Chilling Facts About The Mansions Of Disturbed Minds


Some people have too much money and too little sense, but these mansions, castles, and stately abodes take that maxim to a deranged level. Whether it’s a tragic love story, a secret obsession, or a paranoid urge, each and every one of these buildings built by the rich and reckless has a bizarre origin story. Open the door to these 42 chilling facts about the bizarre mansions owned by some of the most disturbed minds in history.


Creepy Mansions Facts

1. This Ain’t No Fairy Tale

Imagine you’re Mad King Ludwig II of Bavaria. You’re a recluse, a little unhinged, and you have tons of money at your disposal. Time to make an enormous fairy tale castle, right? Ludwig thought so, anyway. The beautiful, daunting Neuschwanstein Castle in Germany is his beloved brainchild—but it has a very dark history.

 Flickr

2. Theatre Kid

Ludwig was obsessed with the mythical operas of Richard Wagner and built the castle as a super weird shrine to the nationalistic composer. Accordingly, the king designed all the architecture and décor in a medieval style, as if he was a knight in his very own storybook. Then he took the whole thing up a big, creepy notch.

 Pixabay

3. Wink-Wink, Nudge-Nudge

Ludwig wrote to Wagner and dropped the not-so-subtle hint that he wanted Wagner to stay in the castle with him as a cherished friend. In his words, “You know the revered guest I would like to accommodate there.” Sadly, it was all doomed to a heartbreaking end. Wagner died in 1883, and never actually visited Ludwig’s monument to him.

 Wikimedia Commons

4. Can You Say: Iconic?

Neuschwanstein’s romantic architecture inspired Disneyland’s famous Sleeping Beauty Castle.

 Flickr

5. Prince to a Pauper

The castle eventually became Ludwig’s ruin. In a good-guy king move, he only used his own personal funds to build the castle rather than draining Bavaria’s coffers. In an “Oh yeah, he has zero self-control” move, Ludwig spent almost every penny on the palace. Then, when his creditors tried to seize the castle, he threatened to commit suicide.

 Wikimedia Commons

6. Storming the Castle

In the end, Mad King Ludwig went down with his ship—er, castle. Frustrated with their king’s unhinged, irresponsible spending, the Bavarian government deposed him in the summer of 1886. In an ironic twist, he had only been living in his beloved castle for a mere 172 days when they came to take him into custody.

Ludwig tried desperately to stop it, even ordering guards to surround his castle to defend him, but it was no use. Then, the story took an even darker turn.

 Wikimedia Commons

7. A Mystery for the Ages

A Bavarian official named Bernhard von Gudden and his men dragged Ludwig kicking and screaming from his palace on June 11, 1886, and secured him in the nearby Berg Castle. Shockingly, just two days later both von Gudden and Ludwig were dead; they went for an evening walk on June 13 and never returned. What happened? Well…

 Wikimedia Commons

8. Happily Never After

When attendants found the men’s bodies, they were floating in the shallow waters of Berg Castle’s lake. To this day, no one knows how exactly they got there. They may have drowned, but this seems unlikely. Another, more disturbing theory suggests that enemies shot at Ludwig, with von Gudden getting caught in the crossfire.

Either way, it was a dark ending for the fairy-tale king.

 Pixabay

9. #Winning With Winchester

Is there anything creepier than a haunted mansion? Well, if you’re the infamous Winchester Mystery House, yes. For a time, Sarah Winchester had it all: She was married to firearm magnate William Winchester, she had a new baby, and they had a butt-load of money on the east coast of America. Then one day, it all came crashing down.

 Flickr

10. Riches to Miss

By 1881, Sarah’s husband died of tuberculosis, and her baby had wasted away from the childhood illness marasmus. On the upside, she was now the sole owner of a fabulous fortune. Grieving, lost, and super-rich, Lady Winchester reportedly went to a medium for guidance—and got some strange advice that changed her life forever.

 Wikimedia Commons

11. Seer Says

According to some sources, the clairvoyant told Sarah Winchester that she was actually…being haunted by all the victims of her husband’s rifles? No, really. Even more bizarrely, the medium told Winchester that she had to travel west and perpetually build a mansion to house both herself and the spirits who were haunting her.

Well, let me tell you, the house that Sarah built was one wild ride.

 Shutterstock

12. The House on Haunted Hill

For almost 38 years, Sarah continuously built up her mansion at 525 South Winchester Road with different rooms, hallways, staircases, stained-glass windows, alcoves, and the like. Construction was so frantic that inside the house, there are even stairs that go to nowhere and windows uselessly overlooking other rooms.

 Shutterstock

13. I Like to Move It Move It

Many people believe the mansion’s twisting insides were meant to keep the vengeful ghosts confused, and Winchester went to great lengths to defend herself. The whole house only had one working bathroom for Sarah herself; the rest acted as decoys to keep the ghosts off her scent. Sarah also insisted on sleeping in a different bedroom every night, living in fear that specters would finally catch up to her.

 Flickr

14. A Room of One’s Own

Winchester died on September 5, 1922, with many parts of her desperate house still unfinished. To this day, there are rooms in the Winchester Mystery House that no member of the public has ever seen—and perhaps never will.

