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Old Ohio Governor's Mansion

Old Ohio Governor's Mansion paranormal

Photo by: Wdzinc via Wikipedia
Location submitted by: sdonley on 02/16/2015
DBA Approved: Y


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PANICd#: 1360

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The Old Governor's Mansion at 1234 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio, was built in 1904. Also known as Ohio Archives Building or as Charles H. Lindenberg Home, the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972

1234 East Broad Street
Columbus , OH 43205
Phone: 614-251-4000
Open to the public: Unknown

https://columbusfoundation.org/

Lat: 39.9661378
Lon: -82.96808229999999

Database Summary:

Demographic Rank: 6
History: 1
Stories: 2
Claims: 4
Evidence: 0
Resources: 2
Retrievals: 3365
Vistor Rating: 0.0
Votes: 0

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History

History information is some background and history about the location. This is meant to be a basic summary. Below the history records you will find sources in which you can click on to find out more information. There may be multiple history records per location.


Around the turn-of-the-century, E. Broad Street was the place to build mansions for the well-to-do. East Broad Street became "the major residential corridor and east-west axis in Columbus during Broad Street's major period of growth and development from the mid-nineteenth century to the mid-1930s."

In 1904, this Neo-Georgian, eclectic brick and stone mansion, designed by well-known architect Frank Packard was built, soon to be right next door to buggy and tire manufacture Joseph Firestone's mansion, that was built two years later, in 1906.

From 1904-1920, this brick and stone masterpiece was home to entrepreneur, newspaperman Charles Lindenburg, who was also president of the Lillia Regalia Co., which produced flags and bunting.

In 1920 the state of Ohio bought Lindenburg's mansion, turning it into their state residence for future governors. After 37 years of service, to 10 governors, it again was put on the housing market when a new governor's mansion, known as The Ohio Governor's Residence and Heritage Garden was built in the suburbs of Columbus, in Bexley, Ohio.

The mansion was zoned for commercial use, and a variety of businesses moved in, including an event venue business, a restaurant, and a hair salon. The Ohio Historical Society also used this mansion as their headquarters at some point in time. The building stood empty, between various businesses.

Then, The Columbus Landmarks Foundation bought this property, and made it their headquarters for a number of years, stabilizing its condition. However, the maintenance needs alone for this turn-of-the-century mansion must have been a chunk of change, and the neighborhood was in need of revitalization. To fully restore this old structure would be even more expensive, a tall order to fill for a non-profit organization, who also have other historical buildings to raise funds for, and help save.

Sometime in the late 1990s, The Columbus Landmarks Foundation put this structure on the market, with the hopes of finding a buyer who would be wiling to do a restoration. A non-profit organization, Columbus Foundation, who helps people give wisely to philanthropic causes, bought this 1904 fixer-upper opportunity, to be their new headquarters in this funky part of town, in need of restoration and renewal.

A few years later in 1999, The Columbus Foundation bought the grand old dame, the Joseph Firestone Mansion from their neighbor, an architect, who had hoped that the foundation would be wiling to restore this house as well.

Columbus Foundation did indeed fulfill their promise in restoring and renovating the public spaces of the Old Governor's Mansion/Lindenburg House in 2007, and probably doing the needed maintenance of the other non-public spaces, to the tune of a million dollars.

However, the long in the tooth Joseph Firestone Mansion wasn't so lucky. Columbus Foundation wound up tearing it down to make room for their expansion project, "to help us to better serve our donors and the community."

The Columbus Foundation did meet with a committee of experts from the Columbus Landmarks Foundation and other interested parties, and considered their plans to make this mansion commercially feasible, but decided against it. It would've cost $2.5 million to restore it, about 4 times the worth of the house and land. "The house's structure made it too impractical and expensive to be converted to meet the foundation's needs."

Though the Columbus Foundation is considered to be dastardly villains for tearing down this mansion, they did restore the old Governor's Mansion/Lindenburg House, and will also tear down the tobacco road quality gas station, located on the other side of the Firestone Mansion, ridding the neighborhood of a ghastly eye-sore!

Added by: sdonley on 07/30/2017 DB#:307
Source(s):
http://www.hauntedhouses.com/states/oh/ohio_mansio...


Stories

Stories are just that. Stories and personal accounts that have been reported about the location.


Ohio's governors lived in this big house on Columbus's East Broad Street from 1920 to 1957. Since then it has been a party house, restaurant, hair salon, and headquarters of the Columbus Landmarks Foundation at different times.

Strange smells fill the Governor's Mansion--described as being like burning hair--and pictures have been known to jump off of walls. A black woman in a blue dress, a nineteenth century maid, has been seen wandering the halls. She even spoke to an employee once, telling her that she was happy the building was being renovated instead of standing empty as it before. I wonder if she's still there.

Added by: sdonley on 07/30/2017 DB#:1259
Source(s):
http://www.forgottenoh.com/Counties/Franklin/gover...


One known female spirit has made this mansion her eternal home.

The female entity of a maid, or perhaps a housekeeper, dressed in turn-of-the-century clothing befitting her station has been seen wandering the halls and rooms of the mansion, going about her business, while keeping an eye on the living.

This female apparition is clearly seen as a black woman who is dressed in a blue dress, in various parts of the mansion.

The living throughout the years have smelled the unmistakable odor of burning hair/and probably flesh.

This entity is more than an impression and is an active spirit who has taken an interest in the mansion's decor and renovation/maintenance work done throughout the years.

She has been known to take pictures off walls she didn't like.

She appeared in full form in front of a staff member/employee and spoke to this person, expressing how happy she was with the renovations being done on the mansion.

Added by: sdonley on 07/30/2017 DB#:1260
Source(s):
http://www.hauntedhouses.com/states/oh/ohio_mansio...


Paranormal Claims

Here are the paranormal claims for this location. These have been found through Internet research, reports from members, or reports from personal interviews. To add a claim, please contact PANICd.com, and we will review and add your information.


Claim # Added Added By Claim
2454 07/30/2017 sdonley The apparition of a women in period clothing has been seen throughout the mansion.
2455 07/30/2017 sdonley Reports of the smell of burning hair or flesh has been reported.
2456 07/30/2017 sdonley Pictures have been removed from the walls.
2457 07/30/2017 sdonley An apparition has communicated with a former employee.

Paranormal Evidence

Paranormal evidence is based on claims that have been reported for this location. There can be several types of evidence; however, we have grouped them based on media type for better organization. Here you will find evidence that are logs, audio, video, or photographic.

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No Evidence Reported Yet!

Additional Resources

This is a collection of Internet resources for this location. This section will house links to other websites that contain information related to history, claims, investigations, or even the location's website.


HauntedHouses.com Records
Added: 02/16/2015 By: sdonley
Find the haunted Ohio Governor Mansion at HauntedHouses.com.
Wikipedia Entry
Added: 07/30/2017 By: sdonley
Wikipedia entry for this location.

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