Place Type: Museum

George Wythe House

Built in 1754, this Georgian-style mansion was home to George Wythe, a prominent American lawyer, judge, and signer of the Declaration of Independence. However, the house’s history is marred by tragedy, mysterious deaths, and ghostly encounters that have turned it into one of the most haunted places in the United States.

Heart Mountain Relocation Center

Nestled amidst the rugged, windswept landscape of northwestern Wyoming, the abandoned ruins of the Heart Mountain Relocation Center stand as a somber testament to one of the darkest chapters in American history – the incarceration of over 10,000 Japanese Americans during World War II.

Sorrel-Weed House

Built in 1840, this grand antebellum mansion has long been the subject of whispered rumors and chilling tales of paranormal activity, earning it a reputation as one of the most haunted sites in the United States.

Yuma Territorial Prison

Perched on the edge of the Sonoran Desert in southwestern Arizona, the Yuma Territorial Prison stands as a haunting relic of the American West, its weathered walls concealing a dark and troubled past that continues to reverberate through the ages.

Fort East Martello Museum

Perched along the picturesque coastline of Key West, Florida, the imposing structures of Fort East Martello Museum stand as a testament to the region’s tumultuous past, their weathered walls concealing a haunting legacy that has captivated visitors for generations.

Oak Alley Plantation

Flanked by the iconic double row of moss-draped live oak trees that give it its name, Oak Alley Plantation in Vacherie, Louisiana, stands as a testament to the antebellum South’s grandeur – and its darkest secrets. This historic site, with its stately white-columned mansion and lush, sprawling grounds, is renowned not only for its architectural splendor, but also for the persistent reports of ghostly activity that have captivated visitors for generations.

Littlefield House

Standing majestically on the University of Texas campus in Austin, the Victorian-era Littlefield House harbors both architectural splendor and spine-chilling tales of supernatural occurrences that have captivated students and faculty for over a century.

House of the Seven Gables (Turner-Ingersoll Mansion)

Immortalized by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s gothic novel and shrouded in centuries of supernatural lore, the Turner-Ingersoll Mansion in Salem, Massachusetts, stands as one of America’s most haunted historic homes, where the ghostly footsteps of its former residents still echo through its distinctive seven-gabled architecture.

Indiana Medical History Museum

Behind the elegant Victorian architecture of Indianapolis’s Indiana Medical History Museum lies a darker legacy, where the spirits of troubled patients, dedicated doctors, and mysterious figures still wander the halls of what was once the state’s premier facility for studying mental illness.

McPike Mansion

Looming atop what locals call “Millionaire’s Hill” in Alton, Illinois, the McPike Mansion stands as a decaying testament to Victorian grandeur, where decades of unexplained phenomena, mysterious deaths, and ghostly encounters have earned it recognition as one of America’s most haunted residences.