Explore the Winchester Mystery House: secret passages, hidden rooms and a door to nowhere
Is this America's strangest house?
Located in San Jose, California, this peculiar mansion was built by a troubled heir to a famous firearm manufacturing firm, who was haunted by the 'spirits' of the gun victims who she believed had cursed her family.
What started as a nondescript eight-bedroom farmhouse was transformed by Sarah L. Winchester into an architectural wonder over 36 years of almost continuous renovations that cost the modern equivalent of $92 million (£73m).
Step inside one of America's strangest houses, with 2,000 doors, 10, 000 windows and untold secrets. Let's take a tour...
IanDagnall Computing/Alamy Stock Photo
Meet Sarah Winchester
This photo taken in 1865 shows a young Sarah 'Sallie' Lockwood Winchester (née Pardee) aged just 26. In 1862, Sarah married William Wirt Winchester, the only son of Oliver Winchester, founder of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. The couple had one child, Annie Pardee Winchester, who tragically died in 1866, just a month after her birth.
In 1881, William died of tuberculosis, leaving Sarah a staggering $20 million inheritance – at least $638 million (£503m) today – and half ownership of the Winchester company, making her one of the wealthiest women in the United States. That same year, she also endured the deaths of her mother and father-in-law. Overcome by grief, Sarah began wearing black mourning attire, a practice she would continue for the rest of her life.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
The origins of the house
Sarah Winchester sits in a carriage outside the original house. After the deaths of her infant daughter and husband, Sarah reportedly consulted a medium, who warned that the spirits of those killed by Winchester rifles cursed her family.
To appease them, she was told to move west and endlessly build a home that they could inhabit. She left New Haven, Connecticut in 1885 for San Jose, California where she bought this modest two-storey farmhouse and began renovations.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A life's work
By the time Sarah passed away in 1922, the house had become a vast mansion covering 24,000 square feet (2,230sqm) with a colossal 160 rooms. Before an earthquake destroyed three top floors in 1906, it rose seven storeys high.
Illusionist Harry Houdini visited in 1924 and dubbed the property ‘The Mystery House’, helping to cement its place in American folklore.
Citizen of the Planet/Alamy Stock Photo
Still standing strong
Today, the mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and features a network of shadowy passages, twisting staircases and mysterious doors.
Winchester’s immense estate has shrunk from 162 acres (66ha) to four-and-a-half acres (2ha), but the house remains just as imposing as it was almost a century ago. Let's take a look inside the Winchester Mystery House...
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A jewel of a time-capsule
Through the grand double front doors, the interior walls are panelled with rich brown wainscotting and lined with intricate Lincrusta wallpaper in emerald green.
Stained-glass windows feature heavily throughout the property, casting an eerie glow on the surrounding walls. There's no logical progression to the rooms; wander down a winding corridor and you may find yourself in a kitchen, bathroom or at a dead end.
@winchestermusteryhouse/Instagram
The private rooms
Inside, the home is a mix of different styles with Winchester opting for plainer décor in many of the rooms. However, on closer inspection, the house reveals engraved brass handles, glossy tiles and intricate wooden carvings.
It's been said that Sarah Winchester would sit in front of fires, sealing all the doors and windows to ease her arthritis.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Lucky number 13?
Like a hidden jewel, the grand ballroom is a thing of beauty; an opulent, extravagant space with hand-laid parquet floors, rich brocade wallpaper and a fabulous carved wood organ.
It's been said that Winchester’s obsession with the number 13 influenced many of the design details throughout the home including the number of steps on staircases, the number of lights in chandeliers and the number of panels in the walls.
@winchestermysteryhouse/Instagram
One of many kitchens
This vintage kitchen is one of six in the mansion, and while it may look basic, at the time it had modern plumbing with hot and cold water and steam heating to keep it cosy throughout the year.
The gorgeous metal stove would have been an expensive purchase but money really was no object for Sarah Winchester.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A grand dining space
Situated in an older part of the house, the Venetian Dining Room is one of three in the property. This room has wooden-clad ceilings and walls and features a large fireplace and a patchwork of different rugs.
