La Concha Hotel |
La Concha opened in the
early 1920s and hosted many famous people in its heyday. It was renovated in
the 1980s and since three ghosts have been seen.
One of these ghosts * is
believed to be the spirit of Ernest Hemingway because it is seen in the suite
where he stayed with his mistress—Martha Gellhorn who became his third wife--
in the 1930s.
He began writing his 1937
novel To Have and Have Not at La
Concha. It pays homage to this hotel—noting “its prominence on the horizon.”
His ghost is mischievous for
he often moves objects.
Hemingway and Gellhorn |
One guest who stayed in the
Hemingway Suite was annoyed by activity that prevented him from going to sleep.
He had climbed into bed when he saw a video recorder fall from the dresser he
had placed it on.
He got up and placed it back
on this shelf. But once he was back in bed, the recorder once more fell to the
floor. He picked it up again. He checked the dresser to see if it was wobbly
but determined it was stable.
When he got back in bed—he
turned the light out but watched the dresser this time. He saw a dark figure in
one corner by the bathroom—it was slightly crouched down.
He saw the recorder fall once more. He got up quickly, flipped the light on but found no one else in
the room. He arranged to move to another room.
It appears Hemingway doesn’t
like others in his space.
* Florida’s Ghostly Legends and Haunted Folklore, by Greg Jenkins.
View of Gulf of Mexico from atop the hotel. |
He came up with a strange
plan to commit suicide and make it look like a murder so his family could
collect insurance money.
He left a rambling recording
of statements that implicated his secretary in the crimes and stated that men
were coming to assassinate him.
He then jumped from one of the
hotel’s balconies, recording his screams as he fell to his death. But this plot
to clear his name and help out his family failed.
The authorities had too much
evidence that pointed to his guilt.
Since this bizarre death,
many witnesses at sunset have seen a middle-aged man walking frantically back
and forth on one hotel balcony.
Several of these people have
called hotel security thinking this man was about to jump. However, in each
instance security guards found no sign of anyone on this balcony.
La Concha Hotel balconies. |
A couple sitting in a room
below this balcony called the front desk in a panic. They reported seeing a
body falling past the window. Afterward, no body was found on the premises.
It appears this dishonest
lawyer is doomed to play out his death over and over again.
This ghost is also seen on
the roof of the hotel.
The La Concha is officially
called Crowne Plaza Key West today, but the old name is still used. A tour of haunted Key West landmarks starts in
the lobby of this hotel.
In Part l of La Concha Hotel, read about the ghost of a hotel waiter who died in an accident on New Year’s Eve.
In Part l of La Concha Hotel, read about the ghost of a hotel waiter who died in an accident on New Year’s Eve.
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