Haunted Places in St. Francisville, Louisiana
2 haunted locations

Myrtles Plantation
The Myrtles Plantation, located in Louisiana, stands as one of the American South's most extensively documented and thoroughly investigated haunted properties, achieving international recognition among paranormal enthusiasts while simultaneously functioning as a working plantation offering tours, lodging, and educational programming regarding the property's complex historical legacy encompassing both architectural significance and extensive paranormal phenomena. Constructed in 1796 by David Bradford, a prominent figure in the region's early development, the plantation was designed to showcase architectural elegance and economic success during the formative years of Louisiana's Euro-American settlement, featuring sophisticated design elements reflecting Federal period architectural traditions adapted to the climate and cultural context of the Deep South. The plantation developed through successive generations of ownership and occupation, expanding in physical scope and economic productivity while simultaneously accumulating the emotional weight of centuries of human experience, including periods of economic prosperity alongside darker chapters involving slavery, violence, and the exploitation of enslaved populations whose labor generated the wealth that sustained the plantation. The accumulated historical memory of the property, enriched by accounts of multiple deaths, violence, and family tragedy, appears to have created conditions favorable to extensive paranormal manifestation documented through comprehensive investigation and the consistent reports of visitors, staff, and paranormal researchers. The paranormal activity documented at the Myrtles Plantation centers on multiple distinct entities whose manifestations have been subject to historical research attempting to trace specific identities and circumstances associated with the spirits' original attachment to the location and their continued presence in non-physical form. The apparition identified as Chloe, appearing in the distinctive form of a girl dressed in a green turban, represents the most prominently reported and extensively documented paranormal entity at the plantation, manifesting with sufficient frequency and consistency that her presence has become virtually synonymous with the property's paranormal identity and the primary focus of paranormal investigation and visitor interest. The historical circumstances surrounding Chloe's death and her subsequent haunting remain subjects of ongoing historical research and paranormal investigation, with various accounts suggesting different narratives regarding her identity, her role at the plantation, and the tragic events that ostensibly led to her death and spiritual attachment to the property. The apparitions of children spirits, identified as the Woodruff children, suggest the presence of additional entities whose youth and apparent innocence create an eerie contrast to the adult spirits inhabiting the property and to the broader narrative of violence and tragedy associated with the plantation's haunting. The documented paranormal phenomena at the Myrtles Plantation include the apparition of a man appearing on the main staircase, a location of significant symbolic and physical importance within the plantation's architecture that appears to serve as focal point for paranormal manifestation and visitor experiences. Mirror handprints, representing one of the most distinctive and thoroughly documented paranormal phenomena associated with the location, appear mysteriously on mirrors throughout the property, manifesting as handprints of apparently child-sized dimensions that appear despite the absence of visible moisture or visible means through which they might have been created through conventional physical means, suggesting instead the direct imprint of non-physical entities upon reflective surfaces. The concentration of paranormal activity throughout various rooms and areas of the plantation suggests a location where paranormal phenomena manifest across multiple spaces rather than concentrating in isolated areas, indicating a property thoroughly permeated by supernatural presences or by some environmental or architectural condition that facilitates widespread paranormal manifestation. The documented historical accounts of deaths, violence, and family tragedy occurring at the plantation over more than two centuries provide potential explanation for the intensity and persistence of paranormal activity, with specific events including documented deaths and violent incidents appearing to coincide temporally with the particular entities whose presence appears most strongly anchored to specific areas. Today, the Myrtles Plantation operates as a museum, historical site, and paranormal tourism destination offering tours, overnight lodging, and paranormal investigation opportunities to visitors seeking both historical education and direct encounters with the supernatural phenomena that persist within the historic structure and surrounding grounds. The plantation has embraced its reputation as a genuinely haunted property, incorporating the paranormal character into the visitor experience while maintaining authentic historical interpretation regarding the property's architectural significance and complex historical legacy. Paranormal investigation organizations, television programs documenting haunted locations, and independent ghost hunters have visited the Myrtles Plantation extensively, producing documentation of phenomena that adds to the comprehensive body of evidence supporting the property's reputation as one of America's most authentically haunted locations. The continuing reports of paranormal activity from reliable sources including staff members, overnight guests, and paranormal investigators equipped with sophisticated detection equipment suggest that the entities inhabiting the Myrtles Plantation remain actively engaged with the physical location and with visitors who venture into spaces where the spiritual presences appear concentrated, creating opportunities for contemporary individuals to encounter direct evidence of paranormal phenomena and to develop personal understanding of the mysteries that blur the boundaries between documented history and the supernatural realm. The Myrtles Plantation stands as testimony to the possibility that certain locations, marked by historical significance and tragic events, may develop genuine haunted characteristics that persist across centuries, creating authentic locations where past and present intersect in ways that continue to fascinate and intrigue both historical researchers and paranormal investigators.

Rosedown Plantation
Rosedown Plantation stands as one of Louisiana's most historically significant antebellum estates in St. Francisville, representing the agricultural, economic, and social structures of the Old South plantation system. The estate was established during the nineteenth century as a substantial agricultural operation based upon cotton cultivation and enslaved labor. The main house reflects architectural aspirations of wealthy planters seeking to establish physical manifestations of economic status and social prominence. The extensive grounds include formal gardens designed according to nineteenth-century horticultural principles, creating spaces of aesthetic refinement demonstrating the proprietor's cultivation and wealth. The gardens at Rosedown Plantation represent extraordinary historical achievement, incorporating plant species from throughout the world arranged according to sophisticated aesthetic principles. Creation and maintenance of such extensive gardens required specialized knowledge, considerable labor, and sustained investment over decades. Within the hierarchical and racially stratified antebellum plantation system, gardens were maintained through forced labor of enslaved individuals with horticultural expertise. The identity of enslaved gardeners who created and tended the landscape remains largely obscured by historical circumstance, as plantation records frequently failed to document the names and identities of those whose labor created aesthetic achievements. Paranormal activity at Rosedown centers upon a female spirit believed connected to the plantation's horticultural history. Witnesses have documented her apparition in the gardens surrounding the main house, engaged in tending plants and continuing horticultural work that presumably occupied her during life. The manifestation suggests a spirit bound to the location through emotional attachment to the gardens or unresolved connection to work and responsibilities undertaken while living. Her continued presence suggests attachment to Rosedown transcends the boundary between life and death, with her connection to the gardens and land persisting with sufficient intensity to anchor her spiritual presence. The female spirit's identity remains subject to speculation among paranormal researchers and historians. Whether she was a member of the plantation owner's family, household staff, an enslaved individual with horticultural expertise, or another figure connected to estate history, her manifestation represents historical testimony to her significance. The concentration of paranormal activity in garden areas rather than the main house suggests her connection to place and work may exceed connection to any particular individual or family structure. The consistency of reports describing a female gardening spirit engaged in tending work establishes this as a documented element of Rosedown's paranormal history. Rosedown Plantation operates as a state historic site preserving the physical structure and landscape while documenting and interpreting the complex history of plantation agriculture and slavery. The paranormal manifestations add dimension to the site's historical significance, providing evidence of persistent spiritual presence within a location saturated with historical trauma. Visitors may encounter the gardening spirit while touring the grounds, experiencing what appears to be a centuries-old presence bound by love of work or unresolved historical circumstance. Rosedown represents convergence of architectural preservation, horticultural history, and paranormal phenomena characterizing the South's most historically significant estates.