Missouri Paranormal Investigation, and Research
Paranormal we are a organization that help people to understand and learn about the supernatural and miss understood world of the paranormal!
if you want more infomation about us the website will be display as well as a email to contact us!
Celebrating my 14th year on Facebook. Thank you for your continuing support. I could never have made it without you. 🙏🤗🎉
It's been 3 years since covid-19 showed up we are now getting back in normal life so hopefully we will start up investigating the paranormal hopefully soon we will update with anything
At the moment with the issues concerning COVID 19 MOPIAR is not conducting any studies or investigations until further notice. Sorry for any inconvenience but we are concerned about our team.
11/15/2018
Kirkwood
Massa’s Restaurant
131 West Argonne Dr.
Employees have reported eerie vibes at this former Bopp’s Funeral Parlor (1819-1961). They have witnessed the bathroom door in the hallway leading to the old carriage house now a bar open and slam shut three times by itself when the chef was closing.
Once, while the assistant manager was standing behind the bar and telling stories about the ghosts, a ceiling tile fell right over his head two seconds after he moved from the spot where he was standing.
A waiter has seen a coffee pot resting securely on a shelf practically fly off and hit the adjacent wall. Once on a quiet evening in the restaurant when there were no male employees in the building, a man's voice called a female employee's name from a private room hidden by curtains (curtains which often move as if in a breeze when there is none). They have also experienced lights turning on and off, and the volume on the radios mysteriously turning up and down without assistance, video cameras revealing a shadow in an empty room. The basement was used for autopsies and draining of blood from the bodies. Doors seem to opens and close at will.
11/15/2018
Hazelwood
Star Lite Billiards
407 Candle Light Ln.
Reports of feeling a presence walk past you, seeing a shadowy figure, seeing red eyes moving through the place, cold spots felt, and an apparition of an older man have all been experienced. Recently the new owners were renovating the Billiard parlor and were closing for the night turned off all the lights, set the alarm in the office, and upon exiting the office to the parlor saw all the lights turned back on. They have also noticed and felt like they are being watched sometimes at night.
11/15/2018
Glencoe
Zombie Road
Lawler Ford Road
A two-mile stretch of road that is surrounded by a forest of hills on both sides, it has been unused for several years. The road has been around for over eighty years, and people around the area say it was built and used by a company that dredged the Meramec River for gravel and a dredger was left in the Meramec River. Some people have also stated it used to be a horse and carriage road back in the late 1800’s. The road is located next to Ridge Meadows Elementary School. The road meets up with a mini railroad train track for kids and ends at a beach area where people say witches and devil worshipers tend to use for rituals.
The legend goes that back in the mid-1970's a man was walking along the railroad tracks from one town to another when a train hit him. From time to time people see the man walking by the tracks and being hit by the train. A woman named Dee Hamilton was actually killed by a train in 1876. Many stories have claimed other incidents that include a group of kids were playing near the river and fell from one of the bluffs and were left there by his friends to die. Another is about an old woman with a gun at the end of the road that yells at passersby. Bike riders and people who are just inquisitive now use the road.
11/14/2018
Florissant
Taille de Noyer
On the grounds of McCluer High School
1896 South New Florissant Rd
Originally a two-room log cabin built in 1790, on the site that was part of a Spanish land grant, by Hyacinthe Dehatre, a French trader, on a 350-acre walnut grove. Taille De Noyer means “a clearing in the walnut grove”.
Elizabeth and John Mullanphy, who was an early merchant and St. Louis’ first millionaire in 1808, purchased the original log cabin; it grew through the years during with it served as the home of the Mullanphy’s. In 1819 Mr. and Mrs. Mullanphy gave their daughter, Jane and her husband Charles Chambers this home to lure them back from New York after their marriage. The Chambers began expanding the house and took up residence in 1820. They had seventeen children and Taille De Noyer grew with the family into a mansion with twenty-two rooms each with beautiful fireplaces of brick. This home had one hundred and forty years of continuous occupancy by heirs of the Mullanphy’s until 1961 when the family donated the land and the house to the Ferguson-Florissant School District.
