A grand Victorian hotel whose founder is said to still keep an eye on the place.
The Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee has one of the most famous haunted reputations in American hotel folklore, especially because its ghost stories are not limited to anonymous guests or local legend. A large part of its modern paranormal reputation comes from professional baseball players who have stayed there while visiting Milwaukee to play the Brewers. Because Major League Baseball teams have frequently used the Pfister as a team hotel, the building has developed an unusual second life in sports culture: a luxury historic hotel that some athletes openly claim to avoid because of its eerie reputation. The hotel itself is real, historic, and well documented; the haunting claims, however, should be treated as reported experiences rather than proven events.
The most commonly named spirit in Pfister lore is Charles Pfister, the hotel’s original owner and one of Milwaukee’s most powerful late nineteenth and early twentieth-century businessmen. Charles Pfister died in 1927, and many stories suggest that his presence still lingers in the hotel. The idea is not usually presented as a violent or malicious haunting. In many accounts, the “Pfister ghost” is described more like an overseeing presence, a figure still watching over the hotel he built into one of Milwaukee’s grandest public landmarks. ESPN summarized the hotel’s baseball-related legend by noting that the landmark is rumored to be haunted by Charles Pfister himself.
The reported activity varies, but several patterns repeat often: unexplained noises, strange knocking, lights flickering, electronics turning on by themselves, radios activating without explanation, objects moving or being misplaced, and the uneasy sensation of being watched. These are not unusual categories in hotel haunting reports, but the Pfister’s reputation is unusual because many of the accounts come from named public figures. Haunted Rooms, a paranormal travel site, summarizes the alleged activity as including electrical anomalies, object manipulation, and apparitions, especially in connection with visiting Major League Baseball players.
One of the most repeated types of Pfister phenomena involves electronics. Guests and athletes have described televisions turning on and off, radios coming on by themselves, lights behaving strangely, and other electrical disturbances. These experiences are difficult to evaluate after the fact, because hotel rooms contain many possible sources for electronic irregularities, including timers, faulty switches, wiring issues, remote-control interference, motion sensors, and unfamiliar climate or entertainment systems. Still, in ghost lore, these details matter because they recur across multiple accounts. HauntedUS describes one early baseball-related report from 2001 involving a Los Angeles Dodgers player who allegedly experienced a television turning on and off during the night, along with strange knocking at the door.
A well-known reported experience involves former Cincinnati Reds player Brandon Phillips. His account centers on a radio that allegedly turned on by itself. The story is often cited because Phillips told it with memorable intensity, describing entering the room, sitting on the bed, and then hearing the radio come on. After he turned it off and went into the shower, he said it came on again. Vogue included this story in a roundup of haunted hotels, using it as one of the examples of why the Pfister’s reputation has spread beyond Milwaukee folklore into national travel and pop culture coverage.
Another frequently cited player is Michael Young, formerly of the Texas Rangers. His story is often treated as one of the stronger baseball accounts associated with the hotel. Several paranormal sites and baseball articles mention Young in connection with the Pfister, usually describing a frightening stay involving unexplained activity in his room. MLB.com has collected a number of these player stories, framing the Pfister as one of baseball’s most famous haunted hotels and emphasizing how often the hotel appears in players’ road-trip ghost stories.
Justin Upton’s account is also important because it is less about one single dramatic event and more about the atmosphere of the building. According to Milwaukee Magazine’s summary of ESPN’s reporting, Upton said the hotel unsettled him from the moment he entered. He described the lights, the building’s mood, and the need to sleep with the blinds open and the lights on. That kind of report is useful to separate from claims of direct phenomena. In Upton’s case, the account seems to emphasize environmental dread: the sensation that the hotel feels wrong, heavy, old, or oppressive to the person staying there.
That atmosphere is part of why the Pfister works so well as a haunted hotel legend. The building opened in 1893, has ornate historic interiors, grand public rooms, old-world artwork, chandeliers, long corridors, and a preserved luxury-hotel identity. These features do not prove paranormal activity, but they create the right conditions for suggestion, expectation, and heightened attention. A guest who already knows the hotel’s haunted reputation may notice every creak, click, hum, shadow, or mechanical sound. In an old hotel, especially one with elevators, plumbing, HVAC systems, hallway traffic, service movement, and layers of renovation, many normal noises can become difficult to identify at night.
The Pfister’s haunted reputation has continued into recent years. Some players reportedly refuse to stay there, even when their teams use it as the road hotel. People reported in 2025 that Dodgers star Mookie Betts has avoided staying at the Pfister for years because of its haunted reputation, and that teammate Teoscar Hernández also chose alternate accommodations during a Milwaukee series. The New York Post similarly reported that Hernández avoided the hotel at his wife’s request, citing stories among Dodgers families about flickering lights, strange noises, and footsteps.
Footsteps are another recurring element in Pfister stories. Reports of footsteps are common in hotel hauntings because corridors, rooms above and below, elevators, housekeeping movement, old floors, and mechanical systems can all create ambiguous sounds. At the Pfister, however, the reports are folded into the broader idea that someone unseen is moving through the building. In some versions of the legend, this unseen presence is Charles Pfister, still making his rounds. Milwaukee Record notes that early reports of the hotel’s ghost often described a relatively benign presence, with Pfister supposedly seen or sensed around the hotel as if making sure everything was operating properly.
There are also claims of apparitions, though these are less consistently documented than electronic disturbances and uneasy feelings. Some general paranormal summaries mention sightings or visual impressions, but the most publicly repeated stories tend to involve lights, radios, televisions, knocking, noises, and the psychological effect of the building. This is important from an investigative standpoint. The Pfister’s reputation is powerful, but the strongest public record is not a neat catalog of full-bodied apparitions with dates, rooms, and corroborating witnesses. It is a collection of personal accounts, many from athletes, layered over the atmosphere of a very old luxury hotel.
The folklore also appears to have grown partly because of repetition within baseball culture. Players talk to other players. Families hear stories from other families. New guests arrive already aware that the Pfister is “the haunted hotel.” That kind of reputation can reinforce itself over time. WUWM described the Pfister as one of Milwaukee’s most historic landmarks and also as a place “said to be haunted,” showing how the ghost legend has become part of the hotel’s public identity, even in mainstream local coverage.
From a grounded historical perspective, the Pfister haunting is best understood as a living legend attached to a historic building. The reported phenomena include electrical disturbances, unexplained knocking, footsteps, strange noises, moving or misplaced objects, apparitions, and a strong feeling of unease. The most famous alleged ghost is Charles Pfister, whose presence is usually described as watchful rather than threatening. The most distinctive part of the story is not one single ghost tale, but the hotel’s unusual connection to professional baseball. Because so many athletes have publicly discussed feeling disturbed there, the Pfister has become one of the rare haunted hotels whose legend is tied as much to sports testimony as to traditional ghost lore.