Thursday 12 May 2022

New York City Mayor Doesn't Like Official Residence Because It's Haunted

Ghostly Gracie: NYC Mayor Eric Adams says he doesn't like living in the 18th century mayoral mansion because it's HAUNTED

  • The Democrat, 61, made the claims during a baseball game between the Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Asked if it was cool to live there on Tuesday, he said: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man'
  • The Mayor was booed by Yankees fans when his name was publicly announced as he walked onto the mound to throw the first pitch before the game
  • The ghost of the daughter-in-law of the mansion's architect - Elizabeth Gracie-Walcott - is said to haunt the home after she died there from apoplexy in 1819

NYC Mayor Eric Adams has complained his official residence Gracie Mansion is haunted while moaning that the storied Manhattan property isn't 'cool enough' for him or his family. 

Adams, 61, made the supernatural claim on the YES network Tuesday, with his comments first reported by Upper East Site

He spoke with announcers Michael Kay and Cameron Maybin shortly after pitching the first ball of the game between the Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays. 

'I know the mayor of New York lives in Gracie Mansion. That doesn't seem cool enough for you,' announcer Michael Kay began. 

'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' Mayor Adams answered. 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man.'

'We just had a conversation about ghosts yesterday,' co-host Cameron Maybin then says.

He continued: 'I've been in some haunted buildings in my life. I'm not interested in revisiting those.'

Kay, the game's main commentator, went on to quiz the mayor on whether he's ever heard a ghost wandering around the Upper East Side mansion, where he's lived since taking office in January. 

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams responds.

'You hear footsteps and all types of stuff?' Maybin then asked.

'Listen, they’re creeping around,' Adams claimed, discussing his mansion at East 88th Street, in Manhattan's Yorkville neighborhood. 

Mayor Eric Adams (centers) talks about ghosts inside Gracie Mansion -the official residence of the New York City Mayor - from the press box of Yankees stadium during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday

Mayor Eric Adams (centers) talks about ghosts inside Gracie Mansion -the official residence of the New York City Mayor - from the press box of Yankees stadium during the game against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday

Adams said ghosts have been 'creeping around' Gracie Mansion since he took over the home from Bill de Blasio on January 1, 2002. Pictured: Adams throwing the first pitch on Tuesday before the state of the MLB game between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays

Adams said ghosts have been 'creeping around' Gracie Mansion since he took over the home from Bill de Blasio on January 1, 2002. Pictured: Adams throwing the first pitch on Tuesday before the state of the MLB game between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays 

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the Mayor of New York City. Completed in 1799, it is located in Carl Schurz Park, at East End Avenue and 88th Street in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the Mayor of New York City. Completed in 1799, it is located in Carl Schurz Park, at East End Avenue and 88th Street in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan

Asked if it was cool to live there, Adams said of the matter: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man'

Asked if it was cool to live there, Adams said of the matter: 'No, it's not. Trust me. Trust me,' before adding: 'And I don't care what anyone says, there are ghosts in there, man' 

An interior room at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's official residence since 1942, except between 2002-2013, when Michael Bloomberg was the NYC mayor

 An interior room at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's official residence since 1942, except between 2002-2013, when Michael Bloomberg was the NYC mayor

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams said in reaction to being asked if he hears ghosts walking around the traditional residence

'All the time, man. All the time,' Mayor Adams said in reaction to being asked if he hears ghosts walking around the traditional residence

The daughter-in-law of the Gracie Mansion's architect - Archibald Gracie - died of apoplexy at the home in 1819 and her ghost is rumored to be moving around the house.  Pictured: Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott-Gracie, who lived between 1795 and 1819

The daughter-in-law of the Gracie Mansion's architect - Archibald Gracie - died of apoplexy at the home in 1819 and her ghost is rumored to be moving around the house.  Pictured: Elizabeth Stoughton Wolcott-Gracie, who lived between 1795 and 1819

The master bedroom in Gracie Mansion, where Adams and his family live since the beginning of the year after being elected as the new mayor in 2021

The master bedroom in Gracie Mansion, where Adams and his family live since the beginning of the year after being elected as the new mayor in 2021

The dining room at at the five-bedroom residence, built at the end of the 18th century and seized by the government in 1899

The dining room at at the five-bedroom residence, built at the end of the 18th century and seized by the government in 1899

One spooky tale frequently told about the 223-year-old mansion is that its haunted by Elizabeth Walcott-Gracie.

She is the daughter-in-law of the home's architect, Archibald Gracie and died at the residence in 1819 from apoplexy. 

Chirlane McCray, wife of former NYC mayor Bill de Blasio, said during an interview with Metro US in 2017 that she never saw the woman's ghost.

But McCray added that 'there are times when doors open and close by themselves and the floorboards creak as though someone is walking through the rooms.'

Gracie Mansion was initially built in 1799 as a country home overlooking Hells Gate channel along the East River, a couple of miles above what was then considered the New York City's northern edge. 

The 214-year-old mansion in Schultz Park has served as the official residence for New York City mayors since the middle of World War Two (1942), overlooking the East River

The 214-year-old mansion in Schultz Park has served as the official residence for New York City mayors since the middle of World War Two (1942), overlooking the East River


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