The home was moved two hundred yards from the original site in 1960 by Florissant Valley Historical Society to make way for McCluer High School. Students and school staff inside the home have seen the original owners supposedly walking inside their old home. Volunteers say that visitors often comment upon touring the house that it is an interesting historical home because it does not feel like a museum; it feels as if someone lives there. The property is open on the first and third Sundays 1p.m. to 4p.m. and is closed the months of January and February
11/14/2018
Florissant
Myers House
180 Dunn Road
In 1867, Florissant was a French and German settlement and when John Myers, a farmer and land speculator from Potsdam, Pennsylvania purchased fifty acres of land just south of French town, St. Ferdinand that is now Florissant. His house sat on a knoll above the road that was built between 1867 and 1869. Construction began in 1886 extensive glazing and painting was done which included fresco work. The home was built in the classical Palladian tradition, which continued into the Victorian era with its elaborate designs. In 1869 before completion of the residence, Mr. Myers died at the age of forty-nine. His wife Adaline and their three children continued to live there until 1889. After John Myers death, the estate was tied up in court for more than a dozen years but Mrs. Myers managed to have the house completed.
In the 1960’s the Myers House fell into disrepair and while plans were being developed to build the I-170 interchange through the area where the house and barn stand. Designated by the City of Florissant as landmarks, the house and barn were both saved in 1974 through the intervention of the United States Department of Transportation when the structures were to be demolished for the extension of the inner belt. The Myers House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The big red barn behind the house is of the same vintage. The property sits on about an acre of ground.
An antique and craft store and a deli-style restaurant are leasing both the house and barn. People have heard the voice of Adeline Myers on the grounds surrounding the mansion.
11/14/2018
Eureka
Six Flags – St. Louis
4838 Allenton-Six Flags Rd
Six Flags - St. Louis opened on June 5, 1971, the third and final original Six Flags park in the original twelve-park system it became the leading amusement park in the Midwest. This one hundred thirty-two acre park located in Eureka Missouri cost approximately fifty-five million dollars to build. Six Flags – St. Louis opened with six themed sections that include Missouri, Spain, England, Illinois, France and USA within these sections are five show venues that include The Palace, Miss Kitty's, Dolphin Arena, Krofft's Puppet Theater and Chevy Show.
There are three known ghosts that haunt this famous theme park. The first one is the ghost of a little girl that has been seen around various areas of the park running around and laughing. The second spirit is of a girl who haunts several of the parks theaters, giving off cold spots and speaking to people.
Two incidents have apparently had cause paranormal activity. The first occurred on July 5, 1978, at around 2 p.m, when a gondola ride carrying four passengers seventy feet above an amusement park slipped off its cable and plunged to the ground after a support arm on a tower broke. Two girls and a man perished in the accident while a third girl was critically injured.
The victims were, TW (10), of St. Louis, and KJ (15), of Barre, VT., and her uncle, CFJ (25), of Riversville, W.VA. Only sixteen cars were in the air at the time. Jennine W. (12), a sister of TW was critically injured and was the only survivor of the crash. The uncle and niece were visiting TW and Jennine’s family at their St. Louis County home. About sixty people were stranded in the fifteen remaining cable cars in operation at the time of the accident. The steel cable car, a mass of gnarled metal, was whisked away to a storage room nearby.
The Sky-Way ride ran across most of the width of the park from between the Illinois and USA stations of the park. The ride opened in 1971 and was removed at the end of the 1981 season.
The second accident occurred on July 7, 1984, two weeks after the opening a new ride named the Rail Blazer which was located where the River King Run Mine Train run today. The Rail Blazer was a suspended, stand-up roller coaster, where people were strapped in while standing.
Unfortunately, a female passenger named SH was riding the roller coaster when she died after being flung from the ride then falling twenty feet. After this incident, the Rail Blazer was closed and was converted back to a sit-down ride the following year. Several explanations have included people saying that the female was too heavy to ride the roller coaster and she fell out, the other explanation is that the woman fainted causing her to become loose in the restraints that cause her to slip out of them.
The last known ghost is not true, the entity known, as The Pigman is a Halloween story the park director thought up several years ago and is still used at the park today as a gimmick.
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3212 Miller Road
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63010