Most Haunted Places In Rugby, Tennessee To Visit

Following are the most haunted places in Rugby, Tennessee, where the echoes of tragic deaths and forgotten souls linger in the darkness. These haunted spots have witnessed centuries of sorrow, and some say the spirits of the departed are not yet ready to rest.

The Town

: "A carriage will drive through the town. The Episcopal Church is in the tour, and they still hold service there on Sundays. Kingstone Lisle is also in the tour. In the buildings on the tour you can take pictures but cannot use flash when you do. Also, unfortunately, you cannot touch any of the books in the library. All of the buildings are beautiful and there are a couple of cemeteries included in the tour. For more information on the tours go to www.historicrugby.org"


The Big South Fork National Park

: "The newspaper, USA today did a story in 1997 on one of the houses that is haunted by the ghost of a land agent who died there waiting for his son to arrive. Rugby is a village that is the remnants of a failed Victorian attempt at a utopian settlement there in the Cumberland Mountains."


Kingstone Lisle Inn

: "This is the home of "The snoring ghost", can only be entered during the tour. This is the house that Thomas Hughes, founder of Rugby, built for his mother, there are at least two. His mother and one they call "the snoring ghost". He likes to pull the blankets back on the bed and evidently you can hear him snoring."


The Library

: "The Library still has the original first edition books that were brought over, including those from Thomas Hughes himself. They say that the curator is still there overlooking his books and his dog is still trying to get out the door at night."


Newbury House Inn

: "there are a few. One is of a man that killed his wife thinking she had cheated on him, then killed himself. He was a nasty man."