have been glimpsed just
vanishing through doorways or just out of sight. One figure turned into the
upstairs hall as Theo Barrymore arrived on location and both Robert “Buddy”
Wilkinson and Eugene “Shorty” Meeks noticed a strange lady in white moving
through the basement. This Lady in White has been noticed quite often in the
house since 1952. Dwight Hartman, Professor Oldman’s assistant, even managed to
videotape the shadow of an unidentified figure in the parlor that didn’t belong
to any of the accounted students.
Joggers and pedestrians at nearby Santa
Rosita Park sometimes experience odd breezes coming from the house. Cold
breezes sometimes accompanied by laughter come from the house. A photograph
taken during a birthday party in the park shows a Lady in White in a window at
Kane Manor when the old manor was supposed to be empty. Computer imagery being
used to bring the figure into perspective revealed not just her long dark hair
but her eyes missing and her face pulled tight to resemble a skull!
In one odd occurrence, Cindy Campbell found
herself sleepwalking through the house. During a deep sleep, she woke up,
dressed herself in wardrobe left behind by a previous person to live in the
house and wandered down to the kitchen without any conscious reason for her
activity. Later on, after snapping out of her spell, she had a mental epiphany
and realized that someone had been killed in the kitchen, and that she was
unconsciously retracing the dead woman’s steps.
Psychokinetic behavior in the form of
poltergeist activity has also been recorded in the house. Doors sometimes slam
shut, and undisturbed objects fall to the floor at times. In the kitchen, all
the objects fall in a common direction. Hartman’s wheelchair crashed by itself
not once but three times into the same wall beyond his control.
The ghost of Hugh Kane who owned the house
from 1948 to 1952 seems to be by far the most dominant of the ghosts. When she
was eight-years-old, Megan Voorhees saw him several times in 1998 wandering
through the house and at night standing over her bed as she tried to sleep. She
described him as a huge man, some seven feet in height with a heavy brow and
his hair parted down the center. Her mother never saw him, but often heard the
sound of a strange man laughing out loud from the attic bedrooms. A year before her death, Megan even screamed
that he was in bed with her and her mother came running. Despite being the
middle of summer, Megan’s room became extremely cold; her mother noting that
she could see her breath.
For unknown reasons, Kane seemed interested
in Megan and following a company business party in spring of 2000, she became
distant and withdrawn. Her mother noticed her talking to empty rooms and
getting answers to questions she couldn’t have known. Activity in the house
picked up and noises and voices started coming from Megan’s bedroom. Father
Andrew Harris from the 2000 dinner party tried to give his religious support to
Mrs. Voorhees, but when he tried to lend support to Megan, she attacked him in
a lewd manner. Harris then asked Father James McFelty to come to the house
without telling him he suspected that Megan was possessed. On October 31, they
stayed up all night trying to exorcize Megan of whatever possessed her as
screams and noises came from the basement of the house and objects flew around
the room. At sunrise, the house finally settled and the noises went away. As
they tried to wake Megan, they discovered she had died in her sleep of what was
believed to be a heart attack
The so-called exorcism was never reported and never mentioned. Mrs. Voorhees moved away and both Father Harris and Father McFelty vowed to never speak of it again. A year later, Professor Oldman obtained permission from Howell Industries to use the house for a weekend. As they departed Monday morning, Cindy Campbell noticed a sinister brooding figure sitting on the backyard veranda and staring up to the house with demented intent. On the surface, her description of the figure nearly matches that of Megan Voorhees!
History: Originally Keaton House, the main portion of Kane Manor was built in 1898 by Archibald Keaton as a gift to his wife, former actress Cora Faris, but they sold it in 1920 to a vague character named Uriah Bloodworth (as according to the notes of Cyrus Zorba; no person with his name is listed in the county census records), but he lost the place during the stock market crash and retired to Florida. Bloodworth is reputed to still be alive, but Keaton House was next acquired by textile magnate Hugh Ronald Kane who added another wing to the structure, expanded upon the house catacombs and created gardens for his wife, Victoria. Much of the renovation was supervised just to placate his wife, Carolyn Drew, reportedly a relative of Archibald Keaton, as part of a ruse while he carried on with a mistress, Victoria, later hired as a potential nanny. She lived in a room in the new wing of the house, now named Kane Manor, away from Carolyn’s knowledge and carried on her affair with Hugh. Carolyn, however, came home unsuspectedly one day and caught Hugh and Victoria in the kitchen in the midst of sexual intercourse and killed them both before killing herself – at least, that was the official police account. Years later, manservant Justin Hanson revealed he had been in love with Carolyn and that after she was killed by Kane, he killed Kane and Victoria and burned their remains in the furnace. Hanson stayed on caring for the house for several years, but vanished into obscurity following his 2001 confession. The house had since fell into custodianship under Kane Industries and used as a retreat for parties and residence for visiting guests, mostly for Elizabeth Voorhees, Chief stockholder for Kane Industries, but it fell into the possession of Howell Industries along with all of Kane’s holdings.
Identity of Ghosts: According to Plato Zorba, a number of eleven ghosts haunt the structure, but only a few have been identified. The presence of Hugh Kane has been felt as well as that of his mistress, Victoria, and his wife, Carolyn, the two of them locked in eternal conflict. There are no records of children having ever lived in the house, yet, the sounds of their ghosts still occur.
Comments: Scary Movie II (2001), Hauntings derived from the movie and its
motion picture influences.
Santa Rosita and Santa Rosita State Park,
“It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” (1963)
Howell Industries,
“Gilligan’s Island” (1963-1965)
Plato Zorba,
Thirteen Ghosts (1960)
Hill House, The
Haunting (1963,1999)
Vannacutt Sanitarium,
House on Haunted Hill (1999)
Belasco House,
Legend of Hell House (1973)
Rose Red Mansion,
Rose Red (2002)