Bragg-Mitchell Mansion
1906 Spring Hill Ave.
Contact: virginia@braggmitchellmansion.com
Website Here
Haunted by a lady that has lost her true love. Has a haunted elevator that has been known to scare some folks. Also
suppose to be haunted by a little girl that died of yellow fever.
Oakleigh Mansion - built circa 1833
300 Oakleigh Place
Contact: hmps@bellsouth.net
Website Here
Chairs moving, lights flickering, it's the perfect haunted house. Evidently it has one good ghost named Miss Daisy
(what one book called her) and another ghost that doesn't really have a name. She evidently isn't too terribly nice and
tries to scare people and hates gaudy items.
Richards DAR House - built circa 1860
256 North Joachim Street
Contact: (251) 208-7320
Website Here
Evidently haunted by children and a mother that all died of yellow fever. It is said the people can often hear the children
laughing and playing while the mother watches over them.
Phoenix Fire Museum
203 S Claiborne St
Contact: (251) 208-7569
Was completely rebuilt brick by brick, but it was evidently such a good job that someone decided to come and haunt it. No one
really knows who is haunting it, but people can hear footsteps, doors closing, mumbling, etc.
Museum of Mobile
111 S. Royal Street
Contact: museum@cityofmobile.com
Website Here
People have experienced odd things here. no one really knows who or what is haunting the place. Evidently the
botanical gardens area is the hottest part. Even the cleaning crew hate to go in at night for fear their equipment will disappear.
Fort Conde
150 S Royal St
Contact: (252) 208-7304
Website Here
Fort Conde is suppose to be haunted by soldiers from the Battle of Mobile Bay.
Boyington Oak
Church Street Cemetery
Charles Boyington was found guilty of murdering his friend Nathaniel Frost on February 20, 1835, and was hung while he was proclaiming
his innocence. An oak tree sprouted from his grave several months after his execution. It is rumored you can still hear his cries and
whispers from time to time. This oak is located in a parking area outside of the Church St. Cemetery wall near Bayou St. It is believed
that it is the oak with the wooden posts around it.
The Seaman’s Bethel Theater
This theater basement, at the University of South Alabama, is said to be haunted by the ghost of a young child. It is believed that he likes
to play in the costume area. The ghost of a seaman also seems to haunt the fly loft.
Bienville Square
The ghosts of 2 soldiers have been reported there.
Magnolia Cemetery
Ghosts have recently been photographed there and a spectral funeral procession has been seen approaching the cemetery. It happened so frequently
that (it is rumored) the gate the ghosts used to enter the cemetery through was permanently closed. Beware the Blue Lady.
Seven Hills Cemetery
An apparition of a woman has been seen hanging on a cross.
Oyster Shell House
This house was once belonged to William Dexter. He fought during the Civil War and later acquired a large amount of land. He made a lot of money
being an oyster grower. He had his house made out of the shells of the oysters that made him rich. He was brutally murdered in his home in the
early 1900s. The exact date is not known. He was in his nineties when he was murdered. He was quite active in his older years with most of the
pretty girls in town. The last girl was engaged and the fiancé found them together. The fiancé went home, got an axe and went back to kill them.
Mr. Dexter’s nephew was also killed when he tried to keep the man from killing his uncle. This all happened on a dark, stormy Wednesday. From
family history and accounts, on the property there is a concrete slab where the house once stood. It is rumored that if you are there on a Wednesday
before a storm, you can see Mr. Dexter’s and his nephew's blood seeping out of the slab and the rest of the remains of the home.



