Featured Haunts

Old Talbott Tavern – Bardstown, Kentucky
The Old Talbott Tavern was built in 1779 as the western-most (at the time) stagecoach stop in the frontier wilderness of a new nation. The town of Salem (later renamed to Bardstown) grew up around it. Originally called the ...

Olde Pink House – Savannah, Georgia
Construction on the Olde Pink House began in 1771 by the Habersham family. The house survived occupation by the British in the Revolutionary War and by the Union Army during the Civil War. It also survived the war of 1812 and ...

City Tavern – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The City Tavern was constructed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1773. It was one of the finest buildings in the largest and most cosmopolitan North American city of the time. It arrived on the scene just in time for its date ...
Recently Added Haunts

The Grill House and Rock Bottom Bar – Allegan, Michigan
The Grill House was built in 1836 by Samuel Hubbard, a Massachusetts Supreme Court justice who had interests in real estate. Hubbard’s Boston Company was granted 25,000 acres and eventually developed the town of ...

The Poland Spring Inn – Poland, Maine
The Poland Spring Inn actually encompasses three inns, three restaurants, a golf-course, and a great deal of history and local legend. The bar has a $2 happy hour for golfers and guests, and frequent live ...

Lemp Mansion – St. Louis, Missouri
When Johann Adam Lemp, moved to St. Louis in 1838, he found that the biggest sellers in the small store he opened were vinegar and beer. He started making both himself, and as his new, lighter, and very un-European style of ...

White Eagle Saloon and Rock & Roll Hotel – Portland, Oregon
Founded in 1905, the White Eagle Saloon was nicknamed "Bucket of Blood" for the frequent brawls that erupted among its patrons, mainly post-shift workers from the nearby docks, rail yards, and factories. Legends say the bar ...

Recent Comments