:: Our Guides ::
Ghost Hunters of Asheville: Ghost Tours
Asheville's Only
Interactive Ghost Tour!
828-779-HUNT (4868)
For Information &
Reservations:
828-779-HUNT (4868)
or
Email Us


Hours of Operation:
Tours leave nightly
from the Haywood
Park Hotel. Times are
seasonal. We are currently
departing at 7
:30pm.


Prices:
Adults: $18
Children aged 8-14: $1
0
6 and under are free


Ask about
local
& military
discounts!
A native Iowan, Deb is a Public Speaking instructor at
Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College. Out
of the classroom, Deb actively hunts for ghosts and has
participated in several ghostly investigations. “There’s
no end to the journey,” she says. “There’s always
something new to learn, to investigate, to question.”

Deb is an avid researcher in finding and authenticating
new Asheville ghost tales and is a member of the
Asheville Paranormal Society. See my
blog for updates
on ghostly experiences.
With a background in Communications, Brenda began
leading tours to Europe for a client years ago. This
experience, along with a lifelong interest in the
paranormal, set the stage for downtown tours in Asheville.
"I have the best job," she says. "I meet people from all
over the world and share history, adventure, and mystery -
all in the course of an evening stroll."

Brenda also leads women's history tours during the day.
Herstory Asheville spotlights the women of our city's past.  
Deb Maddox
Deb
Brenda
Brenda Seright Williams
Don't be fooled by her youth! Haley has grown up with a
mother who investigated and wrote about real
hauntings, and she is just as comfortable visiting
graveyards at midnight as she is navigating the streets
of downtown Asheville. She can "feel" where the spirits
lurk, and her photos are usually teeming with orbs.

"I love this city", Haley says. "There is no place like
Asheville and the ghosts are the icing on the cake."
Pepper
Pepper considers herself a rare breed, because she was
actually born and raised right here in Asheville. An avid
local historian, she loves researching Asheville’s exciting
past,  its downtown architecture and sharing the ghost
stories of our area.  “My father owned several buildings
downtown during 1940’s thru the 1960’s and shared many
of the same ghost tales you’ll hear on my tour. He was a
young boy during the depression and spoke of the many,
many suicides Asheville experienced in the early 1930’s.
He used to say there were a lot of spirits with unfinished
business walking around downtown.” She feels blessed
with the ability to sense spiritual activity, as did both of
her grandmothers, one who resided in Portlaoise, Ireland
and the other a Cherokee Indian. When not revealing
ghostly history by the moonlight, Pepper works in
marketing for a local radio station group.
Haley
Pepper Parris