Epperson House on the University of Missouri–Kansas City campus is a grand three-story Jacobean Revival mansion built in 1919 by Uriah Spray Epperson, a wealthy corn merchant. After the Epperson family donated the property to the university, the building served various institutional purposes, and reports of paranormal activity began surfacing among faculty and students. The most commonly reported phenomenon is the apparition of a woman in white seen gazing from the third-floor windows, visible from the campus grounds below. Some identify her as Harriet Barse Epperson, who died in the house. Others have reported hearing piano music emanating from the ballroom when the building is locked and empty. Security guards doing night rounds have described doors opening and closing on their own, lights switching on in sealed rooms, and an oppressive feeling on the grand staircase. The building's ornate interior — with carved woodwork, leaded glass windows, and a pipe organ — contributes to its haunted atmosphere. Several UMKC student publications have documented the legends, and the building remains one of the most talked-about haunted locations in Kansas City.
