Face The Ghosts.
The most reported paranormal hotspots in the five boroughs — and the histories behind them.
Haunted Places in New York City
The Merchant's House Museum at 29 East 4th Street is widely considered the most haunted building in Manhattan. Built in 1832, it's the only 19th-century family home in New York preserved intact with its original furnishings. The house's last resident, Gertrude Tredwell, died there in 1933 at age 93, and staff and visitors have reported seeing her apparition in an upstairs bedroom, smelling her perfume in the parlor, and hearing piano music from a room where no one is playing. The building has been investigated by paranormal researchers multiple times, and it's one of the few haunted locations in New York that is open to the public year-round.
The Morris-Jumel Mansion in Washington Heights, Manhattan's oldest surviving house (built in 1765), served as George Washington's headquarters during the Battle of Harlem Heights. Its residents over the centuries included Aaron Burr's wife Eliza Jumel, whose ghost has been reportedly seen in an upstairs window. The House of Death at 14 West 10th Street — a brownstone in Greenwich Village — has an alleged 22 ghosts, including Mark Twain, who lived there briefly. The New York Public Library's main branch on Fifth Avenue has reports of footsteps in empty reading rooms after closing. Even the Empire State Building has its ghost stories, typically involving Depression-era workers who died during construction.
StoryHunt's haunted walks send you to the city's most reported paranormal locations — not for jump scares, but for investigation. Your phone delivers historical clues about each site, challenges you to find physical evidence of the events that created the legends, and lets you draw your own conclusions. Each haunted place has a real history that's as compelling as any ghost story. You walk the route, you decode the clues, you decide what you believe.
Pick a city. Choose a story. You receive a curated mystery mission set in a real neighborhood.
Follow clues through the streets. Everything happens via chat. Your phone sends you clues, riddles, and directions to hidden spots, secret doors, and forgotten places.
Solve the puzzle. Live the legend. 2-3 hours of immersive adventure. No guide. No bus. Just you and the city.
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