|
||||||
Haunted Vogue Theater HollywoodGhost Sightings of School Children and Former Employees
Before the Vogue Theater was built, it was the site of an elementary school and a textile factory which both burned down. These tragic events have caused ghostly activity
The Vogue Theater is located on Hollywood Boulevard just east of Highland in the center of historic Hollywood. At the end of the 19th century, the street was known as Prospect Avenue. A four-room school house called Prospect Elementary originally stood on the site but it burned down in 1901. Twenty-five students and the teacher, known as Miss Elizabeth, perished in the fire. The Vogue was built at the site of the school playground. For a few brief years after the school burned down, a textile factory was built on the Site and it burned down. In 1934, plans were drawn up to construct the Vogue Theater. History of the Vogue TheaterThe Vogue was opened on July 16th, 1936 as a one-floor movie house which had seating capacity for 890 people. Fox West Coast Theaters ran the Vogue until it was purchased by Mann Theaters in the early 1990s. The Vogue closed in 1995 but was rented by the International Society for Paranormal Research (ISPR) in 1997 as a research site and as a venue for psychic performances. The Vogue was also used as a location for various films but closed its doors in December 2001. Ghosts of the Vogue Theater
The four-year study by the ISPR was the longest running scientific paranormal study ever conducted at a haunted location in the world. When the ISPR finished their stay at the Vogue Theater in December 2001, they claimed to have cleared the property of seven resident ghosts. Sources:
Related Articles on Ghosts and Hauntings in Hollywood:Haunted Graumanns’ Chinese Theater Hollywood Forever Cemetery Ghosts Haunted Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel
The copyright of the article Haunted Vogue Theater Hollywood in Ghosts & Hauntings is owned by Maureen K. Fleury. Permission to republish Haunted Vogue Theater Hollywood in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||