Bernard Millet shot himself inside the Sunflower Room of the Hotel Wolf in Ellinwood, Kansas in 1927. The bullet hole that went through Bernard’s head and into the ceiling was never repaired, and is a current tour highlight at the Historic Hotel Wolf.

The purported bullet hole in the ceiling of the Sunflower Room at the Historic Wolf Hotel.

This bullet hole isn’t just a tour highlight; it’s mentioned as part of the hotel’s history on the application for placement on the National Register of Historic Places.

“One man, Bernard J. Millet, arrived in Ellinwood in the early afternoon and after doing some shopping downtown, he registered in the Hotel Wolf and prepared for dinner in the dining room. He ordered his meal and ate so slowly that by the time he was almost finished, he was the last person left in the dining room, attracting the attention of the two young ladies working in the dining room, one playing the piano, and the other cleaning up. Suddenly, the man reached into his pocket, took out a pistol, ad shot himself in the head. The suicide in the dining room produced a four-page article in the newspaper detailing the entire event and the life of Mr. Millet, and the dining room ceiling also bore the mark of the incident with a bullet hole as part of its fixture.”

Source

The Historic Hotel Wolf has a framed article on display in the Sunflower Room detailing the event, which blames unrequited love for Bernard’s suicide.

Many newspapers from Barton County during this time period are not available online yet, so I haven’t been able to find the article that is framed and on display at Hotel Wolf. Surprisingly, the sensational article didn’t seem to make it beyond Ellinwood, at least in the newspapers I am able to search. I couldn’t find any newspaper that reprinted the article in full.

However, I was able to transcribe most of it from photos that I took, and there is another full transcription of the article available here.

I also found a brief paragraph about Bernard’s suicide from Waldo, Kansas.

The Waldo Advocate, Waldo, KS, Mar 7, 1927

Who Was Bernard J. Millet?

Bernard Joseph Millet was born in Union Town, Kentucky on March 9, 1888 to Alice Clements and Joseph Millet. He was the youngest of their six children, the baby of the family. He moved to Larned, Kansas with his parents in 1908 when he was 20 and began his career as a store manager.

“Our Shoe Department is under the supervision of Bernard J. Millet.” The Tiller and Toiler, Larned, KS, Sep 15, 1921

Bernard probably went by B.J., based on the signature on his WWI draft registration card, which describes him as a short and slender man with dark brown hair and gray eyes.

When Bernard signed his name “B.J. Millet” on his WWI registration card, he was a manager at Dunn’s in Garden City, but his home address is in Larned, 100 miles away. Source

Bernard didn’t just register; he was drafted, and he served with the 164th Depot Brigade at Camp Funston from June-December 1918. “Depot brigades were responsible for receiving, housing, equipping, and training enlistees and draftees, and for demobilizing them after the war.” He joined at the beginning of the worldwide influenza pandemic that began at Camp Funston.

Soldiers of the 164th Depot Brigade, Camp Funston, Kansas, formed into the shape of the U.S. Armed Forces service flag, ca. 1918. Is one of these men Bernard? Source

Bernard was apparently unlucky in love. He never married and had no known children at the time he took his own life on February 19, 1927, less than a month before his 39th birthday.

According to the Ellinwood Leader news article that hangs in the Sunflower Room, Bernard “was engaged to one of the popular young women of Larned and … the engagement had recently been broken off.” The article also states that “from letters on his person, it is believed that unrequited love was responsible.” His despondency over the breakup likely led to his fatal decision, though his family claimed to no know reason why he would do it.

Bernard’s parents lived in Wichita at the time of his death, so his body was sent to Wichita for burial. The Wichita Eagle announced his death, but made no mention of it being suicide or that he died at Hotel Wolf. Instead, they reported that he died at his brother’s house in Larned.

The Wichita Eagle, Wichita, KS, Feb 21, 1927

Bernard came from a devout Catholic family, so he was buried in a family plot at Calvary Cemetery, and since he was the first Millet to be buried there, the family plot was likely purchased because he died. The photo below came from Find a Grave and is not what his grave looks like today.

Bernard Millet’s grave marker in 2008, photo by Del Huggins via Find a Grave

When I first visited Bernard’s grave in 2022, I found that the marker with his name, birth, and death dates had been removed. While this could have been damaged by lawn equipment, I am guessing it is due to vandalism. Bernard’s father has the same style of marker and it is not damaged or missing.

Bernard’s grave as it appears today.

Rumors persist that Bernard haunts Hotel Wolf; folks who claim to be paranormal investigators say they captured his disembodied voice in the Sunflower Room saying “pull the trigger,” and the Ellinwood Underground City Foundation tells everyone that Bernard is a paranormal feature of their for-profit venture.

But Bernard was a person, perhaps a troubled one, not a ghost story.

Sunflower Room detail

Additional Resources

Tour a underground city in Kansas thought to be haunted, KSN

Historic Wolf Hotel Instagram

Wolf Hotel, National Register of Historic Places

The Historic Wolf Hotel and Underground Tunnels, Backroads and Burgers

The Lingering Spirit of Bernard Millet, Ellinwood Underground

Going Underground in Ellinwood, Kansas

Bernard Millet, Find a Grave

Hotel Wolf, HMDB

Wolf Hotel, Wikipedia

Bury Millet in Wichita, The Wichita Eagle, Feb 22, 1927

Historic Wolf Hotel in Ellinwood getting new life with new owner, The Wichita Eagle, Jun 10, 2013

Chicken dinner place with old fashioned feel opens in hotel, The Wichita Eagle, Jan 14, 2018

The Historic Wolf Hotel, KCL online


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2 responses to “Rejected in Love: The Suicide of Bernard Millet”

  1. Michael Halfman Avatar
    Michael Halfman

    Good stuff. Perhaps we need to dispatch Barbara to Calvary cemetery to apprehend the vandals. There was a Dr. John Millet, professor of English, and head of the honors program at WSU back in the late 60\’s. Probably related.

    I\’m assuming when you did the Wolf hotel you also did the underground city?

    1. We did do the underground tour! I’ve never seen anything like that before, it was really cool.

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