I once took a Haunted ATX ghost tour through Austin, and let’s just say—I didn’t sleep well that night.
At the Littlefield House, they say Alice Littlefield never really left. She rarely went outside when she was alive, and now people hear her playing the piano upstairs after dark.
The Clay Pit was once a trading post in 1853 and later a family home. Some nights, staff hear a full party upstairs—and a little boy who died there still tapping around his old room.
Then there’s the Driskill Hotel, opened in 1886 and dripping with ghosts. Guests smell Jesse Driskill’s cigar smoke and hear a senator’s daughter bouncing her ball down the marble staircase she fell from.
And the Suicide Brides—two of them. Both jilted, both still roaming the fourth floor in their wedding dresses. If you ever stay there in October, don’t be surprised if one shows up to check on your room.
“Himalayan Cedar” imported from the Himalayas and planted on the property of Littlefield HouseHimalayan Cedar Tree imported from the Himalayas and planted on the property of Littlefield House… the most haunted site in AustinThe Driskill Hotel is haunted by multiple ghosts including 2 suicide bridesA vault from 1890 – originalWitnesses at The Driskill report hearing sounds of people upstairs when no one is there, and feeling something they can’t see touching their face and arms. Also, apparitions have been seen sitting in chairs or at windows.The blonde lady in the portrait is said to have been seen around the hotelThe tavern is haunted by two Mexican prostitutes who were murdered there in the 1800sThe Clay Pit is said to be haunted, especially the basement. The restaurant was built by a group of early settlers in 1853 as a trading postThe Haunted ATX hearse arriving at Littlefield house
Haunted trinkets at The TavernOur Cadillac hearse on 6th streetA Zoltar machine predicts your future at Pinballz Arcade“The Tavern” bar has a fortune machine on the upper floor