West Virginia Explorer
Old penitentiary at Moundsville, WV, Marshall County, Northern Panhandle Region

Introducing the five most haunted places in W.Va.

March 20, 2014

Ted Fauster

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. — The Travel Channel ranks two West Virginia landmarks among the most haunted in the United States, but ghost hunters know there are many more. The following five, ranked in 2014, are favorites of Jason Burns and Jonathan Moore, among the state’s best-known purveyors of the paranormal.

No. 1: Trans-Allegheny Asylum

Dwarfed by its massive tower, hosts flanking the front door welcome guests to the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum.

Dwarfed by its massive tower, the hosts flanking the front door welcome guests to the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum.


When Virginians decided to rid themselves of their “insane,” they determined that moving them west of the Alleghenies would prove the best solution. And, so, at Weston, in what was soon to become West Virginia, construction of one of the most fantastic buildings in the U.S. began.

According to parapsychologists, the psychologically troubled brought a host of troubling energies. Today, the facility, which was formerly the Weston State Hospital, has been converted into a museum and a destination for seekers of the supernatural, known as the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum.


 

No. 2: West Virginia Penitentiary

The Old West Virginia Penitentiary at Moundsville now welcomes tourists. Photo courtesy David Gear.

The Old West Virginia Penitentiary, located in Moundsville, West Virginia, now welcomes tourists. (Photo courtesy David Gear)

Near the epicenter of West Virginia’s “City of the Dead,” the presence of the old penitentiary at Moundsville has fueled a perfect storm of psychic activity.

Suicides and executions, violent inmates and violent guards — parapsychologists postulate that the turmoil of prison life worsened disturbances caused when European settlers decimated prehistoric burial mounds here.

Established in 1876, the castellated West Virginia State Penitentiary is now a civic center for the city and is open intermittently for historical and paranormal tours.

No. 4: Historic Harpers Ferry

Harpers Ferry, West Virginia

Hikers take in the view of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, from Maryland Heights. Photo by Rick Burgess

Whole armies of ghosts are said to march through the countryside above Harpers Ferry, not coincidentally one of the most important historic locales in West Virginia. Here in the shadow of the Blue Ridge Mountains, where the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers join, the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park protects a landscape untouched by time.

Ghostly residents haunt its cobbled streets and stare with empty eyes from windows overlooking a landscape that has changed little since the Civil War and John Brown’s murderous rebellion there.

No. 5: Parkersburg, West Virginia

Blennerhassett Hotel at Parkersburg, WV, Wood County, Mid-Ohio Valley Region

Blennerhassett Hotel, Parkersburg, WV

There’s no generally accepted reason for the relatively large number of hauntings experienced at Parkersburg. Perhaps activity here is a result of its situation on the Ohio River at the mouth of the Little Kanawha River, once known as the River of Evil Spirits.

Native Americans feared its floodwaters, in which whirlpools would quickly appear. Weeping statues, shadowy phantoms, and outright evil revenants inhabit its historic mansions and wander its wharves and avenues.