PRISM Colorado- Paranormal Research
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    • Central Denver Division
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    • Member Application
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    • Residential Investigations
      • Private Residence- Denver
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Pink Cadillac Boutique, CO. Springs, Co
With a long history of numerous business types, families in and out, natural deaths, new life being born, the Pink Cadillac Boutique has several entities that seem to roam within the walls. Reports of objects moving on their own accord, a shadow figure walking in certain areas of the store and disembodied voices the Pink Cadillac Boutique not only makes for a great shopping experience but also for a fun filled night of investigation. 

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Dickens Opera House- Longmont, CO
This 133 year old location has seen many deaths and mysteries. From the presence of the young maiden who haunts it’s restrooms to the angry man in the green room. Performers, guests and staff alike have many to report from the Dickens Opera House. Thrilling tails of full body figures roaming the halls and invisible entities banging on doors. Dickens Opera house is open to the public to investigate, book your haunt filled night here. 

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Farrar Elementary- Farrar, IA
​The large 17,000 square foot schoolhouse looks out of place in the small town of Farrar, Iowa. Over the decades employees and students reported hearing voices, slamming doors and sightings of unnatural figures walking the halls. After sitting abandoned for five years, Jim and Nancy Oliver purchased the building in 2006. It quickly became apparent they were not alone.

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Escapology- Denver
Employees of the Denver Escapology location have experiences of seeing faces in certain game rooms, hearing a woman's voice and having very strange occurrences in the game room; Shanghai. Objects within the Shanghai room have gone missing and randomly appeared at a later time and some who enter the room have been touched. Although there are no documented deaths or tragic events on the property, the location appears to have numerous accounts of activity. 
Photo from Escapology Facebook

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The Great Plains Hotel
The Historic Plains Hotel, in the heart of Downtown Cheyenne, WY, is a charming 1911 National Historic Landmark Wyoming Hotel. The most famous story of the Plains is a female ghost named Rosie. Rosie and her newly found husband booked overnight at the Plains to celebrate their marriage, after several drinks, Rosie finds her Lover with a prostitute. It is said that Rosie shot the woman and her Husband and then killed herself in the honeymoon suite. Claims of multiple entities, crying and Rosie her self have been reported by Guests over the years. Guest who stay in the room can even see the bullet hole in the glass pane for themselves. 
​Photo from expedia.com

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Malvern Manor
Built in the late 1800’s as a hotel initially to service the railroad. Malvern Manor was eventually turned into a nursing home and then a group home for the mentally handicapped. It serviced all ages with diagnosis of a broad range; from Down’s Syndrome to the more exotic of diseases like multiple personalities and schizophrenia. Visitors experience voices, bangs, shadow people, grabs, hair pulls etc. The most notorious claim is a large shadow figure emerging from a room, chasing individuals from the end of the hall. Malvern Manor is available for group overnight stays to the public; Malvern Manor.
-Photo from weekinweird.com

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Dunning Benedict Mansion
The Historic Dunning Benedict House was designed and built by well known Denver Architect William Lang in 1889 for Denver Real Estate entrepreneur Walter Dunning.  Architect, William Lang, is known as the same architect that designed and built the famed Molly Brown House, which is located just to the north on Pennsylvania Street from the Historic Dunning Benedict House.  By the 1950's, the Historic Dunning Benedict House had been divided up and was being used as several apartments and is currently still used this way today. Many residents claim activity of a man standing at the end of their bed at night, object moving within the home and un-explainable noises.
​-Photo from historycolorado.org

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Victor Hotel
The first Victor Hotel was built in the early 1894 by the Woods Brothers just in time to accommodate travelers arriving on the newly completed Florence & Cripple Creek Railroad. One distinctive feature of the hotel was its elevator, which came in handy for yet another function that the building took on. During the winters, when the ground was frozen between October and June, it was impossible to dig graves for those that died in the quickly growing city. As an alternative, the bodies were taken up the elevator and stored on the fourth floor of the building until the ground thawed enough to bury them. Though seemingly harmless, several people have witnessed the site of disembodied apparitions on the fourth floor. Reports include what look like both doctors and patients, sometimes without arms, legs, and even a heads, moving about this place that once acted as “holding cell” for the dead. But the most prevalent ghost is that of a man named “Eddie” who allegedly fell down the elevator shaft years ago. Staying in Room 301 at the time of his death, Eddie has often been seen in the room, in the hallways, and in the elevator. Guests who stay in Room 301 also report hearing footsteps and other strange sounds that cannot be explained. Though the elevator is regularly inspected and maintained, it often tends to activate itself going up and down the shaft when no one is near it. Always stopping on the third floor, the elevator’s ghostly activity usually occurs around 3:00 a.m.
-Listing from Victor Hotel Website

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Remains of the 1950 Cemetary
Cheesman Park
The park’s history began in 1858 when General William Larimer jumped the claim of the St. Charles Town Company and established his own town, which he called Denver. 
In November, 1858, Larimer set aside 320 acres for a cemetery, which is now the site of present-day Cheesman and Congress Parks. Larimer called it Mount Prospect Cemetery and several large plots were designated on the crest of the hill for the exclusive use of the city’s wealthy and most influential citizens. The gruesome work began on March 14, 1893, before an audience of curiosity-seekers and reporters. McGovern soon found a way to make an even larger profit on the contract. Rather than utilizing full-size coffins for adults, he used child-sized caskets that were just one foot by 3 ½ feet long. Hacking the bodies up, McGovern sometimes used as many as three caskets for just one body. In their haste, body parts and bones were literally strewn everywhere and in the disorganized mess, "souvenir” hunters began to loot the open graves and coffins. Today, an estimated 2,000 bodies remain buried in Cheesman Park and these restless spirits are still said to occupy the park as dozens of tales continue to be told of paranormal activities taking place.  Most visitors tell of feelings of un-explainable sadness or dread in a place, that is today, meant for pleasure and relaxation.  But other reports are more specific, often including the sounds of hundreds of whispering voices and moans that continue to come from the fields where the open graves once laid.
-Article from Haunted Legends.
-Photo from Denver Public Library

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​Copyright © 2016 - 2021  Paranormal Research & Investigative Services Midwest
All Rights Reserved.  No information, duplication, or reproduction of materials is allowed without the express written consent from
the director(s) of PRISM Co.
  • Home
  • Meet the Team
    • Central Denver Division
    • Southern Colorado Division
    • Northern Colorado Division
    • Member Application
  • PRISM Internship
    • Internship Application
  • Investigation Request
  • Investigations & Evidence
    • Residential Investigations
      • Private Residence- Denver
      • Lakewood Residential
    • Business Investigations
      • Pueblo Heritage Museum
      • Elite Barber Shop
      • Dickens Opera House Investigations
      • Ideal Ghost Town
      • Pink Cadillac Boutique
      • Farrar Elementary
      • Briggle Home
      • Francisco Fort Museum Investigations
      • Undisclosed Location
      • Phoenix Gold Mine
      • Undisclosed Church
  • Archived Investigations
  • Contact
  • Newsletters
  • Blog Posts
  • Partnership Opportunities
    • Partners