REVIEW · SAVANNAH
Savannah’s Ghost City “Dead of Night” Walking Night Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Ghost City Tours · Bookable on Viator
Ghosts of Savannah sound better at night. This adults-only walk weaves Savannah Historic District history with classic ghost lore, starting in Johnson Square and ending at Wright Square. I like how the tour keeps the vibe spooky without turning it into a gimmick, and how different guides I’ve heard named (Henry, Rebecca, Cordelia, Deanna, and AG The Ghost Goddess) bring clear, story-driven pacing.
Two things I really like: you get a guided route through major old-Savannah stops, and you’re not stuck figuring out what you’re looking at on your own. The walk is planned for a small group size (up to 30), so you can actually hear the guide. One thing to consider: this is more historical death-and-ghost storytelling than full-on jump-scare horror, so if you want gore or constant hauntings, you may feel a bit underwhelmed.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You Should Know Before You Go
- Savannah Ghost Tour at Night: What the Dead of Night Format Really Feels Like
- Meeting at Johnson Square Near the Nathaniel Greene Monument
- Johnson Square Unmarked Graves and the First Layer of Spooky History
- Colonial Park Cemetery: Where Yellow Fever and Civil War Legends Enter the Story
- Marshall House: A Civil War Hospital With Resident Ghouls Lore
- 432 Abercorn St: The Address That Makes Locals Cross the Street
- The Sorrell-Weed House Museum: Tragic Mansion Stories and Reported Cold Touches
- Wright Square, The Hanging Square: The Tour’s Grim Ending
- Price and Value: Is $34.99 Worth It?
- Pacing, Shoes, and Photo Timing for a 90-Minute Night Walk
- Who Should Book Dead of Night, and Who Might Want Something Different?
- Should You Book Savannah’s Dead of Night Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- Where does the Dead of Night ghost tour start and end?
- How long is the tour?
- What does it cost?
- Is the tour for families or kids?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- What’s included in the ticket price?
- What isn’t included?
- Does it run in bad weather?
- Is there a limit on group size?
Key Highlights You Should Know Before You Go

- Johnson Square start: the tour kicks off near the Nathaniel Greene Monument with stories tied to unmarked graves beneath the square
- Colonial Park Cemetery: a focused stop with Civil War desecration, yellow fever victims, and body-snatcher-style legends
- Marshall House outside viewing: learn how a Civil War hospital is tied to haunting stories, plus resident ghouls lore
- Wright Square ending: the “Hanging Square” site where the first woman executed in Georgia is part of the ghost lore
- Guides who balance facts and chills: many strong ratings point to guides like Henry, Rebecca, Cordelia, and Deanna
Savannah Ghost Tour at Night: What the Dead of Night Format Really Feels Like
If you like Savannah, you probably love the idea of seeing it with different eyes. This tour uses the night setting well: illuminated streets, old live oaks draped in Spanish moss, and a route that naturally changes mood as you move from square to cemetery to hotel lore.
What makes this one work is the mix. You’re not just hearing “spooky, spooky” lines—you’re getting a guided story thread that links place to history, then to ghost legend. I also like the adult-only framing (minimum age 16), because it keeps the tone consistent: darker tales, fewer distractions, more grown-up delivery.
Timing matters too. It runs about 1 hour 30 minutes, with multiple stops at roughly 15 minutes each. And while you’re walking, it’s not an all-day slog; one review specifically called out the route as just over a mile total, which is a big help for planning your evening.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Savannah.
Meeting at Johnson Square Near the Nathaniel Greene Monument

The tour starts at Johnson Square in central Savannah, meeting near the Nathaniel Greene Monument. By day, Johnson Square looks polished and proper. At night, the same stone and monuments become a stage for what’s under the square and around it—unmarked graves tied to Savannah’s earliest dead.
This opening is doing more than setting a mood. It also gives you your lens for the rest of the walk: Savannah’s “beautiful” layout is tied to real people who died, disappeared, or were buried in haste. The guide uses that context to frame the ghost stories, so you’re not hearing legends as random horror movie lines.
If you’re the type who likes to know where you are, this start helps you get your bearings fast. You’ll be learning your way around the historic district while the stories are still fresh in your head.
Johnson Square Unmarked Graves and the First Layer of Spooky History

