Haunted Places in Lee County, Georgia



    We're sorry, but there are currently no haunted listings available within the boundaries of Lee County, Georgia. If you know of one that should be listed here, please let us know via our submission form. Alternatively, you may want to expand your search to the state of Georgia.


    In the meantime, here's a list of all haunted places within 100 miles of Lee County, Georgia.



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    Windsor Hotel

    Americus, Georgia

    21 miles from Lee County, GA

    This 1892 hotel once boasted 100 rooms and a 3-story atrium, but it closed in the 1970s. It has since reopened and now has 53 guest rooms. It was once the site of a 1928 speech given by Franklin D. Roosevelt, prior to his becoming governor of New York. The ...

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    Plains Historic Inn and Antique Mall

    Plains, Georgia

    22.9 miles from Lee County, GA

    This quiet southern town was the birthplace of Jimmy Carter, and also boasts a supposedly haunted inn. The historic hotel formerly featured a funeral parlour on premises, but now houses delightful guest accommodation and a quaint antiques store with a variety of interesting displays, including local memorabilia. Apparently a ...

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    Baker County Courthouse

    Newton, Georgia

    34.1 miles from Lee County, GA

    Dating back to 1906, the historic courthouse no longer serves as a jail due to flooding from the nearby Flint River on several occasions. Disembodied footsteps and ghostly voices are often heard when there is no one around. (Submitted by Callum Swift)

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    Hawkinsville Opera House

    Hawkinsville, Georgia

    52.5 miles from Lee County, GA

    Construction on the Hawkinsville Opera House began in 1907, and the 576-seat theater has been used as a makeshift church and a temporary movie cinema when those respective buildings burned. Now it is a historic theater and possibly home to a ghost, who is said to dim the lights at ...

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    Kendall Manor Inn

    Eufaula, Alabama

    59.9 miles from Lee County, GA

    This 1872 inn was said to be haunted by Annie, a dedicated nursemaid who took care of a former owner's children, and stayed on even after her death. Also believed to reside here are the ghosts of a Victorian lady and little girl who hang out in the downstairs area ...

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    Springer Opera House

    Columbus, Georgia

    68.7 miles from Lee County, GA

    Springer Opera House's stage has seen the likes of Oscar Wilde, Lillie Langtrey, John Philip Sousa, Ethel Barrymore, Will Rogers, William Jennings Bryan and Franklin D. Roosevelt. But that's not all. Edwin Booth, brother of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth, is rumored to haunt the place. Other ghosts are thought ...

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    Douglass Theatre

    Macon, Georgia

    78.9 miles from Lee County, GA

    After the theater underwent restoration, staff members noticed that occasionally the lights would grow dim for no apparent reason. The phenomenon is attributed to the theater's ghosts.

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    Johnston-Felton-Hay House

    Macon, Georgia

    79.1 miles from Lee County, GA

    Built in 1859, the house was converted into a museum in 1962 and donated to the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation in 1977. The museum is said to be haunted; the apparition of an elderly woman in a mid-1800s dress has been seen in the hallways. Witnesses also describe cold ...

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    1842 Inn

    Macon, Georgia

    79.1 miles from Lee County, GA

    A ghost, thought to be original owner John Gresham, has been seen in the Dogwood Room, and the ghost of a little girl has been seen in some of the other rooms. A third apparition, one of a tall blonde woman, has been seen in several places throughout the inn.

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    Two Egg Stump Jumper

    Sneads, Florida

    79.8 miles from Lee County, GA

    A small bigfoot-type creature, perhaps the fabled "skunk ape," is reportedly roaming the area between downtown Two Egg and the Chattahoochee River. Footprints, and even the creature itself, have been spotted by the locals.

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    500 N. Ashley St

    Valdosta, Georgia

    82.7 miles from Lee County, GA

    This place, formerly Vito's Pizzeria and Lounge but no longer open for business, was said to be haunted by a former owner who hanged himself on the premises when the building was a private home. Chairs were said to move on their own, and a shadowy apparition was known to ...

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    Headless Indian Chiefs - Walker's Town

    Sneads, Florida

    87.4 miles from Lee County, GA

    During the 1830s in the Indian village called Walker's Town, incidents led to the death of two Native American chiefs. The deceased chiefs' heads mysteriously came into the possession of a Dr. Joseph R. Buchanan of Cincinnati, Ohio, who thought he could learn from the dead by studying their skulls. ...

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    St Luke's Episcopal Church

    Marianna, Florida

    94.6 miles from Lee County, GA

    The Civil War "Battle of Marianna" took place in and around the grounds of St Luke's Episcopal Church, and it is believed that one of the Confederate soldiers killed there still haunts the basement. Witnesses describe seeing the apparition of an elderly, bearded man, dressed in period clothing.

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    Ely-Criglar House

    Marianna, Florida

    94.7 miles from Lee County, GA

    Originally the manor house for Francis R. Ely's cotton plantation, this building is often known as "Ely Corner" in relation to the Civil War Battle of Marianna. It is believed that restless spirits from the battle still reside here.

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    Russ House

    Marianna, Florida

    94.7 miles from Lee County, GA

    The historic Russ House, built in 1895, is said to be haunted by several ghosts. The house serves as the home of the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce and the county's visitor center. The grounds were the site of the 1864 Battle of Marianna, where several soldiers were killed. Another ...

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    Toomsboro Historic Hotel

    McIntyre, Georgia

    95.3 miles from Lee County, GA

    Strange lights and apparition have been seen by staff and guests, along with weird noises. Things would vanish and go missing during the renovations of the old hotel, and workers would see figures standing at windows or at the ends of the hotel halls. (Submitted by Callum Swift)