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Page UPDATED on 1/20/08 - Keep the questions and stories coming - they will be addressed!
Add your story or respond to the ones posted by eMailing me!
| Title: St. Sava's Serbian Monastary | Date Submitted: 10/22/08 |
| Location of Haunting: St. Sava's Serbian Monastary, Libertyville, Il | Date of Haunting: n/a |
Question: Can you please tell me a quick summary of the ghost story of St. Sava in Libertyville. I can't find that information anywhere. I appreciate any information you can give. Thanks. --Tina Response from Slim Pictures: When writing the book, "Voices from the Chicago Grave," I was very excited to come across some first-hand ghost stories about St. Sava's, because I hadn't heard of any stories about the location. To give you a good feel of the stories without going into great detail (these stories alone are worth buying the book), I'll tell you that there are a lot of similarities with the Resurrection Mary stories. One involves a driver striking a ghost (she thought was a person at the time) while driving down Milwaukee Avenue, and the other involves a nearby hotel worker encountering a ghost in the lobby the disappeared after a long and strange conversation. Two people witnessed each encounter. The stories are pretty creepy in their entriety - I usually get goosebumps when telling them. |
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| Title: 2 Lesser Known Hauntings | Date Submitted: 7/28/04 & 7/30 |
| Location of Haunting: St. Mary's Convent, Libertyville, Il & Alcyon Theater, Highland Park, Il | Date of Haunting: (ongoing) |
Story: It's a real
long-shot case to investigate because there isn't much to the haunting
activity; usually only the workers know of it: The "Lady in Red"
at the old Alcyon Theater (now the Highland Park Theater). She walks down
the right-hand balcony aisle and if anyone makes fun of her, she gets
back at them by playing pranks; when I worked there, we heard a loud noise
like the sound of a boiler pinging (the theater has no boiler) in the
main theater. We found nothing when we walked the aisles and when we apologized
for the disturbance to the moviegoers, no one had heard a sound!! The
Alcyon was a Vaudeville theater so we felt that she had simply returned
to happy memories after she died. Perhaps the owner might have more information,
I don't know. Might be worth looking into. Response from Slim Pictures: Great stories! Thanks for your submissions. The tale about Alcyon Theater is a new one to me, but sounds very much like stories I've heard about the Woodstock Opera House in Woodstock, Il. Seems there are a few actresses out there waiting for one last curtain call. I'd be interested in hearing anything more you might find out about St. Mary's Convent. Libertyville already has more than its fair share of hauntings (St. Sava's Serbian Monastary, "The Gate," plus several haunted houses), and I'm sure the best stories haven't been told yet. Please do keep us posted! Reply: Where's St. Sava's?? One quick question about the Gate.....when you did your research, did you find any concrete evidence of a school having been there (like an old map, church records, etc.) and if you found a diocese it belonged to, which one? Someone challenged me to find out about the REAL place (not the ghost story) and I've had bum luck finding any factual evidence. I do plan to purchase your book and DVD this coming week (payday) to hear more of the ghost stories of The Gate! response from Slim Pictures (2): First off, St. Sava's is on Route 21 (Milwaukee Ave) near to the border of Gurnee. You can practically see Six Flags from the driveway. (it's covered in the book - that story alone will be worth the pay day you have coming up! It's one of my personal favorites...still gives me chills!) Next, some of the research on "The Gate" came from Ursula Bielski's "More Chicago Haunts." When I lived in Mundelein I was in the unique position of giving speeches about haunted sites near to where the sites actually were. Often, after a speech people would come up to me telling me of their experiences. When giving one speech in Libertyville, a man came to me and told me that when he bought an older used car, a sign was left in the trunk. The sign was for the orphanage that was back in that area. It also helps that my family was among the first to settle in Lake County, so after all these years, the family has accumulated quite a bit of local history knowledge. I also got testimony from a woman living next to "The Gate," who could vouch for the hauntings from her own accounts. I have a lot of confidence in Ursula Bielski's research, she is one of the best in the business at finding historical fact. |
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Add your story or respond to the ones posted by eMailing me!
* Location is covered in the book/CD-ROM Voices
from the Chicago Grave.
** Location is also covered in the DVD, "Voices
from the Grave."