Although Winchester’s niece did live with her for a period of time, she would have spent much of her later life wandering these expansive rooms alone.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A sign of the times
The once-grand crystal bedroom may have suffered the ravages of time, but it still reveals some unexpected gems. The heavily flocked brocade wallpaper is coated in crushed mica, a silicate mineral that shimmers and sparkles in the light.
The whole room would have originally been covered with this paper, creating a dazzling effect when sunshine trickled in through the windows.
@winchestermysteryhouse/Instagram
A damaged property
In some places, the house has fallen into disrepair. However, expanding the mansion was a Herculean task. It’s claimed that Winchester employed a team of constructors to work day and night on her project, spending a rumoured $5.5 million (£4.3 million) in the nearly 40-year process, the equivalent of more than $103 million (£81m) in today's money.
Yet when she died in 1922, the property was valued at $135,000 (£106k), about $2.5 million (£2m) today, damaged by earthquakes and considered a sinkhole for potential investors.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A light and bright space
Step into one of the mansion’s two conservatories and the house takes on an altogether different vibe. Flooded with light, these two sunporches would once have been filled with plants.
The floors are made from zinc with removable hardwood panels, allowing excess water from the pots and planters to drain into the garden.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Ghostly happenings
Legend has it that Sarah believed herself to be haunted by the spirits of the people killed by the Model 1873 rifle; one of the most popular guns produced by her husband’s company.
To confuse the malevolent ghosts, she built a house that was intentionally mystifying with fake staircases, doors to nowhere and hairpin bends. This strange set of stairs leads straight up to the ceiling.
@winchestermysteryhouse/Instagram
Optical illusions
This skylight sits above a false floor, leading to some impressive trickery of the eye. Among the house’s other curiosities are a door that opens onto an eight-foot drop down to a kitchen sink, and a cabinet that extends over 30 different rooms.
There are doors that open onto walls, rooms without floors and windows in unexpected places. The mansion has countless secret passages, purportedly used by Mrs Winchester to traverse the house unnoticed by the spirits that pursued her.
The door to nowhere
One of the property’s quirkiest features is the ‘Door to Nowhere’; a panelled door on the exterior that opens onto – well nothing. It's unclear if this was an intentional design feature or if Sarah Winchester simply changed her mind about building an additional wing.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A glimpse into the past
The Linen Room offers a glimpse into life in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Fully furnished with Bentwood chairs, treadle tables and a mirrored cabinet, it's modest yet unmistakably refined. Note the intricate floral carvings in the wood and the elaborate brass handles on the dresser.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Vintage accessories
The room is home to two gorgeous antique sewing machines with heavy-duty needles and gilded metal bodies. Whether these were used by Sarah Winchester herself or by paid help is unclear.
The mansion’s owner employed up to 20 members of staff at any given time and reportedly treated them very well, providing salaries and accommodation far superior to those offered by other wealthy homeowners.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Inspired by lands from afar
The original home purchased by Sarah in 1885 had eight bedrooms, but this number grew to over 40 as the renovations continued. It was said that she slept in a different one every night, again, as a ploy to muddle the spirits who haunted the mansion.
She was heavily influenced by eastern cultures so many of the sleeping chambers – including the Oriental Bedroom pictured here – had furnishings inspired by lands far away.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
An opulent space
The master bedroom suite was one of the grandest spaces in the entire house and holds a particular poignancy – this is where Mrs Winchester passed away in 1922, aged 82.
With its imposing canopy bed, red velvet drapes and Queen Anne-style furniture, this room offers an insight into her vision of what the house could have been.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A storeroom worth a fortune
Winchester famously commissioned many pieces from the Pacific American Decorative Company, some of which were never used. In the '$25,000 (£20k) storage room', so-called for the value of its contents, stained-glass panels are on display, each one waiting to be hung somewhere in the immense mansion.