The Johnson Square portion leans into the idea that the city’s earliest history isn’t always neatly recorded. The tour’s story centers on unmarked graves beneath the square and on the contrast between visible monuments and lost burials.
You can expect a tone that’s a little formal at first, then turns uneasy. The tour also mentions duels, mysterious deaths, and whispered conspiracies tied to what has taken place in the area.
Practical note: Johnson Square is central and easy to orient around, but like most historic-district walking, the ground can be uneven. Wear shoes that handle cobblestones or irregular sidewalks without you thinking about it the whole time.
Colonial Park Cemetery: Where Yellow Fever and Civil War Legends Enter the Story
Colonial Park Cemetery is the kind of stop that changes your whole pace. You go from squares and monuments to a setting that feels like it has its own gravity. This is also where the tour’s “history meets legend” approach gets very specific.
The cemetery stop is timed around 15 minutes and centers on:
- desecration during the Civil War
- headstones with stories of lost graves
- yellow fever victims tied to Savannah’s darker outbreaks
- body-snatching-style legends
This is also listed as a stop where admission is not included, so plan on the possibility of paying separately if you want full access. Even if you don’t, you’ll still get plenty of story context tied to the cemetery setting.
Drawback consideration here: this is a cemetery. If you’re sensitive to the subject matter, or if you prefer the spooky stuff to stay lighter, this stop may feel heavy. On the upside, it’s also one of the most historically grounded locations on the route.
Marshall House: A Civil War Hospital With Resident Ghouls Lore

Next up is The Marshall House, part of the Historic Inns of Savannah. Even before you hear the details, the building itself carries atmosphere. The tour frames it as elegant by day, but with a sinister past connected to its use as a Civil War hospital.
The stop focuses on the idea that people died here and that the site’s refined exterior doesn’t erase what happened inside. The guide’s storytelling is supposed to bring that tension to life, plus there are legends about resident ghouls.
One practical detail: this stop is also marked as admission not included. You may get most of what you need from the guide’s talk and the exterior setting, but it’s worth keeping your expectations flexible.
From a value standpoint, I like this stop because it shows how Savannah’s haunted stories often connect to real institutions—hospitals, cemeteries, and sites that were central to survival and loss.
432 Abercorn St: The Address That Makes Locals Cross the Street

At 432 Abercorn Street, the tour leans into a more local, “people react differently here” type of legend. The story is simple: locals are said to cross the street rather than pass too close.
What you’re really being asked to pay attention to isn’t just the haunted claim—it’s the urban superstition. Dark windows, a reputation that sticks, and a building that feels watched even without any special effects.
This stop is listed as admission free, so it can also act like a breath between heavier stops. You’ll still walk away with another piece of the tour’s bigger idea: Savannah holds onto its stories in both official history and street-level lore.
The Sorrell-Weed House Museum: Tragic Mansion Stories and Reported Cold Touches

