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Bobby Mackey's Music World

Coordinates: 39°4′24″N 84°29′35″W / 39.07333°N 84.49306°W / 39.07333; -84.49306
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Bobby Mackey's Music World

Bobby Mackey's Music World is a nightclub and honky tonk located in Wilder, Kentucky, United States owned by country singer Bobby Mackey. Urban legends claim the nightclub is the site of hauntings, murders, and suicides; however, no credible evidence exists for such claims.

Folklore

Promoted in popular culture as "the most haunted night club in America",[1] Mackey claims the site was originally used as a slaughterhouse in the early 19th century and later torn down for construction of a roadhouse that took on various names, such as The Brisbane, until he purchased it in 1978. Various urban legends and modern folklore claim that the site features a "gateway to hell" and is haunted by spirits including Pearl Bryan, whose corpse was found in a field 2.5 miles from the site in Fort Thomas, Kentucky. Other legends claim Bryan's murderers were Satanists who cursed the location and vowed to haunt everyone involved in prosecuting the case.[2] There is also a legend that claims a pregnant dancer named "Johanna" committed suicide with poison in the 1940s after her father murdered her lover Robert Randall, a singer at the club, by hanging him in the dressing room.[3][4]

Investigations have failed to find public records of any such events, and research into property records, newspapers, and court files has failed to substantiate claims made regarding the history of the location. No connection between Bobby Mackey's and the Pearl Bryan murder has ever been established. According to science writer Sharon A. Hill, the nightclub is often publicized with tales of murders, curses, and hauntings, however "the current circulated legend has obviously enhanced and accrued additional details in the retelling over some 30+ years". Hill states that claims of supernatural activity and a "portal to hell" are completely unsubstantiated.[3]

Haunting rumors and claims about Pearl Bryan are promoted in books such as "Hell's Gate" by Doug Hensley. Author Andrew Young speculates that such legends about Bryan are "a way to cope with the gruesome details of her death". According to the Campbell County Historical and Genealogical Society, the story of the murder of Pearl Bryan is continually exploited, and it is "highly unlikely" that her ghost haunts Bobby Mackey's Music World.[5] Northern Kentucky Tribune reporter Ryan Clark investigated the rumors and took the $35 two hour tour on two separate occasions, concluding, "there was nothing that happened on our tour that would indicate that Bobby Mackey’s was haunted".[4]

Television shows

See also

Further reading

  • Hensley, Douglas (2005). Hell's Gate: Terror at Bobby Mackey's Music World. Outskirts Press. ISBN 1-59800-011-X.
  • Stephenson, Wanda Kay (2013). Wicked They walk: A Tour Guide's Book. ISBN 978-0-578-09201-0.

References

  1. ^ Worrack, Johnette; Mallory, Mike; Shaw, Tory. "Waverly Hills, Shandies among Kentucky "haunted" locations". wpsdlocal6.com. WPSD-TV. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  2. ^ Legend of the Pearl Bryan Murder, excerpt from Troy Taylor Book, ancestry.com. Accessed 12/22/10.
  3. ^ a b Sharon, Hill. "Haunted history of Bobby Mackey's Music World fails to stand up to scrutiny". Doubtful News. Lithospherica, LLC. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  4. ^ a b Clark, Ryan. "Working up the nerve for possible encounter of the spectral kind — on Ghost Tour at Bobby Mackey's". Northern Kentucky Tribune. Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  5. ^ Cohen, Allison. "Fascination behind 1896 murder still persists, feeding rumors of ghostly presence at Bobby Mackey's". WCPO Cincinnati. Scripps Media, Inc. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  6. ^ Teets, "Legend of Haunted Honky-Tonk Grows, CinciPulse.com. Archived 2009-10-22 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 12/22/10.
  7. ^ Return to Bobby Mackey's TravelChannel.com

39°4′24″N 84°29′35″W / 39.07333°N 84.49306°W / 39.07333; -84.49306