Entertainment
Finding local ghosts
World-renowned
astrologer and psychic Walden Welch tells the story of the ghost
who watches over the Sonoma Hotel.
Photo by Frankin Lee/Index-Tribune
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According to travel
brochures and Web sites, Sonoma is a quaint little town noted for
its historic architecture, its surrounding vineyards and its world-class
spas.
But what lies
beneath may be a darker picture.
Carla Heine, who
bills herself as an authority on Sonoma's haunted sites, tells chilling
tales of what may really have happened, from the Indian ceremonial
bear sacrifices to the Stevenson regiment's massacre of the last surviving
Indians; to the Chinese tunnels and even the old roller rink under
the Mercato, where stock boys say at night they can still hear the
sounds of people skating.
Heine recounts
stories of the famous archeologist Heinrich Schliemann, discoverer
of Mycenae, and Mark Twain, noted journalist and writer, and U. S.
Grant, general and U.S. president, all of whom supposedly bunked at
the Blue Wing Inn.
But the men and
women who spent time at the "Hanging Tree" remain nameless,
although perhaps they left a more enduring impression.
The Hanging Tree
It doesn't look
like much now, with its limbs lopped off every which way to make room
for the paved parking lot and traffic beneath. But according to legend,
this huge oak off First Street East was used for nearly 100 years
as a hanging tree. And according to Heine, on the hottest summer nights
when nothing stirs, it still tells its gruesome tale.

Sonoma Hotel ~ 1881
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"Anyone guilty
of less than a death penalty offense was hung (here) by leather thongs
for three days and three nights," Heine says. Not only that,
but they were given 40 lashes with a cat-o'-nine-tails braided with
twists of barbed wire.
The criminals
were hung by their wrists, not their necks; their toes barely touching
the ground. But, she adds, the punishers were gracious and doled out
the whippings in four sets of 10 lashes to make them more endurable.
Less generous persons might suggest prolonging the pain gave the punishers
more pleasure.
While the criminals
hung from the tree, no one was allowed to come near them, not even
to give them water or medical attention. In the heat of August and
September, many died.
But during the
night, between the hours of, say, midnight and 1 a.m., the mothers
and wives and children would sneak down to the hanging tree and risk
their own lives to keep their loved ones alive - to offer succor and
food and water and comfort.
And to this day,
during the hottest weather - in the months of August and September
- neighbors near the hanging tree say they can hear the crying and
singing and praying of women float in to them through their open windows.
The Vallejo Home
A different kind
of ghost - or ghosts - may haunt the Vallejo house, if the stories
Michelle Kazeminejad hears are true. She is the state parks guide
at Lachryma Montis, the estate of Gen. Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo,
off West Spain Street at Third Street West.
Seven years before
Kazeminejad arrived in 1982, an old groundskeeper tended the gardens
on the estate.
"He claimed
that sometimes a voice would greet him in beautiful fine Spanish very
early in the morning," Kazeminejad said.
She explained
that Vallejo loved his gardens and his trees and would appreciate
someone carefully tending them.
But that's not
the only unusual occurrence.
During restoration
of the house, Kazeminejad was surprised by a carpenter's confession.
He had been working by himself on the roof and came down to confide
in her.
"I feel something
has been interfering with my tools," he said. "And I hear
the laughter of a young person."
It was as if the
young person had been teasing him, moving his tools around, Kazeminejad
said, then laughing over his mischievous prank.
Hotel
Circa 1920
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She doesn't know
whether or not the house is haunted, but she does say she is jealous.
Some years ago the phone rang and a man from Oregon called with a
story of walking into Vallejo's house and feeling his presence.
"I felt I
knew a great deal about him," the man told Kazeminejad.
She, on the other
hand, felt left out. After all, she took care of Vallejo's house and
he didn't talk to her.
Later, she said,
when she went to lock up, "I stood in the entry to the study,
and felt I couldn't move. I felt this odd sensation, as if I was immobilized,
transfixed."
Was it Vallejo,
letting her know he understood?
A remote canyon
ranch
Down one of the
old canyon roads, back where there's still no electricity, lives an
old woman and her companion, their ranch hands in the outbuildings.
The woman, now 94 years old, has lived here for more than half a century.
