Real Haunts

A horrific collection of real haunted houses and haunted places. Want to stay in a haunted hotel or visit the Amityville Horror house, the Exorcist House, or the real Conjuring house? This is where you go to find true reported locations of hauntings and paranormal activity. Find real haunted houses near you with our FrightFinder.

Real Haunted Houses Categories

The Haunted Menger Hotel in Texas

210-223-4361

204 Alamo Plaza, San Antonio, TX 78205, USA

The Menger Hotel in San Antonio, Texas has a haunted history like none other. The hotel is quite welcoming, with many hospitable rooms ranging from single beds to parlor suites. However, you’ll find that its sordid history has this 316-room hotel placed firmly at the top of Texas’s Most Haunted list.

The Haunted Menger Hotel in San Antonio, Texas

Originally built in 1858 next door to William Menger’s brewery, the hotel’s long and occasionally bloody history has left at least 32 distinct ghosts living within its walls. Many of them have persisted through remodeling and have taken to drifting through walls where doors used to be, much to the dismay of unassuming guests.

Guests looking for a scare will certainly not be disappointed. While the living identity of many of the Menger ghosts is unknown, a consequence of its nearness to the devastation at the Battle of the Alamo just a few yards away, The Menger ghosts have a few famous haunts on their roster.

The Ghosts of the Menger Hotel

Sallie White, a young maid working at the hotel, got into an argument with her husband one spring afternoon in the late 1800s. She took refuge in one of the hotel’s guest rooms for the night, but her husband, incensed, sought her out the next day. She was badly beaten but hung on for two days before she succumbed to her injuries and passed away in the hotel. Her funeral was provided for by the hotel’s owners, and today she appears more often than any of the hotel’s otherworldly residents.

Captain Richard King, the one-time owner of Texas’ King Ranch, learned that he was dying. Rather than pass on in the comforts of his own home, he booked his favorite room at the Menger, where he stayed until his illness overcame him. Though his room has since been remodeled, legend says that the bed frame is still the same one he sought out for his last moments, and his funeral service took place in the hotel parlor.

In addition to Captain King and young Mrs. White, other reported incidents include unseen kitchen help who carries utensils from counter to counter and the unknown man in buckskin who accosts guests coming out of the shower with his repetition of a single question:

“Are you gonna stay, or are you gonna go??

Horror Fields Haunted House in Sawmills, North Carolina

828-461-7484

4270 Helena St, Sawmills, NC 28630, USA

This Haunted Attraction has closed. Find more haunts near you or in North Carolina.

The Horror Fields Haunted Attraction offers families of the Hickory and surrounding areas a night of excitement they will never forget. This Halloween Season we will feature “Gory Tales of the Helena St. Hellbilies” and the “Horror House of 3 Dimensions” to ensure a thrilling night for all. We offer all sorts of entertainment in “Terror Town” including delicious soda blends, amazing photo opportunities, discounted costume sales, live music, dance parties, games, and more! Come out this 2017 Halloween Season to have an experience to DIE FOR!

Moore’s Old Pine Inn

110 S Main St, Marysvale, UT 84750, USA

Built in 1882, the Moore’s Old Pine Inn is home to several spirits. It is said that previous owners and guests to the inn are still occupying the space.

Many see an adult female resting on the front porch as well as children playing.

Psychics have visited the inn and determined that it is indeed haunted.

Haunted Myrtles Plantation

7747 Hwy 61, St. Francisville, LA , USA

Haunted Myrtles Plantation

Built in 1796, The Myrtles Plantation is located near Baton Rouge, Louisiana. In the 1970’s, the mansion was converted into a Bed & Breakfast. Those who visit are treated to the splendor of 1790’s southern architecture, with the grandeur of a traditional plantation-style home. In addition to opulent chandeliers, a vast veranda, and ornamental furnishings, the Bed & Breakfast also offers a ghastly history full of violence and scandal. Visitors experience the mystery firsthand via daily guided tours… and firsthand while they sleep.

History of the Myrtles Plantation AKA Laurel House

Myrtles Plantation Stairs where William Drew Winters died on the 17th step

The stairs where William Drew Winters died on the 17th step. Listen for Winters’ ghostly footsteps.

Myrtles Plantation in St. Francisville Louisiana certainly has one of the most intricate histories dating back to the Whiskey Rebellion of the 1790’s. The house was built by General David Bradford in 1796; it was originally called “Laurel house” and lies on 600 acres. The plantation was passed down to General David’s son-in-law, and eventually came to be owned by Ruffin Gray Stirling and his family, who changed the name; it is now casually referred to as “The Myrtles.”

