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The Haunting Of New York’s Infamous Dakota Building |
One of the
most interesting buildings in Manhattan is certainly a landmark, though it
doesn’t come up as often as many of the others. Possibly because this building
is a landmark not for its height, or its grandeur, but because of the darkness
that surrounds it. Built between 1880 and 1884, the Dakota started off as a
building alone in what was, at the time, an empty area of the island of
Manhattan. Today, we call that area the Upper West Side, and it is far from
empty.
The most
famous story of Lennon’s ghost appearing at the Dakota was told by Yoko Ono. As
the story goes, Yoko, who lived in the Dakota for 20 years after Lennon’s
death, saw the spirit of the musical god sitting at his piano. Lennon turned to
Yoko and said “Don’t be afraid. I am still with you,” before vanishing. The
first reported sighting of Lennon’s ghost was in 1983 when Joey Harrow and
Amanda Moores spotted the Beatle standing at the entrance of the Dakota. Harrow
claimed that Lennon was surrounded by an ominous light, and Moores said that
she almost walked up to Lennon, but the look on his face suggested he wasn’t in
the mood to talk to strangers. I suppose being shot in the back five times by a
stranger would make you wary.
Before his
death, John Lennon claimed to have had his own paranormal experiences in the
Dakota. Lennon told tales of seeing a spirit he called The Crying Lady walking
the halls of the building. The going theory is that Lennon, and others who have
seen this Crying Lady, are seeing the ghost of Elise Vesley, who managed the
Dakota through the 1930s, 40s, and 50s. Elise, who was way into the paranormal
herself, believed that she had psychokinetic powers and was a major player in
the Vedantist movement. As is often the story when it comes to ghosts, Mrs.
Vesley suffered a great tragedy when her son was hit by a truck outside the
Dakota. The boy died, and by all accounts, Mrs. Vesley was never the same
again. She took to being extra nice, and extra protective of the children that
lived in the Dakota. Maybe that is why she still walks the halls today – she
just wants to make sure all the kids are doing OK. Or maybe she’s trying to
help The Young Girl.
John
Paynter was an electrician working on the Dakota in the late 1930s. The wiring
of the building was, according to Paynter, pretty crazy, with bits and bobs he
had never seen before. Often, Paynter would take pieces of the circuitry home
to try and figure them out. It was late one night, while Paynter was in the
basement of the Dakota working on one of these weird pieces when he came
across the weirdest thing he ever did see.
From out
of the shadows of the basement came a short man. The short man wore a frock
coat and a winged collar. He had small steel-rimmed glasses that were held up
by a very large nose. A well-kept beard could not hide the very fake-looking
wig the short man wore. The short man walked up to Paynter and angrily glared
at him for what, according to Paynter, felt like minutes. Then, as if this were
a normal thing to do, the short man pulled off his wig and violently shook it
in Paynter’s face before vanishing. Paynter had four more run-ins with this
short-wigged ghost and never figured out who it was, but damn if this spirit
didn’t look a whole hell of a lot like Edward Cabot Clark, the man who built
the Dakota. Apparently, Clark, who died before the Dakota was finished, wasn’t all
that jazzed about this electrician screwing with his building.
In the
weeks following Mielziner’s death, workers at the Dakota were besieged by
something throwing items around the basement. Wilbur Ross, a tenant of the
building at the time, was called into the basement by a porter who saw a shovel
fly off its spot on the wall and land in the middle of the room, some twenty
feet away. Not long after, bags of garbage started to fly about the basement.
While Wilbur was not present for these moments, he claimed to have seen a large
iron bar come off the wall of its own accord and fly at him, landing at his
feet. Wilbur attempted to lift the bar but found it was too heavy for him. I
imagine Wilbur stayed out of the basement after that.
As this
was going on, odd piles of shredded paper were found in the halls of the ninth
floor, piled up in a fashion that suggested someone was looking to start a
fire. Residents began to become suspicious of each other. As one may expect,
rumors spread about who was behind all of this. Things reached a boiling point
when a can of paint fell from the roof into the courtyard, just barely missing
a tenant.
The strangest part of it was that there was no
painting or remodeling happening at the time – there was no reason for a can of
paint to be on the roof. People began to wonder… did the paint can fall… or was
it thrown?
Was there
a murderer at the Dakota? The only way to know for sure was to get really weird
with it. A group of residents of the building took it upon themselves to set up
a secret spy club. They would set themselves up in hiding spots and, with
binoculars, watch the comings and goings between the various buildings.
All they found were multiple spouses who were having affairs. The Phantom of
the Dakota seemed to disappear as quickly as he appeared. Some believe that it
was that old bald shorty, Mister Clark, coming back once more, unhappy with the
new elevators.
One night,
on his way home, Frederick looked up at his living room window and was shocked
to see the lights were on. Even more shocking to him was that the light was
coming from a crystal chandelier, seeing as there were no chandeliers in the
Weinsteins’ apartment. Freddy checked again, making sure he was looking at the
3rd-floor corner window that was his home. Still, the crystal chandelier hung
in place, lighting up the room. When Frederick entered his apartment, it was
dark and, sure enough, there was no crystal chandelier.
Days
later, Frederick found two of the word tiles in the pockets of his suit. He
came across a third tile in his eyeglass case. The three tiles were ‘I’ ‘C’
‘U’.
Is the
Dakota haunted? Maybe. One thing we know for sure is that someone hated the
redesigned elevators and a painter died tragically. It certainly has all the
pieces of a good haunting. Many of the residents, as well as workers, of the
Dakota, seem to think the ghosts are real. Film critic Rex Reed, shortly after
moving into the building, once confided in a doorman that of all the previous
tenants of the Dakota, he would have most liked to meet Boris Karloff.
The doorman, being very good at his job, kept
looking straight ahead and said, in a calm, cool voice, “He’ll be back, just
wait and see.”
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