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Overnight Paranormal Investigation at The Admiral Peary Inn

By AFTERLIFE PARANORMAL TOURS AND EVENTS (other events)

Sat, Nov 23 2024 6:00 PM EST Sun, Nov 24 2024 9:00 AM EST
 
ABOUT ABOUT

FIND OUT WHAT IT'S LIKE TO BE A REAL PARANORMAL INVESTIGATOR! 

JOIN AFTERLIFE PARANORMAL FOR A UNIQUE INTIMATE PARANORMAL EVENT AND PSYCHIC READING GALLERY WITH PSYCHIC MEDIUM CHRISTOPHER BROWN!

 ONLY 7 TICKETS AVAILABLE! PRIVATE ROOM FOR YOU AND A GUEST, LIGHT DINNER, REAL GHOST HUNT WITH PARANMORMAL EQUIPMENT IN YOUR HANDS. ONE OF MAINE'S MOST HAUNTED LOCATIONS! A PARANORMAL GOODIE BAG INCLUDED!

The Admiral Peary Inn Haunted History

A woman is seen in the windows of the Admiral Quarter's. Her name is believed to be Abigail. We have captured whistling in this room.

A young slave boy believed to be named Nathan likes to play in the secret passage from Panama to Florence. We have had several experiences with him in Florence room.

The hallway next to Koyoto room we captured a thermal image of a man standing in hall.

In the koyoto room we have experienced banging noises and objects moving

The Panama room we have experienced voices, and major equipment malfunctions.

The Admiral Peary Inn History

Robert Edwin Peary was born in Cresson, Pennsylvania, on 6 May 1856, son of Charles N. and Mary P. Peary. At the age of three, his father died, and his mother took him to Portland, Maine, where he spent his boyhood. He graduated second in his class from Bowdoin College in 1877 with the degree of Civil Engineer. He lived at the Admiral Peary Inn from 1877 to 1881. He was the town curator, a taxidermist, and justice of the peace. He then spent the next few years employed as a draftsman in the Coast and Geodetic Survey offices in Washington, DC, and he entered the Naval service as a Civil Engineer, USN, with the rank of Lieutenant, on 26 October 1881. He was promoted to Lieutenant Commander on 5 January 1901 and to Commander 6 April 1902.

His first notable Naval Assignment consisted, oddly enough, of tropical duty. He later returned to the tropics when he led a party that surveyed a route for the proposed Nicaraguan Canal. It was not until after this that he became interested in the far north, and in April 1886 he was granted six months' leave of absence to lead an expedition to Greenland, where he recorded important ethnological and meteorological observations.

During the next twenty-three years, he led various expeditions into the north. On some of these journeys, Peary was accompanied by his wife, formerly Josephine Diebietsch, whom he married in 1888, and their children. The first attempt to reach the North Pole was carried out over a period of four years, from 1898 to 1902, when a point 343 miles from the pole was reached. Four years later, in 1906, he steamed northward on the USS Roosevelt, a sturdy ship built to his own design, which crushed its way to the shores of the Polar Sea, from which he marched to a point only 174 miles from the pole.

His third polar attempt, and his eighth and last expedition into the north (sponsored by the Peary Arctic Club, and later investigated and approved by the National Geographic Society), was crowned with success on 6 April 1909. Exactly 23 years from the day Peary left the Navy Department for his first exploration journey, he reached the north geographical pole of the earth, not in the supposed Polar Continent, but a point in the ice-covered Arctic Sea. This was the expedition that achieved what no previous human had ever accomplished.

 

**EACH TICKET IS FOR 2 PEOPLE PER ROOM**