This ornate building in
Toronto that houses the Hall of Fame was used for over 100 years as a branch
of the Bank of Montreal.
For the past 60+ years a
ghost known as Dorothy has haunted
this building. There have been numerous books and articles written about this
female ghost with countless witness reports.
One popular backstory has
been circulated for years as to why Dorothy haunts this building.
It was believed by many that
Dorothy was a teller at the bank. She became involved in an affair with the
branch manager--a married man. Later, when this romance soured this man jilted
her. She then committed suicide on the upper floor of the bank in the mid 1900s.
A newspaper article written
by The Star in 2009 revealed their
research about this well known haunting.
They discovered the popular
backstory about Dorothy was actually true.
The Ghost of Dorothea Mae Elliott
Dorothea was only 19 year-old
when she shot herself early one morning in 1953. She was transported to St.
Michaels’s Hospital where she died later.
Dorothea was orphaned at
the age of 9 when both her parents died within a few years of each other.
Employees that worked with
Dorothea at the bank remember her fondly. She was a popular colleague who was
bubbly and beautiful. Her looks were compared to a Hollywood star of the
time--Rita Hayworth.
One female employee noted
that she was tall and buxom, sophisticated and well liked by the men. This same
employee noted that the morning Dorothea committed suicide her blue dress appeared
to be wrinkled and untidy.
Finding herself rejected by
this branch manager Dorothea took a .38 caliber revolver from a drawer it was
kept in at the bank and went to the 2nd floor women’s washroom where
she shot herself.
Since her death, there have
numerous reports of strange activity occurring in this building--first when it
was still the bank and later when it became the location for Canada’s Hockey
Hall of Fame.
An Active Haunting
For many years staff and
employees have refused to be in this building after 6:00 p.m. Most refuse to go
up to the second floor.
Common activity reported
includes: cold spots, lights flickering on and off and doors opening and
shutting without cause.
Other reports include:
hearing moans and screams throughout the building as well as people hearing footsteps.
Some witnesses state a
phantom hand touched their shoulders.
One former Hall of Fame
employee, Rob Hynes who was an events coordinator had a scary encounter with this
ghost.
He was in a kitchen on the 2nd
floor behind the conference room when he got a strong feeling someone was
watching him. When he entered the conference room he saw one of the chairs
moving around. There was no breeze in this room.
He quickly exited this room
when this chair headed for him.
One young male visitor to the
Hall of Fame started to scream, “Don’t you see her, don’t you see her.” He
stated that he saw a woman with long black hair walking through several walls
upstairs.
In the early 1990s before the
Hall of Fame was located in the building a musician by the name of Joanna
Jordan was playing her harp for an event being held in the Great Hall.
She looked up and saw a ghost
looking down at her from the ceiling. She had not heard about this haunting
beforehand. In later years, when she visited the Hall of Fame she refused to go
up to the 2nd floor.
45 foot high ceiling |
More Sightings
On the site Toronto and Ontario Ghosts and Hauntings Mathew Didier wrote about the Dorothy haunting. He at one
time worked as a teller at this bank branch. His post solicited many comments.
One man who left a comment
was an employer of the bank in the 1980s when it was used as office space for
the bank's computer department.
He states that there was a
lot of poltergeist activity and cold spots in the building when he worked
there. He and his fellow workers did not share what they experienced at the
time afraid of dismissal.
Because of the building’s
history he and others did not like staying after 6:00 p.m. or going up to the 2nd
floor. They found Dorothy liked to play pranks.
He and forty other employees
worked in cubicles on the main level. One day he left his desk to copy a paper
two cubicles down from his. He was only gone a few moments but when he returned
he found his space in disarray.
His desk was messed up and
his coffee cup was spilled. He also found his filing cabinets were locked. None
of his colleagues were close enough to have done this in the short time he was
gone.
There are many more stories about sightings of this ghost on the research society site mentioned above.
There are many more stories about sightings of this ghost on the research society site mentioned above.
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