Tag: Gettysburg Ghost Stories
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The Dobbin House, the Underground Railroad, and a History of Hauntings

I was once having dinner with a work colleague at the Dobbin House. It was a quiet late winter day, and we had been doing work on a phone app. The fine dining was slower than usual, and several tables sat empty around us. A table just across from us had two married couples—clearly tourists,…
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Tillie Pierce: Her Battlefield Account, Family, and Haunted House

Today, the story of Tillie Pierce and her family has been subsumed by the story of the battle, Tillie’s recollections of it, and the landmark house that is now a bed and breakfast. Like the Jennie Wade House, the Hotel Gettysburg, the Farnsworth House Inn, and the Rupp House and Tannery, the site has also…
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The Rupp House and Tannery: A House Divided . . . and Haunted

The Rupp House is close to the Jennie Wade House and the Farnsworth House Inn, and it’s just south of the Hotel Gettysburg. It stands at 451 Baltimore Street in Gettysburg, PA, and today houses the Children of Gettysburg 1863® museum (a Gettysburg Foundation interactive history center). In the 1860s this Gothic-Revival home belonged to…
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From North Carolina Planter to Iverson’s Pits: The Life and Death of Oliver Evans Mercer

The command disaster on Oak Hill that led to the infamous Iverson’s Pits cost the Army of Northern Virginia some of its most seasoned, hard-fighting men. Many of these had fought at Chancellorsville and a half-dozen other engagements, which surely made their destruction even more terrible for Robert E. Lee’s army. Not only were they…
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The Hotel Gettysburg: Its History and Hauntings

The Hotel Gettysburg stands at 1 Lincoln Square. Gettysburg’s Lincoln Square has been anchored for over two centuries by the inn that has worn many hats – from a humble 18th-century tavern to a Civil War hospital, from a Gilded Age grand hotel to a modern haunt for ghost-story seekers. The Gettysburg Hotel (once known…
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Thirsty Soldiers and the Mysterious Woman in White at Spangler’s Spring

In the years shortly before the war and shortly after, Spangler’s Spring was a gathering spot for the town. Newspaper notices often carried announcements of Fourth of July celebrations or political gatherings at the site. Likewise, it was a center point for visitors at Culp’s Hill. In the first several decades after the war, Culp’s…
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The Daniel Lady Farm: Bloody Floors, Carvings, and Ghosts

The Daniel Lady Farm near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, is known both for its pivotal Civil War history and for ghostly legends. John Forney, owner of the land of Iverson’s pits, could relate well to the Ladys. But more than just the dead in the fields, the house and barn have permanent reminders of the war (similar…
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The Ghosts at Iverson’s Pits: Why Workers on the John Forney Farm Avoided this Burial Site

On certain foggy evenings at Gettysburg, witnesses claim to hear faint moaning voices and see pale lights floating above a quiet ridge. This unassuming patch of farmland—known as Iverson’s Pits—hides a grim legacy. Here on July 1, 1863, nearly an entire North Carolina brigade was cut down in minutes during the Battle of Gettysburg. In…
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Is the Basement Really Haunted at Pennsylvania Hall?

People trying to explain the inexplicable at Pennsylvania Hall often suggest that hugely traumatic events leave an energy or an imprint on a place and that the imprint will then sometimes “play,” like an old record on a record player if someone cranks it up. My father was a rational man who practiced law and…
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It’s Called ‘Devil’s Den,’ So It’s Haunted, Right?

On the afternoon of 2 July 1863, the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg, the jumble of pink granite boulders at the southern end of the battlefield became the scene of intense fighting. Known today as Devil’s Den, the rocky defile marked the left flank of General Dan Sickles’s extension of the Union line, and its capture…