The Story of Kate
Morgan
&
The Hotel Del Coronado
The elegant Hotel Del
Coronado was opened in 1888 and soon became a favored
destination for people from all over the world. It is not long after the
Hotel's opening that our ghost story starts.
Tom and Kate Morgan were
a married couple who rode the trains in the late 1800s. Their
occupation: con artists. Kate was apparently very attractive, and would
lure men into a game of cards with her "brother" (Tom), so
that they could prove their worth. Tom
would swindle them out of whatever money they were willing to part with,
and this is how the Morgan's made their living.
In November of 1892,
however, Kate discovered she was pregnant and wanted to stop the train
racket and settle down. While the two were riding towards San Diego,
they had an argument because Tom did not want to change his lifestyle.
Tom disembarked at either Los Angeles or Orange County. He was supposed
to meet Kate in San Diego for Thanksgiving.
Kate continued on to San Diego and checked into the
Hotel Del Coronado under the name "Lottie Anderson Bernard".
There she waited for Tom, but Thanksgiving came and went with no sign of
him. She checked other hotels in the area but could not find him
anywhere. During this time, Kate complained to various staff members of
feeling ill and reports of the time indicate that she was looking pale.
It is suspected that she performed an abortion on herself.
It is known that while Kate was
waiting for her missing husband, she ventured into San Diego and bought
a gun. It was shortly after this that Kate was found shot in the head on
some steps leading down to the beach, an apparent suicide.
For years everyone accepted that the death was a
suicide, until 1990, when Alan May (a lawyer who specializes in murder
cases) published the book The Legend of Kate
Morgan: The Search for the Ghost of the Hotel del Coronado.
(BTW, this book is available in the Signature Shop at the hotel.) May
pored through old records from the time of Kate's death. He came to the
eventual conclusion that Kate did not kill herself, but was murdered by
her husband. There are several pieces of evidence supporting this
theory, the most compelling of which is the fact that the bullet in
Kate's head was of a different caliber than the ones in the gun she
bought. Also, the position her body was found in was not consistent with
a suicide.
The Ghost
The room Kate checked into was
302, which is now room 3312. But
that is not the only haunted room. Room 3502,
which was once a maid's room, is also considered haunted. Both rooms
have experienced oddly functioning electrical equipment (lights turning
on and off, etc) and cold breezes. Maids report that objects are moved
around by unseen hands. Guests in the rooms (those who were brave enough
to stay the night!) have experienced oppressive feelings and curtains
that move even though the windows are closed. Other people swear they
have heard murmurings coming from somewhere in the room. Kate's ghost
has been seen walking down hallways of the hotel and standing at
windows. According to Alan May, an electrician told him that the light
over the steps where Kate died will not stay lit. The bulb is replaced
constantly, but the light always winks out. May also claims that while
he was staying in one of the haunted rooms [the sources I have do not
make it clear which one], he saw a face on the television (which was, of
course, turned off at the time). This sighting was supposedly verified
by one or two hotel employees.
Room 3502 has a history
of its own. Apparently, the maid who was living there during Kate's stay
may have become friends with Kate. What is known is that the day after
Kate's funeral, the maid disappeared. There is some speculation that Tom
Morgan may have killed the maid as well as his wife. One story even
theorizes that when hotel staff found the maid's body, they
surreptitiously removed it so as not to further upset the guests!
|