
The Stickney House
Within easy (pre-hip-fracture) walking distance of my current location at Heck of a House, The Stickney House (pictured above) is associated with ghostly goings-on by several web sites dedicated to paranormal phenomena.

[The Stickney House is located to the right of the green arrow;
Heck of a House is at the tip of the red arrow]
Built in 1836 as the residence of George and Sylvia Stickney,1 The Stickney House (AKA The Stickney Mansion) building is known for its rounded corners,2 a structural detail resulting, in this case, from the sacrifice of architectural efficiency to the percepts of spiritualism.
Corners were forbidden the architect by the Stickneys, who were followers of a form of Spiritualism which held that evil spirits could be trapped in square corners or even be attracted to them with catastrophic consequences.3 Both Mr. and Mrs. Stickney officiated as mediums at séances attended by socialites who would travel from Chicago and other cities to the isolated mansion for sessions with the dead.

The obligatory macabre kicker to the story of the house without corners is that George Stickney died of unknown causes in a square corner of his house with a terrified expression on his face.
In addition, some sources hold that a child of the couple who built the house hanged himself in one of the upstairs rooms.4
Since then, rumors of supernatural activity taking place at Stickney House have proliferated; three of the most frequently reported incidents follow:
- Several individuals entering the house alone claimed to have seen figures moving about and heard sounds of steps.
- “Persistent disembodied sounds and strange occurrences night or day, have caused more recent owners to abruptly vacate the house and give it back to the Stickneys.”5
- “A local antique dealer would claim that he saw a real estate ad for the place in which a woman in a wedding gown could be seen pulling aside a curtain and peering out. The photographer who took the picture said that no one was in the house at the time. He also stated that he had seen no one at the window when he was snapping photos of the house.”6
From Stickney House To Precinct House
Since 1985, the Village of Bull Valley and its police department have occupied The Stickney Mansion. According to the Wikipedia article, which references a WGN TV news story as its source,
The Stickney House Ghost Story: A Case Of Unfulfilled Potential
While I hold no credentials as a medium, paranormal investigator, or Ghostbuster, I have experienced and survived The Spooklight, which seems to me an altogether more impressive sort of weirdness.
The Stickney House legend consists of an architectural oddity (the absence of right angled corners), a history of séances, the owner’s death from unknown causes, and some nonspecific sightings of ghosts. Even the report from the police, who currently inhabit The Stickney Mansion, is ambiguous. And the story of the photo, taken when the house was empty, that shows a woman in the wedding dress, which seems to me to be far and away the most impressive spectral emanation attributed to the place, has no apparent link to the rest of the saga. As a ghost story, this inconsistent, sometimes internally conflicted, unorganized collection of factoids and deserves no better than a “C-” grade.
Let’s face it - if a local municipality threw a StickneyHouseFest, no one would show up. The back story just isn’t there.
A solid basis for a legend should fit together and presage the supernatural activity to continues into the future. For example,
Now, that’s a spooky story, to which one only needs add sightings of the bride in full regalia appearing to others many years after her death.
Lending some poignancy and connecting the key issues of the plot are, indeed, the essential changes necessary.
Other efforts that would be helpful in transforming the Stickney House into the focal point of a spooky, disturbing, give-the-local-kids-bad-dreams sort of tale include
- A consistent accounting of the corners and an explanation for the existence of any 90 degree corners despite the owners’ decree to the architect. Perhaps the house was constructed while the Stickneys were in Europe and the tragic construction error was discovered only when they returned, at which time, George keeled over. Or perhaps the square corner was part of a nefarious scheme put in motion by one of the Stickneys or someone involved in the construction. Or maybe George was a secret disbeliever in Spiritualism who intentionally put in the corner to demonstrate to his more dedicated wife that he could flaunt the spirits with impunity.
- Better use of the Stickney House history to further the story. Stickney House,
for example, served as quarters for Federal soldiers in the Civil War and was home to the first piano in McHenry County.7
The mythology should at least hold that the Stickneys paid an outrageous sum to have a grand, curvilinear piano installed to avoid the square corners of a spinet. The Civil War segment would be an ideal stage for a corner-related prophecy; what if a loyal Union Army Commander spending the night at Stickney House had a dream that presaged the danger to Lincoln from a corner (of the President’s box at Ford’s Theater)?
- A more gripping motivation for the involvement of Bull Valley’s village government. One example would be the innuendo that the presence of the Bull Valley Police is a cover for a surreptitious Federal agency charged with guarding a mysterious mechanism found in a secret room of the Stickney House that throws off death rays that are rendered ineffective only when transmuted by a round corner.
- An symbol that ties in the major story elements. A ghostly protractor probably isn’t just right, but you get the idea.
- A present-day connection. This could be something on the lines of a revelation that monies George Stickney invested in the 1800s eventually funded Lake Point Tower - with the stipulation that no corners were allowed.

Throw in a few of these plot elements; invest a few city tax dollars in some special effects to provide the apparitions, creaky noises, and perpetually foggy atmosphere traditionally associated with spooky stuff; and salt a few inexplicably weird anecdotes in the local papers, and you’ve got yourself a dandy new and improved legend fully capable of scaring the crap out of the young’uns.
Footnotes
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Stickney_House↩
- Depending upon the source, there are no right angle corners anywhere in the house (http://www.ghosts.org.uk/index2599.html), the entire second story has 90 degree corners (http://www.angelfire.com/theforce/haunted/hauntedplacesofillinois.htm), only one room on the upper floor was built with a 90-degree corner (http://www.zuko.com/weird_n_spooky_america.htm), or only one corner of one second-story room “accidentally ended up with a 90-degree measurement” (http:///www.prairieghosts.com/stickney.html). In addition, one source reports that the entire second story was used as a ballroom, in effect making the second floor a single room that ran the entire length and width of the building (http://www.prairieghosts.com/stickney.html).↩
- http://www.prairieghosts.com/stickney.html↩
- http://www.angelfire.com/theforce/haunted/hauntedplacesofillinois.htm↩
- http://www.zuko.com/weird_n_spooky_america.htm↩
- http://www.prairieghosts.com/stickney.html↩
- http://www.prairieghosts.com/stickney.html↩


















