Mugshot Mysteries
You are lying in a hospital bed on a hilltop above Louisville in 1932. Every window in the building is open, because your doctors believe freezing air is medicine, and there is actual snow on your blanket. You have tuberculosis. You have been here for months, maybe years, and you cannot leave. Every few days, someone on your floor stops coughing, and you have learned that the silence means they are dead. You never see the bodies go. Five hundred feet below you, a tunnel with a motorized cart carries them down the hill and out of sight. The staff calls it the supply tunnel. Everyone else calls it the body chute. This week on Mugshot Mysteries, Kathryn and Gabriel walk Waverly Hills Sanatorium, the most investigated haunted building in America, and use it to ask a harder question: why do we believe the dead can linger, and what does the science actually say? We start with the history, because the haunting is downstream of a catastrophe. At the turn of the twentieth century tuberculosis was the leading cause of death in the United States, and Louisville, sitting in the damp Ohio River Valley, had one of the worst rates in the country. We trace the sanatorium from its 1910 origins to the massive 1926 building, the open-air "fresh air" cure, the brutal escalation to artificial pneumothorax and rib-removing thoracoplasty, the self-contained quarantine city with its own zip code, and the roughly six thousand documented deaths, not the wildly inflated sixty thousand you will see online. We cover the body chute, the disputed legend of Room 502, the building's grim second life as the Woodhaven geriatric center, and its abandonment. Then we do the part most ghost shows skip. We lay out the skeptic's toolkit in full: pareidolia, confirmation bias, Terror Management Theory, carbon monoxide, and infrasound, the Vic Tandy discovery that sound below human hearing can vibrate the eyeball and manufacture dread and shadow figures. And then we lay out the believer's evidence with equal seriousness: Dr. Sam Parnia's AWARE studies on awareness during cardiac arrest, and the University of Virginia's decades of research into young children who report verifiable memories of past lives. We sit in the uncomfortable middle, and we introduce ostension, the idea that walking into a legend with a camera makes you a participant in it. Finally, we walk the floors. The baking bread no oven is making. The blonde woman strangers describe identically. Timmy and the rolling ball on the third floor. The Creeper on the fourth. The running nurse and the singing children on the roof who were brought up there to be healed and were not. Six thousand people died here in agony. If any building on earth has earned the right to be haunted, it is this one. This is Waverly Hills. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: Records of the Board of Tuberculosis Hospital of Louisville and Jefferson County and the history of the Waverly Hills property, including its naming after Sir Walter Scott's Waverley novels and the schoolteacher Lizzie Lee Harris; architectural history of the 1926 main building designed by D.X. Murphy; filed death-certificate records dating to 1911 and the death-toll estimate of approximately six thousand attributed to former assistant medical director Dr. J. Frank Stewart, including the single-year peak of 152 deaths; medical-historical sources on tuberculosis, the "White Plague," and period treatments including heliotherapy, artificial pneumothorax, and thoracoplasty; Schatz, A., and Waksman, S., the 1943 discovery of streptomycin and the 1946 to 1948 trials establishing it as an effective tuberculosis antibiotic; the sanatorium's 1961 closure, its 1962 to 1982 operation as the Woodhaven Geriatric Center, and the building's purchase and restoration by Charlie and Tina Mattingly in 2001; Tandy, V., and Lawrence, T., "The Ghost in the Machine," Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, 1998, and Tandy's subsequent infrasound research at Coventry and Edinburgh's Mary King's Close; the 2003 "Infrasonic" concert study by the National Physical Laboratory and Sarah Angliss; Solomon, S., Greenberg, J., and Pyszczynski, T., research on Terror Management Theory; a 1921 carbon monoxide hallucination case reported in the American Journal of Ophthalmology; Parnia, S., et al., the AWARE and AWARE II studies on awareness during resuscitation, NYU Langone Health; the University of Virginia School of Medicine Division of Perceptual Studies and its case archive of children reporting past-life memories; paranormal-investigation accounts and televised features including Ghost Hunters, Ghost Adventures, and Kindred Spirits; the folklore concept of ostension as used in contemporary legend studies. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode discusses fatal disease, invasive and experimental medical procedures, child illness and death, institutional neglect and abuse, and references to suicide. Please take care while listening, and consider stepping away if any of this is difficult. Nothing in this episode constitutes medical, psychological, or legal advice. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, institution, owner, university, or production referenced in this episode, including the current owners of Waverly Hills Sanatorium or any of the television programs named. This episode examines paranormal claims alongside documented history and peer-reviewed science. The reported hauntings, apparitions, recordings, and personal experiences are presented as accounts and claims, not as proof of life after death. The scientific research discussed, including studies of infrasound, near-death awareness, and reported past-life memories, is presented as ongoing and, in some cases, contested inquiry; it does not establish the existence of ghosts, an afterlife, or reincarnation, and the hosts' own conclusions are their personal beliefs rather than scientific fact. Our historical account is drawn from publicly available sources, including hospital and public-health records, death-certificate-based estimates, medical history, and journalism. Figures and dates vary across sources, and we have tried to flag where they do; in particular, popular death-toll claims far above the documented record are not supported. Several of the building's most famous stories, including the legend of the nurse said to have died in Room 502, are undocumented folklore that we present as legend rather than established fact. References to any person, living or deceased, are made in the context of documented history, public records, and reporting, and are not intended to defame, harass, or cause harm. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode constitutes medical, psychological, or legal advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.
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