Harry Houdini’s Mythic Haunt

by Michael Imlay on October 31, 2007

in Cryptic L.A.

Houdini's Haunting Grounds?Except maybe during rush hour when traffic grinds to a crawl, the winding drive along Laurel Canyon Blvd. can border on the mystical. After all, this rustic L.A. neighborhood is steeped in history and lore. Once a stage pass from the San Fernando Valley through the Hollywood Hills, since the late 1800s the ravine has been a haven for banditos, movie cowboys, prohibition-era boozers, bohemian artists, musicians and other sundry counterculturists. Little wonder so many Angelenos insist the free-spirited road remains a prime connection to otherworldly adventure.

Perhaps no Laurel Canyon site better symbolizes this than the mysterious ruins of a once-posh estate near the intersection of Lookout Mountain Road. Allegedly haunted by master-illusionist Harry Houdini, the private grounds continue to draw lookie-loos seeking fleeting glimpses of his lonely shade amid the property’s rocky stairs and grottoes.

Of course, Halloween is an especially popular time for Houdini drive-bys, since he met the Grim Reaper on this night in 1926. Over the years, there have even been rumors of trespassers sneaking onto the property for clandestine seances in the hopes of conjuring up his spirit — an ironic twist, considering Houdini actually spent much of his career trying to debunk such occultism. Nevertheless, true believers claim the so-called Houdini Mansion is among L.A.’s most haunted places.

But something seems to have escaped Houdini’s spiritualist following. According to historians, he never lived here. Despite what you may read on the Internet, expert research has uncovered no title in his name, nor any conclusive evidence he owned or even rented any home in the vicinity.

In actuality, the estate belonged to Eliza Walker, a Los Angeles furniture entrepreneur. About 1918, Walker built an immense villa on the site, which a wildfire later claimed in 1959. So how did Houdini’s name come to be attached to this locale?

Some Houdini biographers speculate that the master illusionist may have been a silent investor in Walker’s land ventures, and therefore may have been a guest of Walker’s during rare West Coast visits. In his 1974 book Haunted Hollywood, the famous ghost hunter Hans Holzer reported that he was invited to investigate the property in 1969 and again with a psychic in 1970. Fania Pearson, the estate’s owner at that time, insisted that Houdini had held seances in the residence’s large salon during his stays.

Other historians suggest the real association lies with Houdini’s wife Bess, who moved onto Walker’s estate after her husband’s death. City directories from the 1930s give her address as 2435 Laurel Canyon Blvd., a former parcel also belonging to Walker across the street from his mansion. Later, she may also have relocated to a second, Gothic-style guest house that reportedly survived the 1959 blaze and still stands today within the villa’s main gates.

Seeking to establish once and for all whether spirits could be contacted, Houdini made an agreement with Bess before his death. She would hold regular seances and, if successful, he’d reveal his presence via a prearranged code word. Paranormal investigators say Bess almost certainly made an attempt or two at occult contact in Walker’s parlor.

Perhaps Bess succeeded in summoning his spirit forth, but somehow failed in returning it to the Great Beyond. Still dazed, lost and confused, his wraith wanders the Laurel Canyon ruins aimlessly on spooky, moon-filled nights.

Seriously… How else would one explain a ghostly magician materializing again and again to a place that was never among his frequent haunts in life?

[Intersection of Laurel Canyon Blvd. and Lookout Mtn. Road, on the east side. Note the estate is private property, with restricted parking.]

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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Joe November 18, 2007 at 2:34 AM

I was there tonight… it’s pretty cool… I don’t think it’s haunted… but it’s damn creepy. It’s got stairwells that lead to nowhere! I found that entertaining. :P

David Abbott April 9, 2008 at 12:57 PM

I believe the residence across the street belonged to, or was occupied by a Mr. Hereward Carrington who was the Author of many books on out-of-body experiences, and psychic manifestations. He was also the president of the “American Psychical Institute.” The head honcho in a field Harry was very interested in. Harry and Hereward are alleged to of been very good friends. So, it makes perfect sense that The Houdini’s may of been house guests (or vice versa) at the 2435 address across the street, or even rented the Villa across the street (with or without documentation).

Administrator April 9, 2008 at 5:16 PM

Thanks for that info, David. How did you stumble across it? Can you point me toward a source? I’d like to explore this connection further. –MI

Korso August 8, 2008 at 12:03 AM

“”Of course, Halloween is an especially popular time for Houdini drive-bys, since he met the Grim Reaper on this night in 1926.”"

okay, now it’s interesting to me that you would say ‘drive-by’s’… ill explain why. im 20 years old and a born angelino. i lived on wonderland ave. which is right down the block from the houdini house. one night with my aunt at about 1:00 we were on our way home from her bowling game and we were at the junction of laurel canyon and hollywood blvd… (where it splits off at the bottom on the city side right before laurel canyon turns into crescent hights) and a 1920-2950ish car came barreling down the hill (headed southbound) at about 60 mph and dissapeared with a bright flash of light. almost like a transformer on a pole exploded. and it appeared that the car had crashed but on second look, the car had actually dissapeared as fast as it showed up. still cant really understand what happened to this day, dont know if it was apparition of houdini, but i know it was a once in a lifetime thing and the other witnesses were also very shooken up. if you want you can ask me more or we can chat about hauntings in the city of Los Angeles at myspace.com/K0rso

Korso August 8, 2008 at 12:04 AM

btw it was 1:00 am not pm

Greg September 8, 2008 at 4:44 PM

Houdini neither owned nor leased this property. His wife, Bess, is said to have leased a bungalow on the grounds, but did not reside in the house itself.