 Flickr

15. Let Me Slip Into Something More Comfortable

When burgeoning business tycoon and eccentric billionaire William Randolph Hearst inherited the humble plot of land in San Simeon where his family used to go glamping, he commissioned architect Julia Morgan to build “something a little more comfortable up on the hill." She certainly did. The result was today’s infamous Hearst Castle—and the stones have stories to tell.

 Pixabay

16. A Den of Sin

William Randolph Hearst had originally intended the “humble” Hearst Castle abode as a family home for his wife Millicent and their sons, but he ended up using it for a much more scandalous purpose. By 1925, he and Millicent were married only in name, and Hearst took up with his long-time, notorious mistress, the actress Marion Davies.

Suddenly, Hearst Castle was the destination place for Hollywood. The illicit power couple hosted the likes of Cary Grant and Charlie Chaplin at their raucous parties.

 Getty Images

17. Harder, Better, Faster, Bigger

Hearst Castle was under almost constant construction; even as Hearst and Davies hosted their famous parties, Julia Morgan was building ever more extensions, rooms, theatres, tennis courts, swimming pools, and guest houses.

 Flickr

18. The Great Accumulator

One art dealer called Hearst “The Great Accumulator,” and he more than lived up to the name. Even as a young boy, he was an obsessive collector, and Hearst Castle became his enormous display case. He bought antiques, textiles, you name it, all on a massive scale, and wanted to make Hearst Castle “a museum of the best things that I can secure.”

 Wikimedia Commons, B. M. Clinedinst

19. The Hollywood Treatment

Hearst and his mighty castle were the focus of Orson Welles’ classic movie Citizen Kane. In the film, Hearst Castle is appropriately re-named “Xanadu.” Not everyone was a fan of the film, though: Hearst despised the portrayal and worked tirelessly to get the film banned from Hollywood.

 Wikimedia Commons

20. American Royalty

Though Colorado is better known for its high mountains and deep forests, it also has its very own castle—and an eccentric mind to go with it. Bishop Castle, just off Highway 165, is named after its creator, Jim Bishop. Sure, it’s got all the strange rooms and medieval architecture you’d expect of a castle. But it also has a bizarre history.

 Flickr

21. A House of God-darn You

Jim Bishop was a blunt, loud, and tough-talking man who transformed a proposed cottage into a towering oddity. But when he and his wife were both diagnosed with cancer in 2014-15, his friend David Merrill committed the ultimate betrayal. After the Bishops made him a trustee of their house, Merrill went and turned it into...a church. Yep.

The outspoken Bishops were not pleased and spent the next few years both battling cancer and trying to get Merrill’s name off the lease.

 Flickr

22. The Latvian Lunatic

If you think Stonehenge is creepy, get a load of Coral Castle. At the turn of the century, infamous Latvian weirdo Edward Leedskalnin got rejected by his 16-year-old fiancée. Uh, the day before their wedding. Well, Eddie dealt with this like every other sane person would: He fled to America to lick his wounds—and then got really into occult construction.

 Wikimedia Commons

23. Faith Healing

According to Leedskalnin himself, he contracted tuberculosis on the way over to America from Latvia but miraculously healed himself. How? Oh, just magnets. You know, the healing properties of magnets. Apparently inspired by this “miracle” to do great things, Leedskalnin started work on what we now know as Coral Castle…which is where things got very creepy very fast.

 Wikipedia

24. Do My Eyes Deceive Me?

Leedskalnin purchased land in the then-super remote Florida City, AKA the middle of nowhere. While working on the castle, he demanded to build it all with his own hands, by himself and refused to let anyone see his work. Reportedly, a group of teenagers once managed to sneak in to take a peek—and what they saw made their blood run cold.

According to their eyewitness accounts, Leedskalnin somehow got the blocks of coral he was building with to float.

 Wikimedia Commons

25. What, This Old Thing?

Though many people asked, Leedskalnin never told anyone how he had built the castle by himself. He only admitted to using a “perpetual motion holder,” which is no help at all—no offense, Ed. Sometimes when visitors pressed him to reveal his construction secrets, he apparently only shrugged and said, “It’s not difficult if you know how.”

 Needpix

26. Location, Location, Location

True to his weirdo roots, Leedskalnin actually once moved the whole castle—yep, the whole thing—from Florida City to near Miami. He was apparently fed up with people trying to sneak in and find out his secrets, so he picked up and moved the whole kit and caboodle in order to protect his well-guarded, occult methods.

 Needpix

27.  Chez Ed’s

Leedskalnin called his original structure in Florida City “Ed’s Place,” a shockingly original and innovative name that might give you some sense of exactly who it is we’re dealing with here. Moreover, though we now call the final structure Coral Castle, Leedskalnin originally named the second location “Rock’s Gate.”

 Wikipedia

28. Ex Hex

Whenever anyone asked Leedskalnin why he had decided to so suddenly build this castle, he’d always enigmatically respond that it was for his “Sweet Sixteen.” Though many experts now believe this was a reference to his teenaged ex-fiancée and his unrequited love for her, no one ever figured out the truth for sure.

