The Fairmont Le Château Frontenac in Quebec City is one of the most photographed hotels in the world and one of Canada's most haunted. Opened in 1893 and designed to resemble a French château, the hotel sits atop Cap Diamant overlooking the St. Lawrence River. The building's most frequently reported ghost is Louis de Buade, Count Frontenac, the 17th-century Governor of New France, after whom the hotel was named. Frontenac's apparition has been described by guests and staff — a figure in 17th-century military attire walking the corridors of the older wing. Other reported phenomena include a woman in a wedding dress who appears on the sixth floor, believed to be a bride who died on her wedding night, and the sound of children's laughter in the tower rooms. During World War II, the hotel hosted the Quebec Conferences of 1943 and 1944, where Churchill, Roosevelt, and Mackenzie King planned the Allied strategy, and some staff believe the ghosts of wartime figures linger. The hotel's imposing copper-roofed towers, its commanding position over the old city, and Quebec City's 400-year history as the cradle of French civilization in North America give the Château Frontenac a depth of atmosphere that few hotels can match.