Marla September 18, 2008 at 9:17 PM

My Grandfather, Knute Napoleon Ericson constructed the brickwork, flowerpots and lamp posts at the bottom of the high cement stairways on the Laurel Canyon-Walker Estate where he worked for several years building a 25 room home.

micheline Guerin May 18, 2009 at 8:14 PM

I investigated at the Downtown Library and found the following:

14082. 2398 Laurel (same as 2400)Walker, R.J. (earlyLaurel Canyon Resident; pre-1920 Friend of Houdini, left the estate to Houdini when he died in 1925;

14983. 2435 Laurel Canyon, Mrs. H. (Beatrice) moved here in 1930’s.

To me it makes sense that Besse would have lived at 2400 before 1930.

Steve R February 19, 2010 at 6:08 PM

Hereward Carrington, the psychic investigator and Houdini were friends till 1924 when they had a falling out. If Houdini had lived perhaps they would have eventually patched things up.

Patrick Culliton January 29, 2011 at 10:44 AM

2398 Laurel Canyon Blvd. (or as it is now known 2400) was built and owned by Ralf M. Walker, the owner of Walker’s Fifth Street Store–a department store that eventually evolved into the Broadway Dept. stores. The guest house was directly across Laurel Canyon, up on a bluff that jutted into Laurel Canyon, creating one of its most dangerous hairpin curves. The address of Walker’s guesthouse was 2435 Laurel Canyon Blvd. The guesthouse was a big four bedroom with a separate garage and maid’s quarters. It had an elevator which was cut through solid granite to a tunnel which led to the gatehouse of 2398 (2400).
Houdini lived at 2435 Laurel Canyon for most of 1919, when he lived in Hollywood while starring in two feature films for Lasky Famous Players, one of Paramount’s production companies. The studio was located on Vine St. between Prospect–now Hollywood–Blvd. and Sunset. Walker named the guesthouse Houdini House.
After Houdini died in 1926, his widow referred several times to her “home in Hollywood” and finally returned to it in 1934. In 1935, Beatrice Houdini hosted a cocktail party for 500 magicians and their wives who were in Hollywood for a convention. This took place in the gardens of 2398 and that is when the confusion began.
Ralf M. Walker died in 1935 and the entire estate was sold. Beatrice Houdini lived at various addresses in Hollywood over the next few years and also spent time in Florida and New York. She was returning to New York when she died on the train near Needles, California in 1943.
Houdini never owned 2398 (or 2400) Laurel Canyon. A 1928 biography of Houdini, written “from the recollections and documents of Beatrice Houdini” states Houdini rented the guesthouse. One thing seems clear: from Ralf Walker’s standpoint, when Houdini was in Hollywood, 2398 Laurel Canyon was Houdini’s.
Houdini never owned 2435 Laurel Canyon Blvd.
1959, when the huge mansion at 2400 Laurel Canyon Blvd. burned down in the disastrous Laurel Canyon fire, all three of L.A.’s daily papers reported that the “old Houdini mansion” had burned down. One of the papers even noted it had been called “Houdini House” by its owner.
2345 Laurel Canyon, the real “Houdini House,” had burned down at the same time. Even old-timers who had known Houdini when he’d lived in the house forty years before didn’t realize the newspapers were talking about the wrong house.
Did Houdini walk in the gardens and swim in the indoor pool at his friend Ralf Walker’s mansion? Of course.
Houdini stated in an interview that Hollywood, California was his favorite place on earth.
There is one building still standing on the estate at 2400 Laurel Canyon. That was a garage and maid’s quarters. It has been dressed up into an apartment, but, it was a servant’s quarters and the story that Mrs. Houdini and her manager, Dr. Edward Saint lived there is completely false.
In the 90s, the estate (2400) was owned for a time by a colorful antique dealer from Georgia who manufactured fake Houdini memorabilia and false historical facts at a relentless pace. This served to further cloud the already clouded true story as to where Houdini and later his widow lived in Hollywood.
For more on the true facts go to:
http://www.houdinisghost.com/laurelcanyon.html
and
http://www.houdinisghost.com/wrongruins.html
What I have stated in this post is the truth. Everything else on this web page is just a mess of completely wrong information.

Patrick Culliton January 29, 2011 at 10:57 AM

I misstated something which will really confuse things and make matters worse. I wrote that when Houdini was in Hollywood, Ralf Walker considered 2398 Laurel Canyon Houdini’s.
WRONG!!!
I MEANT to say: when Houdini was in Hollywood, Ralf M. Walker considered 2435 Laurel Canyon Houdini’s.
This is what I get for saying that everything on this page other than my post was “a mess of wrong information.”
So, to reiterate, Houdini never lived at 2400 (2398) Laurel Canyon.
He did live on the estate, in the guesthouse, which was on the opposite side of Laurel Canyon.
Houdini lived at 2435 Laurel Canyon Blvd.
One last thing, at the time Houdini lived there, Laurel Canyon was considered part of Beverly Hills.

Steve R February 7, 2011 at 11:41 AM

Mrs Houdini did invite Hereward Carrington to participate in the Final Houdini Seance in 1936 at the hotel.

Ricky costas December 24, 2011 at 2:34 PM

http://www.sandiegohaunted.com

also lots of haunts

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