 Wikimedia Commons

29. A Family Affair

The Waldorf Astoria in New York. Just those words conjure luxury, elegance, and more money than you can shake a fist at. But underneath the hotel’s gilded exterior lies a dark, dirty history. The original Waldorf-Astoria was actually two separate hotels: The Waldorf and the Astoria—and they came out of a bitter family feud.

 Wikimedia Commons

30. Not-So Sweet Caroline

In the late 19th century, fancypants realtor William Waldorf Astor had an old mansion just lying around on Fifth Avenue and 33rd street in Manhattan, so he decided to construct a hotel instead. Why exactly did he choose to build a hotel? Petty revenge, of course. He was ticked with his aunt Caroline Astor, who just so happened to own the mansion next to his.

What better payback than ruining her morning view with a big honking hotel?  Of course, once he actually built The Waldorf, things got even more interesting…

 Wikipedia

31. There Goes the Neighborhood

Hilariously, when The Waldorf Hotel first opened, high society New Yorkers absolutely despised it and actively laughed at it. Dyed-in-the-wool Manhattanites thought the tacky behemoth really brought down the neighborhood, and its excessive number of bathrooms earned it the scornful nickname “Astor’s Folly.”  Um, obviously, this opinion did not prevail.

 Wikipedia

32. That’s Mrs. Astor to YOU

The specifics of William’s feud with Aunt Caroline are straight out of the “spoiled rich kids” playbook. Waldorf’s wife Mary and his Auntie Caroline were actually locked in a battle of wills about who could use the illustrious title of “Mrs. Astor” in high society. Seriously, that’s it. You know you love me, XOXO, 19th-century Gossip Girl.

 Wikimedia Commons

33. Seeing Double

The Waldorf opened its sleek doors in March 1893 and eventually became the toast of New York Society—until Waldorf’s cousin and rival John Jacob Astor IV said “hold my beer, cuz,” and started trying to build his own Astoria hotel…right next door. Naturally, this hotel was even bigger, with more rooms and an even more ornate ballroom.

Luckily, the family worked out their differences and soon made provisions to create the conjoined Waldorf-Astoria of today. Aw, I love it when families get along.

 Wikimedia Commons

34. Vlad to the Bone

These days, the terrifying Vlad the Impaler—AKA the supposed inspiration for Dracula—is synonymous with blood, terror, and…you know, impaling tons of people on stakes. But try being alive while he was still around. While re-building his Poenari Castle in Romania, Vlad supposedly forced women and children to take part in the construction or else face execution.

 Wikimedia Commons

35. Golden Boy

Maybe on the surface, the Sun King Louis XIV seems stable, what with his long reign and fancy name. But don’t be fooled: When it comes to Louis, all that glitters is gonzo. This megalomaniacal king not only put more and more power into his own hands, he also turned the Palace of Versailles from a hunting lodge into an architectural spectacle that would make even Liberace say, “Whoa, too much, dude.”

 Pxfuel

36. Don’t Stop and Smell the Roses

The gardens of Versailles are world-famous, but in its heyday as a royal residence, the palace blooms smelled so strongly, they apparently made guests sick to their stomach.

 Wikimedia Commons

37. Mirror, Mirror

When Louis XIV built the exquisite Hall of Mirrors at Versailles, he had to tempt away Venetian glassmakers—a move that greatly angered Venice, who wanted to have a monopoly on glassmaking. In a disturbing bid to keep their secrets, the Venetian government actively spied on their workers and threatened them with bodily harm if they ever spilled the beans to outsiders.

 Wikipedia

38. Cold Comfort

The main dining hall in Versailles was so enormous that during big dinners, the servants couldn’t even walk from the kitchen to King Louis XIV’s seat without his food getting cold.

 Wikimedia Commons

39. Holmes on Homes

Notorious killer and con artist H.H. Holmes had something of an entrepreneurial streak in him. When he set up his hunting grounds during the lead-up to the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago, Holmes started building the pleasant little lodge we know today as “The Murder Castle.” Unfortunately, the structure is even more horrific than its name.

 Wikimedia Commons

40. Uh, Oops?

Holmes bought the lot for his dark venture in 1887 and claimed he wanted to use it as a hotel for the upcoming Fair. He quickly hired multiple builders and developers, only to steal their materials for his own “use” and then claim that he had misplaced them. That way, no one knew what was going on in the building…until 1894, when investigators searched it and found a house of horrors.

 Wikimedia Commons

41. A Beast Unleashed

The true extent of Holmes’ villainy was immediately evident once people got a look at his macabre castle. He had soundproofed rooms, labyrinthine hallways, and false walls leading to secret passageways. Those early investigators were utterly shocked at what they had uncovered—but it got so much worse than that.

 Pexels

42. The Rooms of Special Purpose

Among the most chilling features of H.H. Holmes’ crowning “glory” were chutes that plummeted down to a basement filled with vats of acid and airtight rooms into which he could pump noxious gas. Need I say what he actually did with these rooms? To this day, no one knows how many of his victims perished within the castle’s walls.

 Flickr

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14