When Ruffin Gray Stirling died in 1854, his wife Mary Cobb Sterling was left to manage the property. She enlisted the help of attorney William Drew Winter, who would later marry her daughter Sarah; they had several children, one of whom died at the age of 3 of typhoid fever. In 1871, William Drew Winter was shot while standing on the front porch of the Myrtles home. He is said to have stumbled inside the home and climbed the staircase, making it only to the 17th step before succumbing to his wounds. His murder has never been solved.

The Hauntings Begins

Over the following decades, the Myrtles Plantation changed hands several times. Eventually the house and property were purchased by Marjorie Munson, who reported “odd happenings” within the home. Her accounts were just the beginning of a long list of reports of paranormal activity taking place on the plantation over the following century. These stories have been given new life in the form of the Bed & Breakfast’s “Mystery Tour,” and by numerous accounts of guests brave enough to spend the night within its haunted walls.

Guests who stay in the mansion have reported paranormal activity happening in the night: While some have had their bedsheets mysteriously removed while they slept, others have been violently pushed from their beds! And in the notoriously creepy “Fannie Williams Room” also known as the “Doll Room,” visitors have awoken to finding ceramic dolls inexplicable tossed across the room!

Fannie Williams Doll Room in the haunted Myrtles Plantation

Fannie Williams Doll Room in the haunted Myrtles Plantation

Ghost Story: A Slave to Vengeance

The most infamous report of paranormal activity involves a young slave who was said to have been owned by previous plantation owners, Clark and Sara Woodruff. The slave girl, who was named Chloe, was taken as a mistress by Woodruff. The affair went on for some time, but eventually ended and when it did, Chloe began to spy on the family; driven by her fear of being banished to working the fields. One day Woodruff discovered the young slave lurking outside his study and cut off her ear as punishment. Chloe became known for wearing a green turban to hide her unsightly scars.

In a quest for vengeance, Chloe is said to have poisoned the family with a cake containing boiled oleander leaves. While Clark failed to consume the poisonous pastry, Sara and two of her young daughters who ate the cake were sickened and died within hours. Chloe was consequently hanged by fellow slaves who feared the ripple effect of her treachery. To this day, visitors report ghost sightings of the “girl in the green turban” hiding in shadows throughout the plantation.

Myrtles Plantation Chloe Ghost Photo

Many ghost sightings of Chloe have been reported over the years.

Clark Woodruff’s revenge did not go unpunished. Residents and visitors alike have long reported sightings of his wife Sara and their children trapped within a 200-year-old parlor mirror in the mansion. Hand prints and drip marks are visible and appear to be inside the mirror, as no amount of cleaning has been able to remove them.

Murderous History

As many as 10 murders have been reported to have occurred in the Myrtles Plantation home, but the most famous is that of William Drew Winter in 1871, who you’ll remember was shot while standing on the front porch of the Myrtles mansion. Over the last hundred years, residents and visitors have reported hearing his ghostly footsteps ascending the staircase in the night, always climbing no further than the 17th step.

In the 1970’s the plantation’s owner Frances Kermeen published a book about the mansion, calling it “the most haunted house in America.” The plantation has more recently gained notoriety through several television features including Unsolved Mysteries (2002), Ghost Hunters (2005), Travel Channel’s Ghost Adventures, and even an episode Oprah.

The Myrtles was recently mentioned as a “bucklet list must,” for those interested in historical and paranormal mysteries. The author encourages visitors to take the guided tour, but aptly advises against eating the cake…

La Fonda Hotel

100 E San Francisco St, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA

The La Fonda Hotel is a great location for ghost hunting. The original structure stood there more than 400 years ago. An apparition believed to be Judge John P. Slough has been seen numerous times. When one of the hotel staff investigated mysterious footsteps, the apparition resembling Judge Slough walked into the stairwell and vanished.

The ghost of a murdered bride by a jilted suitor has been seen near the elevators, in the lobby, and basement. The spirit of a cowboy is seen at the hotel bar, and a housekeeper saw a body in a bed in a room that was vacant. When she pulled back the covers, no one was there. If you stay at the La Fonda, you may not want to turn your bedroom light off.

31025 Louisiana Hwy. 1, White Castle, LA 70788, USA

Is the Nottoway Plantation Haunted?

The Nottoway Plantation is one of the largest plantation houses in the South. Built in 1858-1859, it has 64 rooms and resides on the Mississippi River. The ghost of a coachman is said to still keep watch over the plantation. The story goes, the young slave stayed at his post ensuring the safety of the occupants during a Civil War attack.

The Nottaway’s Ghost Coachman

Guests have heard ringing bells, presumably for the coachman, and other odd experiences. Looking for a haunted plantation to stay in during your Louisiana trip, the plantation is a great bed and breakfast to consider, with luxury accommodations and they even have murder mystery dinners from time to time. Lots of history and if you’re lucky, you’ll see the ghost of the coachman.