Ghost tours of the U.S.: Test your courage
Tortured slaves. Victims of a “Helter Skelter” blood bath. Theater-goers incinerated in one of America’s deadliest fires.
The restless spirits of these and other tormented souls haunt creaky homes, dreary cemeteries and dark alleys. Or maybe it’s all a con, a scam played upon our morbid curiosity about ghosts and the occult. With
-- Hugo Hugo Martín,
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Dearly Departed: The Tragical History Tour (Hollywood)
Celebrity spook enthusiasts can jump on a bus and cruise through Hollywood for three hours, checking out stops like the site of the Tate-LaBianca murders by the crazed Manson family. Guests also see spots where celebrities took their dying breath, including the site of the Ambassador Hotel, where presidential candidate
1 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays. $35. For reservations and meeting location, call (800) 789-9575 or go to www.dearlydepartedtours.com.
Pictured: The Viper Room in West Hollywood. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
Haunted Haight (San Francisco)
San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district is known as home for laid-back hippies and other free spirits. But it may also be home to dark spooks and evil spirits. Tommy Netzband, founder and president of the San Francisco Ghost Society, leads this two-hour walking tour of “the Haight.” According to Netzband, the highlight of the walk is a haunted bar, where patrons say they feel themselves being watched in the bathroom and unexplained sounds have been recorded by Netzband and his investigators.
7 p.m. nightly. $20. Meet at 1206 Masonic Ave., San Francisco. For more information, call (415) 863-1416 or go to www.hauntedhaight.com.
Pictured: A mural along Haight Street near Ashbury Street in San Francisco. (Robert Durell / Los Angeles Times)
Ghostly Tours in History (
Centered in the Gaslamp district of San Diego, this 60-minute walk starts at the 1850-era William Heath Davis house where visitors say ghostly shapes can be seen in photos taken of a woman’s portrait in the living room. The tour also takes you past the Horton Grand Hotel, where, legend says, the ghost of a murdered gambler haunts the venerable inn.
7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays (New tours are given on Sundays in October). $10. Meet at the William Heath Davis House, 410 Island Ave., San Diego. For reservations, call (877) 220-4844 or go to www.ghostlytoursinhistory.com. The company also offers a limousine tour and a downtown San Diego walking tour.
Pictured: The Gaslamp district of San Diego. (Lenny Ignelzi / Associated Press)
Spellbound Tours (Salem, Mass.)
Mollie Stewart, a licensed ghost hunter with the International Ghost Hunters Society, hosts this 60-minute Vampire and Ghost Hunt Tour. Follow her to locations that she has investigated, including an old graveyard, a creepy jail and the site of the original “witch dungeon,” where people accused of practicing witchcraft were jailed. Stewart also explains the origins of vampire folklore in Salem. She also offers a daytime tour solely on the victims of Salem’s witchcraft trials.
8 p.m. nightly through October. Meet at 2 New Liberty St., Salem. $13 for adults, $10 for students and seniors. For more information, call (978) 745-0138 or go to www.spellboundtours.com.
Pictured: A memorial in Salem for the 19 people hanged in witchcraft trials in 1692. (Lawrence Jackson / Associated Press)
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Haunted History Tours (New Orleans)
According to the organizers of these two-hour nightly walks of New Orleans’ French Quarter, more than 100 people have fainted on the tour. Maybe the creepiest stop is the LaLaurie House, where slaves were allegedly chained and tortured -- a secret that was uncovered after a fire nearly incinerated the building in 1834.
6 p.m. and 8 p.m. nightly. Meet at the Rev. Zombie’s Voodoo Shop, 723 St. Peter St., New Orleans. $20 for adults, $17 for students and seniors, $10 for children 12 and younger. For more information, call (504) 861-2727 or go to www.hauntedhistorytours.com.
Pictured: Bourbon Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans,
Ghost of Gettysburg (Gettysburg, Pa.)
Imagine seeing the spirits of slain Civil War soldiers rise from the earth to reenact the battles that look their lives 145 years ago. Four walking tours offered by the Ghost of Gettysburg Tours focus on the Civil War and the ghosts that purportedly haunt the site of one of its bloodiest battles. The 90-minute long tours are based on the research of historian and former National Park ranger Mark Nesbitt.
Start times and prices vary by tour. Tickets are sold at the Ghost of Gettysburg headquarters, 271 Baltimore St., Gettysburg. For more information, call (717) 337-0445 or go to www.ghostsofgettysburg.com.
Pictured: A wartime weapon is silhouetted against the setting sun on Little Round Top at Gettysburg National Military Park. (Steve Ruark / For The Times)
Chicago Hauntings (Chicago)
One of the most disturbing stops on this three-hour bus tour is at Death’s Alley, the site of the Iroquois Theater fire that killed at least 600 people in 1903 in one of the country’s deadliest fires. Other stops include the Hull House, which was built in 1889 atop sacred Native American grounds. This tour and others are based on the work of paranormal researcher Ursula Bielski.
7 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays plus extra 10 p.m. tours on Fridays and Saturdays. Meet at 600 N. Clark St. (at Ontario), Chicago. $28 for adults; $20 for children. For more information, call (888) 446-7891 or go to www.chicagohauntings.com.
Pictured: The Jay Pritzker Pavilion, designed by Frank Gehry, in Chicago’s