Few People Know A Certain Kind Of Haunting Was Once Illegal In Connecticut
Haunting a tavern was once illegal in Connecticut. That statement might cause you to scratch your head and think that our lawmakers were out of their minds, but we aren’t talking about spirits and ghosts floating around. This illegal haunting is about those colonial drunkards who spent far too much time drowning their sorrows in spirits of the liquid kind found in every local tavern.

It wasn't like today when resources were plentiful. In the early days, one event could quite easily trigger a lifetime of despair. Sometimes the anguish led people straight to the local watering hole.

The problems arose when tavern goers did not want to leave and head home. In the eyes of the lawmakers, excessive drinking was a road straight to ruin and poverty.
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Frequenting their favorite haunts became a little more difficult for people craving a drink, but the laws were enforced loosely and inconsistently throughout different parts of the state and illegal haunting still continued to take place.
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Exceptions to the laws were made for businessmen who conducted meetings in the taverns or for out of town travelers.

In the late 1700s the penalties were pretty severe. Tavern haunters that were caught could spend 2 hours in the stocks or be fined 20 shillings. The tavern keepers had a much steeper price to pay with a fine of three pounds and repeated violations causing a loss of their license to operate the tavern.

Taverns still exist in Connecticut today though few and far between. A tavern license allows only for the sales of beer. wine, cider and food. The cost is significantly lower than getting a full liquor permit to operate a bar.

The Griswold Inn was established in the late 1700s and served its fair share of colonists. Undoubtedly it also saw a fair amount of illegal haunting at the bar.
To check out a different kind of haunting in Connecticut, take a look at these places that are rumored to be inhabited by spirits!
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