SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE
Location: The Smithsonian Institute is the United States’ most revered museum-gallery complex devoted to historical, scientific and artistic interests in the world. It consists of sixteen museums and galleries as well as the National Zoo. The structure here in question is the National Museum of American History located at 900 Jefferson Drive SW in Washington D.C.
Description: The National Building of American History is a plain brick building three stories in size patrolled by security guards at all times and protected by a timer on the front doors. The exhibits include the John Glenn capsule, The Wright Brothers Plane, The Spirit of St. Louis, The Old Iron Horse #7 and an Eli Whitney cotton gin among several dinosaur skeleton displays.
Ghostly Manifestations: It comes to no surprise that museums, libraries and
galleries often rank among the most haunted locations in the United States.
Items on display separated from people who have passed on are supposed to have
the imprints of those people on them. In the after hours then, these objects
are heard trying to come to life and relive the glories that proudly put them
in display.
The Smithsonian guards and staff are often
instructed not to repeat their stories and experiences so as to not frighten
away the public, but these are sometimes the first things the public asks about
as they take the tour. Some of the tales are boring and concern objects that
just vanish and turn up after a few days or stray sounds that occur long after
the last tourist has left. Some guards have noticed fleeting images of shadows
hurrying across the ceiling trying to hide or people where they should not be.
Most of the employees agree that the place is dark and spooky enough to prey on
the imagination.
The museum once used displays with mannequins
to simulate important American events or to exhibit artifacts on display. Often
dressed in actual period uniforms preserved and painstakingly restored, the
figures often looked human enough that many tourists confused them with real
people. After hours, they sometimes acted like real people. One female tourist
swore to have seen out the corner of her eye the Benedict Arnold display turn
its head to her and then turn it’s head back. One guard thinking he was following
a figure wandering around after hours turned a corner quickly and crashed into
a female figure taken twelve feet from out of the Pilgrim fathers display.
Figures sometimes change poses and others change locations. One photograph
taken in 1978 showed a strange light hanging over the figures of Benedict
Arnold, Major John Andre and William Damon that completely distorted the faces
of the figures.
On May 20, 1978, one guard who preferred to
remain anonymous reported he thought he heard the engine in the Spirit of St.
Louis trying to start up. He listened it a few times and brought out with him
someone else to testify to the sound without mentioning what it was, but it
didn’t happen again. Nevertheless, every year on the anniversary of Lindbergh’s
famous crossing, at least one person reports to have heard the now engineless
plane trying to start itself.
The plane is not to only thing to start up on
its own. An Eli Whitney cotton gin has started up under its own power despite
being inoperable and the noise of an old steam locomotive has been heard
barreling through the place near the old Iron Horse #7 display. Still others
have heard animal noises from the dinosaur bones displays.
Not all the phenomenon is confined to the
past. A phantom guard has been observed by the staff wandering through the
place. Only three guards are kept on duty at a time after dark, yet some
inconvertible fourth figure has been seen patrolling the building after
closing. He’s been seen on closed circuit cameras and has vanished from rooms with
second exits. Reports of his appearances are filled with the uncanny
description of his face as he stares up into the cameras as he passes and tilts
his cap to the person watching him.
History: The National Museum of History and Technology was established as part
of the United States National Museum on July 1, 1957. Frank A. Taylor was
appointed Director of the MHT on April 1, 1958 and was primarily possible for
the planning and supervision of the construction of the museum building in
1964. The USNM ceased to exist as an administrative entity in 1967 and at that
time, the National Museum of History and Technology became a separate museum
within the institution.
Most of the hauntings increased during the Bicentennial 1976 year, but have since tapered off since the removal of the figures and the spacing out of the exhibits.
Identity of Ghosts: Theory has it that the activity is caused by psychic energy left over from over several hundred years, although popular sentiment is that the spirits of the deceased that have passed over visit the museum to relive past glories or to sulk near objects signifying their greatest shame.
Comments: Scooby-Doo, Where Are You, Episode “The Spirits of ’76,” Structure based on the National Museum of National History in Washington, D.C. Hauntings based on varied cases, mostly museums.