But her companion is new to the ranch, new to California, and new
to the United States.
Because she is
unfamiliar with clothing fashions for the past 150 years here in California,
it did not seem odd to her to see a little girl in a long dress running
through the house and out the door to the porch, although it was 10
or 11 at night and they lived miles from the nearest neighbors. The
companion assumed the child was visiting one of the ranch hands.
"I was paralyzed
for a moment," she told her friends, "then I went and got
my lantern and went calling her."
But she got no
answer.
Was it a ghost?
her friends asked.
"No, it was
a little girl," the woman insisted.
Maybe. But others
who have visited won't spend the night again. Her daughter, for example,
said, "I'm not going to spend the night up there anymore. I hear
footsteps."
Sonoma Hotel
This quaint hotel
which sits on the historic Plaza in downtown Sonoma may have a permanent
lodger. Many guests have reported to the front desk seeing a janitor
in old-fashioned clothes - a man who died years ago.
Walden Welch,
world famous astrologer and psychic who has served as consultant to
police departments and the FBI, stopped by to check out the story
of this non-paying guest.

Sonoma Hotel ~ 1930
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"First of
all, the name is wrong," he said of the hotel. "I think
it must have once been called the Plaza or Park Plaza, something like
that.
"And I get
the feeling this was not a hotel when it was built. I smell meat.
It was a place to feed people and animals, probably horses."
But the desk clerk
disagreed. The hotel was never named the Plaza; it had never been
a market, and it had nothing to do with horses.
Undaunted, Welch
climbed the stairs to the top floor, where he came up with a name:
Frederick Daniel Ryan, an Irishman in his 30s or early 40s when he
died, with a mustache and long side-burns.
He didn't dress
well and wore a tool belt, said Welch, who had never before heard
of this ghost.
Ryan, he added,
was good-natured, the handyman who maintained these rooms. He loved
the hotel and hated his marriage, so would often stay in an empty
room instead of going home.
One night, he
slept in a room that was being renovated. He fell, hit his head and
died.
"Now he doesn't
want to leave," Welch said. "He loved the place. He doesn't
mean any harm to anybody."
Perhaps it is
Ryan who calls attention to the photos on the second floor, just as
Welch is leaving. There are pictures of the building when it was a
dry goods store and butcher shop. And above a collection of antique
horse shoes hangs a photograph of the hotel around 1920 - the Plaza
Hotel.
Blue Wing Inn
Welch
never saw the ghost who is supposed to inhabit the Sonoma Hotel, but
he did see another apparition, although at the time he didn't know
it was a spirit.
The Blue Wing
Inn on East Spain Street, across from the Mission, was originally
built to house soldiers and later became a gambling saloon and hotel.
It is, according to Heine, California's oldest hotel, complete with
a geothermal aquifer underneath. Legend has it a missing strongbox
from a Wells Fargo Bank stagecoach robbery on Stage Gulch Road was
buried here.
The inn and its
surroundings have fallen into disrepair since the state took over
the property, intending to renovate it, but failing to appropriate
the necessary budget amounts.
But in 1971, the
inn offered tiny but adequate residential apartments with a lovely
back yard for evening parties. Welch attended one of these with his
friend Jeannie, who lived in the inn.
He was sitting
at a table next to the stairs that night when he turned his head to
see a woman in a high-collared, long dress, her hair in a bun, her
feet wrapped in button shoes, climbing the stairs. She was carrying
a candle, something Welch thought odd, since it was still quite light
outside. But then her whole appearance was odd, even to the pink rosebuds
on her dress.
"But this
was the '70s when women wore those granny skirts with the funny shoes,"
he said.
About that time,
one of the other guests excused herself to go up to Jeannie's apartment
to use the bathroom. But Welch suggested she wait as he had just seen
someone else go in.
After a while,
when no one came out, they questioned Welch, who described the woman.
There was a gasp from the others. "You're about the 15th person
who has seen her," Jeannie said, and explained about the Blue
Wing's ghost.
She may have been
a vision, but Welch said she looked as real as anyone there that night.
And maybe she
was.
By Jane Lott
Sonoma Index-Tribune staff writer
Sonoma
Hotel ~ 2004
on Historic Sonoma Plaza
110 West Spain Street
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