Someone that visited the Queen Mary says when we went to visit the Q.M. last year. We went on a tour, walking through the ship was interesting in its history however room B340 as we approached and before the tour guide said a word, I began to feel this stifling sick feeling, almost like I was smothering. Inside it felt awful, all I can explain it was a feeling of being sick and almost smothering, a very negative feeling of intense tragedy and sadness. Close to the bed/bath area it became strongest. After we left the person I was with said when he was walking through the door felt someone push him from behind as if they wanted him to get out (turned and nobody right behind him) It used to be in use as one of the many hotel rooms however the queen Mary officially closed it off to public lodging after repeated complaints of blankets being pulled off, knocks on the door and walk in middle of night and whispers of "get out". The rest of the Q.M. rents other hotel rooms but B340 they won't allow guests to stay in. Apparently back in its day when she was in use as a cruise ship, there was a murder suicide in that room.
The room B340 also has scary stories told on a pilar in the very room itself. Including a Ouji Board so you could play to experience more.The Queen Mary attraction was the site of a fatal plunge as well! witnesses said a womens boyfriend grabbed her hand before she slipped from his grasp. The 26-year-old woman, identified Wednesday by the coroner as Kelly Ryann Dorrel of Long Beach, fell 75 feet into the frigid water between the permanently moored ship and its parking lot. A ship spokeswoman said that she was unaware of any such falls in recent memory, if ever. Some sources report that the Queen Mary has been the site of at least 49 reported deaths. Among them was that of an 18-year-old crewman, John Pedder, who was accidentally crushed in Door No. 13 of its engine room during a routine drill in 1966. In the end the Queen Mary became very well known for the amount of deaths and tragities that have all happened on the ship
If you're still feeling brave enough to consider sleeping on the Queen, there was also a reported visitor that slipped a steward some cash in exchange for finding a 'willing' female passenger to keep him company for the night. After stowing his luggage, a female companion was found and they retired for the night. In the morning the man was missing from the dining hall so the steward went to find him. What they found instead was the corpse of the female companion! They could not locate the male guest, his registration information for that room nor his luggage, which people swore was checked and stowed. He simply vanished and left only a trail of blood and rumors.