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The Story Of F.O. Stanley's Hotel: The Deadly Truth About Tuberculosis Nobody Warns You About Discover the shocking true story behind The Stanley Hotel - how a dying man's desperate fight against tuberculosis created America's most famous haunted hotel. This isn't just another ghost story. This is the untold history of F.O. Stanley, the inventor who built a healing sanctuary that became a horror destination. In 1903, Freelan Oscar Stanley was given months to live. Tuberculosis was killing him at age 54. Weighing barely 118 pounds, doctors told him there was no cure. But Stanley refused to die in a sanatorium. He traveled to Estes Park, Colorado, seeking clean mountain air as his last hope. Within two years, he'd gained 40 pounds and decided to build a $500,000 luxury hotel to share his miracle cure with other wealthy tuberculosis patients. The Stanley Hotel opened in 1909 as a white palace gleaming against the Rocky Mountains - a monument to survival, healing, and hope. Stanley had invented the Stanley Steamer automobile, revolutionized steam car technology, and used his fortune to create a world-class health resort at 7,500 feet elevation. But here's the deadly truth about tuberculosis nobody tells you: it was America's #1 killer in 1903, claiming 200 out of every 100,000 Americans annually. There was no cure, no effective treatment, only fresh air and hope. Thousands of desperate tuberculosis patients traveled to Colorado seeking the same miracle that saved Stanley. Most of them died anyway. This documentary reveals: How F.O. Stanley survived tuberculosis when most patients died within months The real cost of building The Stanley Hotel - $500,000 in 1909 ($17 million today) Why Stanley Steamer cars briefly dominated American roads before vanishing The documented deaths at Stanley's automobile factory that history forgot How Stephen King's 1974 nightmare transformed a healing hotel into a horror destination The workers who built the hotel for $2.50 per day while Stanley spent $1,200 on a single piano Why the hotel celebrates ghosts instead of the inventor who created it The Stanley Hotel story reveals uncomfortable truths about tuberculosis, wealth, and historical memory. Stanley built a monument to life. Modern tourism transformed it into a monument to death. The hotel's ghost tours generate millions while Stanley's actual achievements are forgotten. We explore the complete timeline: Stanley's 1849 birth in Maine, his rise from schoolteacher earning $35/month to automobile magnate, the 1905 boiler explosion that killed worker James O'Connor, the hotel's construction by 120 laborers, Stanley's death in 1940, and the building's transformation into America's premier haunted destination. Compare Stanley's legacy to other Gilded Age fortunes: Carnegie's demolished mansion, Rockefeller's dynasty preservation, and Frick's art collection. Each chose different paths. Stanley's hotel survived through accidental transformation - the building endures, but the story changed completely. This video examines tuberculosis reality in early 1900s America, the desperate search for cures, why Colorado became a tuberculosis treatment destination, and how Stanley's personal survival story became erased by Stephen King's fictional horror. EDUCATIONAL DISCLAIMER: This video is created for educational and historical documentation purposes, exploring medical history, industrial revolution labor practices, and architectural preservation. IMAGE CREDITS: All images used in this video are from public domain sources and Wikimedia Commons, used under Creative Commons licenses for educational purposes. Historical photographs are public domain due to age and copyright expiration. #StanleyHotel #Tuberculosis #FOStanley #TheShining #HauntedHotel #MedicalHistory #TrueStory #HistoricalDocumentary #ColoradoHistory #StephenKing #DarkHistory #HealthHistory