Government House in Regina, Saskatchewan, is the official residence of the province's lieutenant governor and a designated National Historic Site. The imposing Victorian mansion, built in 1891, served as the residence of the lieutenant governors of the North-West Territories and later Saskatchewan. The building is said to be haunted by former residents, with staff and visitors reporting footsteps on the upper floors when no one is present, the sound of a woman's voice speaking in the drawing room, and cold spots that appear in specific rooms. Some staff describe the feeling of being watched by a disapproving presence, as though a former resident is unhappy with changes to the house. The most commonly described apparition is a woman in Victorian dress who has been seen on the grand staircase, looking down at the entrance hall. Government House's formal gardens and its position overlooking Wascana Lake add a stately quality to the location, and its function as the representative of the Crown in Saskatchewan gives the haunting an air of official dignity. Regina's wide prairie sky and extreme seasonal variations — blazing summers and brutal winters — create a city of dramatic contrasts, and Government House sits at the intersection of political history, domestic life, and the supernatural.
