
Haunted places in Detroit: The Whitney mansion
Clip: Season 9 Episode 17 | 9m 19sVideo has Closed Captions
One Detroit’s Chris Jordan goes ghost hunting at The Whitney Mansion in Detroit.
The Whitney, a restaurant in a historic Detroit mansion, is also one of the city’s most famously haunted places. The 19th-century mansion of lumber baron David Whitney Jr. has had several deaths on its premises over the years, and guests and employees have shared experiences of encounters with spirits. One Detroit’s Chris Jordan visits The Whitney to learn about its history and go on a ghost hunt
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One Detroit is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

Haunted places in Detroit: The Whitney mansion
Clip: Season 9 Episode 17 | 9m 19sVideo has Closed Captions
The Whitney, a restaurant in a historic Detroit mansion, is also one of the city’s most famously haunted places. The 19th-century mansion of lumber baron David Whitney Jr. has had several deaths on its premises over the years, and guests and employees have shared experiences of encounters with spirits. One Detroit’s Chris Jordan visits The Whitney to learn about its history and go on a ghost hunt
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Once we start it running like this, you let it run for a second, but then we'll start asking questions, hopefully questions that make sense to them, the spirits, something that's relevant.
But if anybody has a question, ask it out loud.
- Do you like that we're up here?
(static buzzing) Do you like that we're up here?
(static buzzing) - [Chris] Chad and Heather Dye are paranormal investigators under the name Dye Paranormal.
They are also the official resident ghost hunters at The Whitney, the 19th Century lumber barons mansion in Detroit, which is now an iconic restaurant, and which has long been said to be haunted.
They invited "One Detroit" to participate in one of their twice a month public ghost tours.
- It's good being the resident investigators because we get to come back to a place that's familiar.
- Mm.
- We get to try some of the same things we've tried before, maybe with a different result.
- Hm.
- Yep.
- But hopefully, if there are spirits here, they get used to seeing us, they'll, you know, maybe know us.
- Mm.
- Maybe that'll give them an opportunity to reach out to us.
- Mm, yeah.
- That's our hope.
- Make them more comfortable, as opposed to just walking into a random space that you've not been in before.
I think that maybe this year we've gotten to a point where they're starting to engage with us more.
(static buzzing) That was loud and clear to me.
- We take people out to the carriage house and we try to recreate some of the things we've done in the past to try and quantify, you know, what's happening out there.
And like I said, we can't make things happen, we can only hope that maybe one of the guests, their vibe, their energy, will cause a spirit to connect with us.
And that's what we're there for, we want to connect in a respectful way to whatever spirits are here, and hopefully get answers from them as to why they're here.
- [Chris] But first, I spoke to The Whitney's house historian, Yvonne Szymczak, to learn more about the building's rich history.
- So, before it was Motor City, it was Lumber City, and David Whitney Jr. was the most successful lumber baron in the state of Michigan.
The Whitney family lived in the house from 1894, when the build was completed, and it was until about 1917 when David Whitney Jr.'s wife, Sarah, had passed, by choice of the Whitney family, they wanted to give it to the Wayne County Medical Association, which they did do.
So that was the next in line, in terms of ownership.
My favorite stories are the ones that come from the people that come here, and I had a gentleman on one of the tours tell me, "I know about this place in a totally different context."
And he said, "My grandfather came here to get a physical so that he could go off to war."
- How does your job as a historian kind of interact with the myths and legends and folklore of this place, being a famously haunted building?
- It validates a lot of things, it opens up a lot of questions.
It just makes things more colorful, it brings things to life, and it gives people names.
You suddenly have names of people that have been here, you know, and it's not just the Whitneys, because this place was a party house.
I mean, this place was wired by Thomas Edison, this place has seen a lot of notable people pass through it.
- So you're the resident historian, we're also here with the resident paranormal investigators, how do different worlds interface?
- Our stories intertwine because there's so much of that history that backs up a lot of those stories that lead people to ask, "Hey, who haunts this place?"
I mean, obviously we think David Whitney Jr., but why?
He died in his bedroom.
This is something that people are really intrigued with and they often say, "I can feel that, I can feel that in this room."
It gives them something to hang onto.
- We know for a fact from our research, three people have died in the house.
- [Chris] Mm.
- We don't know if anybody died during the construction of the house.
- [Chris] Mm.
- We know David Whitney Jr. died in the house, in his bedroom.
After he had passed, it's believed that Sarah, his wife, moved in her brother and parents for a short time.
- Hm.
- Her brother, John McLaughlin, died in the house, on property.
- Mm.
- And then of course, she died after like an 18 month illness being bedridden.
- We are always exchanging stories and photographs and videos and EVPs, and it all makes sense because as you talk about the story of the house, and the story spans from 1894 to now, that ghost storytelling culture has been such a part of it.
- The carriage house is where a lot of the paranormal activity is said to happen.
What's the history of why that would be?
What's the history of the carriage house?
- One of the youngest daughters, Catherine, did take care of orphans, and there's connection somewhere in there having to do with the sound of children's voices.
- We have an EVP, audio capture electronic voice phenomenon, for those who don't know, of a guest asking, "Would you like me to get out of your seat?"
And I was wearing headphones and I heard, "Yes."
Whispered.
Nobody else heard it, because I was running my audio recorder with my headphones on, so I said, "Who said 'yes'?"
And I'm looking at the crowd thinking somebody's pulling my leg, and they're all like, "What are you talking about?
What do you mean?"
And I hear, "I said yes."
Underneath it.
- Can you say hello, Felix?
- [Chris] What are the tools that you use?
- I always tell everyone that you yourself are your primary tool.
- Mm.
- What you feel in a space, the energy that you pick up, you know, did it change, did it shift, did the temperature drop?
And then the first tool most people buy when they're investigating is a digital voice recorder, which gathers audio evidence.
We use equipment that detects electromagnetic fields, we use spirit boxes that are basically transistor radios that are broken to run through white noise so that the spirits can manipulate it.
- [Chris] The spirit box white noise radio, locked in a faraday cage to prevent interference from ordinary radio waves, is what my colleague, Andrea Riley, used to ask the spirits in The Whitney carriage house if they were happy we were there.
Both of us and our colleague, Leland Stein, all independently reported hearing a girl's voice say, "No."
- Do you like that we're up here?
(static buzzing) - [Chris] A trick of audio and imagination, or potentially a paranormal encounter?
This electromagnetic field sensor goes off when the field around it is disturbed, it went off when Chad was alone in the room and we were filming next door.
(sensor beeping) - What?
- What was that?
- That was REM pod going off.
(footsteps thudding) If you're here with us, can you touch that again?
No, I just, I reached for the the candle- - Oh.
- To put it in the bag.
(sensor beeping) There it is.
Thank you for touching that again.
If you get closer to it, all the lights will come on.
(sensor beeping) - Hey.
- Oh.
- [Chris] See, it's going off again.
- [Chris] Oh, whoa, whoa.
Was the sensor sent off by a spirit trying to communicate?
That will remain a mystery, perhaps "One Detroit"'s contribution to The Whitney's tradition of ghost stories and folklore, which is so interwoven with the building's rich history.
- If you're looking for an authentic experience, and stories, and history, go on a paranormal investigation.
And once you've been on a paranormal investigation and you've enthralled yourself in that environment, then you can truly say that you've been a part of something that isn't manufactured and isn't commercialized.
We are authentic and genuine, and we want that to be your experience.
(bugs chirping)
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