The Old Sorrel Weed House Museum & Tours (Sorrell-Weed House) is a major stop, and the tone turns up again. The tour describes it as a grand mansion tied to tragic deaths and violent haunting stories.
The legend set here includes:
- murder, madness, and sinister secrets
- violent hauntings and stories that suggest intense paranormal activity
- whispers of forbidden affairs
The tour also mentions reports of cold touches in the dark, which adds to the “something is here” feeling.
This stop is listed as admission not included, so consider it a place where you might want to budget a little extra if you plan to go further than the exterior and guide commentary.
Why I think this stop is valuable: it shows you how Savannah’s haunted tourism isn’t only about cemeteries and hangings. It’s also about the homes where wealth and tragedy coexisted, and where people built lives that later became part of ghost lore.
Wright Square, The Hanging Square: The Tour’s Grim Ending
Wright Square is a fitting final stop, because the story goes straight to the site of public hangings. The tour frames it as “The Hanging Square,” where justice—and vengeance—was carried out before crowds.
The biggest named legend here is the restless spirit of the first woman executed in Georgia. The guide ties her haunting to searching for her lost child and for justice she never received.
This is where the tour’s whole theme lands: Savannah’s history isn’t just old dates and architecture. It includes punishment, loss, and stories people kept telling long after the events.
The tour ends at 120 Bull St, so you’re finishing with an easy exit from the route and a clear place to reorient for dinner afterward.
Price and Value: Is $34.99 Worth It?
At $34.99 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, the value depends on what you want from your night.
Here’s what you do get: a professional guide and a spooky walking tour that moves through key parts of the historic district. You also get an organized route so you’re not piecing together which buildings matter or why they matter.
What can affect value is what’s not included. Some stops are marked as admission not included (Colonial Park Cemetery, The Marshall House, and the Sorrell-Weed House). So the total cost could edge up if you decide to pay admission at each.
Still, I think it’s a fair price for the format, especially if you’re visiting Savannah for the first time. A good guide turns “I’m walking around” into “I understand what I’m looking at,” and the strongest reviews repeatedly point to that kind of delivery—storytelling that stays creepy but also makes historical sense.
Pacing, Shoes, and Photo Timing for a 90-Minute Night Walk
This is a walking tour, and the tour guidance is straightforward: bring comfortable shoes and have a moderate physical fitness level. Night walking on uneven sidewalks takes more effort than daytime strolls, so don’t dress like you’re going to the beach.
Also, treat the evening like a real outing: use restroom breaks before you settle in. One review joked that missing the last part happened because someone didn’t plan ahead, and that’s the kind of small detail that can ruin an otherwise great night.
For photos, night tours have an advantage: Spanish moss, old brick textures, and the glow of historic streetlamps give you darker, cinematic frames. The tour’s structure—multiple 15-minute stops—helps because you’re not constantly moving; you get time to frame shots at key locations.
Finally, keep your voice volume in mind. It’s a small group setting, and good guides (like the ones named in reviews) project clearly so you can hear them over the street noise.
Who Should Book Dead of Night, and Who Might Want Something Different?
This tour makes the most sense if you want adult ghost stories with Savannah history stitched through them. It’s a strong pick for couples, and it can work well as a first Savannah activity because it gives you context fast.
It also fits people who like a “story-first” approach. Reviews highlight guides like Henry and Rebecca for being clear, engaging, and not gimmicky. If you like facts plus chills, this format feels designed for you.
But here are the limits. The tour is not aimed at younger kids, and several comments suggest it can feel more like a historical tour about death in Savannah than a nonstop horror experience. If you’re expecting frequent, unmistakable paranormal moments inside buildings, or you want constant escalation, you may find some parts less scary than you hoped.
Should You Book Savannah’s Dead of Night Walking Tour?
I’d book this if you’re visiting Savannah as an adult and you want a guided night walk that explains the city while telling real ghost legends. The stops hit places that are central to Savannah’s identity—Johnson Square, Colonial Park Cemetery, the Marshall House, Sorrell-Weed House, and Wright Square—so you leave with more than just spooky vibes.
I’d think twice if you’re chasing gore-level horror or want a tour that’s mostly about theatrical scares. This one is about darker history and the stories people attach to it, told by guides who keep the pace moving and the sound clear.
If that sounds like your kind of evening, it’s a solid use of time in Savannah—and if you see names like Henry, Rebecca, Cordelia, Deanna, or AG The Ghost Goddess listed for your date, you’ll likely enjoy the style.
FAQ
Where does the Dead of Night ghost tour start and end?
The tour starts in Johnson Square, Savannah, GA 31401, at the Nathaniel Greene Monument area. It ends at 120 Bull St, Savannah, GA 31401.
How long is the tour?
The tour lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.
What does it cost?
The price is $34.99 per person.
Is the tour for families or kids?
It’s listed as adults-only with a minimum age of 16 years.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
What’s included in the ticket price?
Included features are a professional guide and a spooky walking tour.
What isn’t included?
Food and drinks are not included. Also, admission tickets are marked as not included for some stops on the route.
Does it run in bad weather?
The tour operates rain or shine. If it’s cancelled due to severe weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Is there a limit on group size?
Yes. The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.

























