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Spookiest travel destinations

Sleepy Hollow, New York, USA

You know the legend: The Headless Horseman rides over the bridge near the Old Dutch Church, searching for his lost head. Washington Irving’s classic tale was based on a section of Tarrytown, New York, now actually renamed after the fictional Sleepy Hollow – and the town goes all out for the spooky Halloween season. Located in the Hudson Valley, it’s just over an hour by car from New York City. Visit the church’s burial ground to see the final resting places of the real-life people who inspired the story, and listen to the tale read aloud inside the church itself. Take a lantern tour after dark of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, where Irving is buried. A visit to haunted “Horseman’s Hollow” will scare you out of your wits (Caution: It’s not for children). You might even run into the horseman himself!

London, United Kingdom

With its eerie English mist and famous fog, this is one city where ghosts feel right at home. Take an evening Jack the Ripper tour through Whitechapel, visiting notable spots on the trail of the 19th century serial killer’s unsolved murders; then stop at The Ten Bells pub where his victims spent time before meeting their grisly fate. Nearby on the banks of the Thames, the imposing Tower of London witnessed many royal beheadings including Henry VIII’s wife Anne Boleyn, and spirits of the executed still walk the grounds. At Highgate Cemetery in northern London, phantoms of the departed – and even a vampire – have been seen wandering among the tombstones; steady your ghosthunting nerves at The Flask pub (also haunted) around the corner.

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New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Called the most haunted city in America, New Orleans’ history is steeped in Voodoo, vampires and ghosts around every corner. It’s no wonder it’s been the setting for supernatural tales such as “Interview with the Vampire”, True Blood, and American Horror Story. Take a ghost tour to hear about the atrocities committed at the LaLaurie mansion. Visit the bars and pubs of the French Quarter, which all seem to be haunted. Check out a voodoo shop, and take a stroll through the “city of the dead” at St. Louis Cemetery No. 1, burial place of “voodoo queen” Marie Laveau.

La Isla de las Muñecas (Island of the Dolls), Mexico

You’re probably not going to book a vacation to this tropical isle, but if you happen to be visiting Mexico City and the UNESCO World Heritage site of Xochimilco, check out this creepy off-the-beaten-path destination. Legend has it that the Island of the Dolls is home to the spirit of a young girl who drowned offshore. A recluse who lived there believed collecting and displaying dolls, now filthy and missing body parts, would appease her spirit. Tragically, he also drowned – coincidence? Visitors have said the dolls move, blink their eyes, and even whisper. See for yourself if you dare.

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Salem, Massachusetts, USA

Home to one of the most notorious events in American history, the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, this city just north of Boston now embraces its witchy past with the annual Haunted Happenings festival. Visit the Salem Witch Museum or the Jonathan Corwin “Witch House,” the only remaining structure with direct ties to the trials (Corwin was a judge). You can also tour the real “House of the Seven Gables”, the inspiration for Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Gothic tale. Hawthorne’s ancestor, John Hathorne, was also a witch trial judge; visit his grave in the Old Burial Point (Charter Street Cemetery). Remarkably, it was only in 2016 that historians verified the execution site of the alleged witches, where a memorial now stands. However, because it’s in a residential neighbourhood, it might be better to pay your respects at the memorial downtown. 

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Dartmoor, Devon, England

This area in county Devon features eerie moors where mists have been known to come on suddenly and disorient those who dare wander the barren landscape. Dartmoor is also home to more than its fair share of ghost stories, witches and pixies. One of these inspired Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic Sherlock Holmes tale, “The Hound of the Baskervilles”, which featured a deadly canine spectre. Explore the spooky setting for yourself with a visit to Dartmoor National Park – you can even take a guided Hound of the Baskervilles tour to learn more about the supernatural history of the area.

Mercado de Brujas, Lima, Peru

Off the beaten path, the Mercado de Brujas, or Witch Market, within Lima’s non-witchy Gamarra Market, is definitely not a tourist attraction: It’s the real deal. The place sells everything a shaman would need for traditional Peruvian folk medicine: snake skins, dried llama fetuses, monkey skulls and a mixture of natural elements called hatun hampi. You can also sample a curative drink made from live frogs. (We don’t recommend drinking it!)

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The Stanley Hotel, Estes Park, Colorado, USA

If “all work and no play make Jack a dull boy,” consider a vacation to this mysterious hotel. Horror master Stephen King himself was so freaked out by the place when he stayed in haunted room 217 that it inspired his classic, “The Shining”. “Wandering through its corridors, I thought that it seemed the perfect – maybe the archetypical – setting for a ghost story,” the author says on his website. “That night I dreamed of my three-year-old son running through the corridors, looking back over his shoulder, eyes wide, screaming.” Jerking out of bed, within a few minutes he had the idea for his novel. But it’s not just fiction: This Rocky Mountain hotel, which opened in 1909, has its own haunted past (listen for the sound of children playing or a tinkling piano), which visitors can explore during the Night Spirits Tour.

Paris, France

The City of Light has some dark history. Visit the elaborately decorated Garnier Opera House, the real-life setting for “The Phantom of the Opera”. Although the Opera’s museum and library curator, Pierre Vidal, told The Telegraph, “nobody has seen a ghost in the opera house,” you can play a Phantom-themed “immersive adventure” escape game there. If you’re looking for actual ghosts, keep an eye out for the Red Man in the Tuileries gardens. But for the spookiest Parisian experience, check out the Paris catacombs, hundreds of kilometres of underground passageways lined with the bones of six million souls.

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Winchester Mystery House, San Jose, California

The recent Helen Mirren thriller, Winchester, told the story behind this real-life house – whether the supernatural part is true or not is up to you to decide. Tragedy befell rifle heiress Sarah Winchester when her infant daughter and husband died, which she believed to be retribution by all those who had perished by Winchester guns. Sarah began building the maze-like house in the 19th century – and never stopped until her death, creating staircases and doors that don’t lead anywhere, windows that look onto other rooms, and massive amounts of bedrooms so she could change up where she slept. Why do all this? Supposedly, she wanted to confuse the spirits that haunted her. Visit the house today for spooky candlelight tours.

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Edinburgh, Scotland

Edinburgh’s Old Town looks like something out of the Middle Ages – and spirits from that time still linger among the cobblestone lanes. Take a ghost tour along the Royal Mile, which heads up to the imposing Edinburgh Castle, home to phantoms including the headless drummer. One of the most haunted spots in the city is Mary King’s Close, a narrow street that was hit hard by the deadly Black Plague. It was walled off and is now underground, but you can visit it with the Real Mary King’s Close experience. Oh, and try not to disturb the poltergeist that haunts Greyfriars Kirkyard.

Valley of the Kings, Egypt

See where the royalty of Egypt’s New Kingdom is buried – if you dare risk incurring the mummies’ curse of misfortune following those who enter. The legend seemed to come to life when King Tutankhamun’s tomb was opened in 1922 and several members of the expedition, including its financier Lord Carnarvon, died soon after. You can visit Tut’s tomb, along with others, but beware: Some are crowded, dark, and claustrophobic, so not for the faint of heart.

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