13 HAUNTED LOCATIONS
East to west along Arizona's Route 66
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01 Holbrook
The Curse of the Petrified Forest
For over 200 million years, ancient trees lay buried in northeastern Arizona, slowly turning to stone. Visitors learn the hard way that taking even a tiny piece invites disaster — and more than 1,200 have mailed the rocks back to prove it.
02 Holbrook
George Smiley's Ghost
In a town once described as 'too tough for women and churches,' Arizona's first legal execution went badly wrong from the start — and the condemned man never entirely left the building where he waited to die.
03 Winslow
La Posada's Mysterious Guests
One of the last great hotels built by the Fred Harvey Company, La Posada was designed with mystery built into its walls — and the guests who loved it most never quite managed to leave.
04 Canyon Diablo
The Apache Death Cave & Cursed Two Guns
In 1878, forty-two Apache warriors suffocated in a limestone cave sealed by Navajo raiders. When an entrepreneur turned their mass grave into a roadside attraction, the curse came alive — and it hasn't stopped since.
05 Flagstaff
Hotel Monte Vista's Celebrity Ghosts
Built with public funds in 1927, this 73-room hotel attracted Hollywood royalty — and several of them apparently liked it so much they stayed forever. John Wayne's Phantom Bellboy still knocks on doors announcing room service.
06 Flagstaff
The Weatherford's Eternal Honeymooners
When Texan John Weatherford built what the local paper called 'the finest hotel in the whole southwest,' he couldn't have known that a pair of newlyweds would spend their eternity in its elegant hallways — still whispering, still laughing, still together.
07 Flagstaff
Don and Thorna's Museum Club
Willie Nelson played here. Tanya Tucker played here at fourteen. But the most regular performers at Flagstaff's legendary roadhouse are Don and Thorna Scott — the owners who died tragically and never left the building they loved.
08 Williams
The Red Garter Inn's Murdered Madam
Williams was the last town on Route 66 to be bypassed by the interstate — and the Red Garter Inn, once a frontier saloon and brothel, has held onto its past just as stubbornly. Eva still walks the halls in her white dressing gown.
09 Peach Springs
Grand Canyon Caverns' Restless Spirits
In 1927, Walter Peck stumbled into one of the largest dry caverns in the United States on his way to a poker game. He turned it into a tourist attraction — and disturbed the dead in the process.
10 Kingman
Hotel Brunswick's Love Triangle
When a woman came between the two co-owners of Kingman's finest hotel, they made a remarkable decision: instead of one buying the other out, they built a wall down the middle — creating two separate hotels under one roof. The feud never ended.
11 Oatman
The Oatman Hotel's Hollywood Ghosts
Clark Gable and Carole Lombard spent their wedding night here in 1939. They're still there — whispering and laughing in the upstairs room. So is Oatie, the Irish miner who wanders the halls playing his bagpipes.
12 Hackberry
The Hackberry Mine Murders
In 1875 a prospector found silver in the Hualapai Mountains and named his claim after a hackberry tree. The mine made fortunes and drew violence. Around 1910, an unnamed stranger was lured into those hills and never came out — and he's still looking for the mine that killed him.
13 Arizona Route 66 — Holbrook to Oatman
Route 66's Phantom Hitchhikers
Route 66 isn't called America's Most Haunted Highway without reason. For nearly 100 years, this ribbon of asphalt carried millions of travelers from Chicago to Los Angeles. Many never completed the journey — and some of them are still trying.