In 2024, the antique glass panels would be worth around $797,000 (£631k).
@winchestermysteryhouse/Instagram
The power of 13
The heiress' keen interest in the paranormal is shown in the design of this stained-glass window. Designed by Winchester herself, it features spiderwebs said to symbolise communication with the deceased and 13 orbs (the number 13 is often associated with death).
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Stunning window designs
This gorgeous Tiffany glass window is one of the most stunning and expensive features in the entire house. It reportedly cost $1,500 (£1,180), or $52,000 (£41k) in today's money, and was designed to cast a rainbow across the room when light shone through the prismatic crystals.
However, it was installed in a room with very little natural light, meaning the effect goes practically unnoticed.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Adding extra light
As you work your way up through the house, you encounter more and more design quirks. There’s a window in the floor (thankfully surrounded by railings) and a room completely devoid of a floor.
This could be due to Sarah Winchester’s haphazard approach to designing: as she continued to extend the house, she was forced to add skylights and interior windows to help natural light filter through the inner rooms.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Shadowy spaces
Despite her best attempts, the mansion still has many shadowy rooms and eerie passageways which do nothing to dispel myths about hauntings.
The house swallowed up outbuildings as it grew ever larger, creating dark corners that many would not dare to venture into. In the murky hayloft, light filters through tiny windows placed high on the walls, casting sinister-looking shadows onto the floors.
@winchestermysteryhouse/Instagram
Eerie attics
After an earthquake caused huge damage to the house in 1906, reducing the house to four stories, Winchester almost completely abandoned the front wing. Some sources say she saw the destruction as a message from the spirits; a sign that she should cease to expand and extend the house.
The mansion was boarded up, leaving rooms like this attic space unfinished and replete with unused building materials.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
The highest point in the house
The highest point in the house is the Witch’s Cap tower in the South Turret. Said to be occupied by a 'heavy, spiritual presence', it can only be accessed via a claustrophobic passageway with ceilings barely five feet (1.5m) high.
With its minimal furnishings and echoey acoustics, the room is one of the most unsettling in the entire Winchester mansion.
Chris Brown/Alamy Stock Photo
Getting around
The only space in the house that stretches from basement to roof is the hydraulic lift shaft. Winchester installed three lifts in the mansion including an electric one and another powered by a horizontal hydraulic piston.
The majority of lift pistons have a vertical configuration to save on space, but Sarah preferred to capitalise on the enhanced functionality of the horizontal piston and sacrifice a little of the vast floor plan.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Dare to descend
Many people over the years have claimed it is a haunted house. The mansion has two basements, which are said to be hot spots for paranormal activity.
Several witnesses have reported the ghost of a man pushing a wheelbarrow around the house’s eerie underground passageways. Said to be the spirit of a gardener or landscaper, the apparition appears perfectly content to roam peacefully around the basement.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Antique outbuildings
Aside from the main house, many of the estate’s former outbuildings still exist, including a foreman's house, a fruit drying shed, a greenhouse, and a gardener's tool shed. There’s also an old stable block, rumoured to be another site where ghostly figures roam.
There have been reports of haunting orbs floating around the stalls, with some visitors even maintaining to have caught them on camera.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
A mystery mansion
After Sarah Winchester’s death, construction on the house stopped. She bequeathed it to her secretary and niece Daisy Marriott, who sold it at auction.
The property was later leased to entrepreneurs John and Mayme Brown, who eventually purchased it. In February 1923, five months after Sarah’s death, the house opened to the public, with Mayme as the first tour guide.
Winchester Mystery House, LLC.
Would you dare visit?
Restored in 1970, the house is now open to the public all year round, allowing you to explore the wonders and phenomena of this spectacular property.
We may never know all the secrets of the Winchester Mystery House, but it remains remarkable nonetheless, and is the legacy of a woman committed to creating one of the most elaborate and complex homes the world has ever seen.
Looking for more mystery? Explore more of the world's most unusual homes