We have very exciting things planned for this summer. The boys got out Wednesday, and I took them to Sweet Frog. That is one of my favorite traditions with the boys. It’s one of the few things we can all agree to love.
Living in the D.C. area, the day trip options are endless, and Old Town Alexandria is more than worthy of its spot on our list of things to do when you’re in the area.
This was actually my first ghost tour ever. I’ve never been on one before.
You know a friend truly knows me well when she starts out by volunteering to drive into Old Town for me. If you’ve never been, you should know that driving in the D.C. area is kind of a pain, or at least it is to me. There is so much traffic. But really the problem is I have absolutely ZERO sense of direction.
Even with GPS, I make it, but I struggle.
I’m notorious for getting lost, missing turns, etc. Amy driving put me in a fantastic mood right off the bat because I recognize my own weaknesses.
Yes! In any big city, that is a win. It’s a $10 parking garage during the day. After 6 pm, it has a $5 fee cap.
Then Amy navigated us past the town hall, down a couple of blocks, to a Mexican restaurant called Don Taco. We opted to eat inside in the glorious air conditioning. It was hot and humid outside, as it usually is in Alexandria in June.
We all had the chips and salsa. Zoe and I ordered birria tacos, which were delicious. You only need a couple, as it looked like they took the crunchy taco shell and fried it. However, if you just drink water and don’t go too crazy with the chips, you can eat two tacos and leave the restaurant without that heavy “I just ate my weight in Mexican food” feeling.
Amy ordered some kind of rice bowl, which did look much healthier than my tacos, but it must have been filling because she liked it but she couldn’t finish it. We all agreed we would definitely eat there again.
Our dinner was delicious and refreshing. Mexican food just never disappoints. The scenery of Old Town in general is so pleasant too. There is excellent window shopping and two-hundred-year old town houses line the streets in varieties of colors and decor.
The additional crowds gave the whole area a vibrant atmosphere.
I mean, what’s not to love? I get a tour around a town I have not explored thoroughly. The tour is focused on historical events of the town. My friends or family come with me, so we have a much needed night out. Plus, I have always enjoyed a good scary story based on real people.
A ghost tour is basically a walk through a city or town with a tour guide where they stop by locations where historic or tragic things happened. They tell you the story of what happened there, which is almost always a true story, and then they tell you what strange happenings or ghost sightings have happened there in the years that followed.
It reminds me of when I was a kid and I read every one of those 13 Ghosts of Alabama books. Do you remember those? They used to have one for every southern state, though now they seem to be all out of print. If you liked those stories, you will enjoy a ghost tour. It’s like learning all the lore of a local place, in the form of campfire ghost stories based on real historical events.
I’m not a horror fan though. I can only handle ghost stories in small doses, or I will be hiding under my covers and making a mad dash from the bathroom back to my room at night.
It was getting towards dusk, truly the perfect time to do a ghost tour. If you want to feel more nervous, I would say do the 10pm version. I personally don’t go anywhere that late, much less on a ghost tour.
I was taking a photo of the pretty hydrangea bushes, when someone offered to take our picture for us! Who says there aren’t still nice people?
You know, we kept marveling at how many people were in town on a Wednesday night. It just occurred to me we were sandwiched between school ending and this big Army parade happening in D.C. this weekend. That may be one reason Old Town was especially busy this week.
There are multiple tour groups meeting in the square, but this group meets by the stage in front of Town Hall.
It’s mostly famous because it is well known that President George Washington frequented that tavern, and it’s incredible that it is still open. There is even a museum on one side of it.
I have often wanted to go there but was never sure exactly where it was. Well, now I know where to find it. It is close to Town Hall. Plus, we got to learn about the stranger ghost who apparently stays at the tavern.
Now one day I need to go back and go inside!
Our next stop was this coffee shop. Pretty much every single building you pass in Old Town is historical. This building has been many different things over the years. Zoe and Amy both remembered when it was a delightful candy store.
They say this place is haunted, though the ghost does not bother the people in the business. A tragic accidental death happened there, followed closely by her fiance’s suicide. It was a terribly sad story.
Meanwhile, the current shop is a must visit. We went in there at the end of the night. I had a delicious decaf iced vanilla latte, and I think Zoe had gelato. It was extra fun because we ran into a friend of theirs working the counter! Amy and Zoe are far more acquainted with Old Town than I am, so they even know people there.
This is a church with a graveyard attached. In fact, in the back this church appears to run slap into another church. It’s all a little crowded back there. I do not recall much of the stories from this place, as I was so busy trying to get a few good photos here. I can be a little obsessive with my camera.
However, my camera did capture the connection this church boasts of to George Washington:
Also, Janda explained to us the difference between a graveyard and a cemetery, which I had not the slightest clue about. She said a graveyard belongs to a church. A cemetery does not.
This is basically a Revolutionary War era graveyard from what I gathered, though it is very hard to read anything written on these weathered tombstones. I was strolling through these stones, taking photos, trying to figure out where Zoe went (she stopped to pet an orange tabby cat), and enjoying the refreshing cold spots.
You know how you can be in the lake, and there are areas that are just ice cold, and other areas that are normal? Well, that’s how this graveyard is. It was chock full of icy patches, and I loved it because it was eighty degrees, and we’d been outside for a while. Oh, and it was an almost sticky humid evening.
We all gathered near the caged grave in the corner to listen to our tour guide tell us all about the Unknown Revolutionary soldier. Zoe moved on from the orange tabby cat, and we all reformed as a group. Janda said that this is one of the most haunted places in the city, and that several things are often reported here.
She told us about people seeing faces in the church windows, visitors reporting “cold spots,” and this, that, and some other things. I don’t know because as she mentioned the cold spots, I was busy leaning into one to get cooled off! Then all I could think about was, “Wait. What?”
Well, I still can’t tell you whether it means anything or not, but if cold spots means spirits, this place is dancing with spirits.
I checked with my friends. It was crazy cold in there, right? You felt that? Nope, nope, nope. It was just me. Zoe was only thinking about her new cat friend, and Amy said it was hot just like everywhere else.
Huh. Well, what do ya think of that?
You can read more about it on the American Legion’s page here. Our guide, Janda, knew all about it. She said when they were rebuilding the wall back there (or renovating a building or something), they found this full Revolutionary War skeleton. It is all very official. He is the Unknown Revolutionary.
There are other memorials throughout the country to the Revolutionary War’s unknown soldiers, but this is the tomb.
A Civil War soldier was murdered in this tunnel. Other people have also been murdered there, way back in the past. It used to have train tracks inside.
There was a couple on our tour who had their engagement photos done here. They said the photographer’s camera would only take black and white photos in the tunnel, but everywhere else the photos were color, but no matter how much light they added, the photos still came out black and white. Isn’t that weird?
This is a popular place to walk in the city. Most people do not know about its being haunted, or they pay it no attention.
The most famous Spite house in Alexandria is something like six inches slimmer than the one in the photo. This was my first time to see any of them in person, though I have read about them before. We were excited to see this too!
By the way, that skinny little home sells for over $800,000, which is why we have never lived in Old Town Alexandria.
Janda varies her tours. You can go on the same tour more than once and actually see different places. It was seriously crowded with other ghost and history tour groups that night, so we skipped some popular spots to see others like the tunnel that were more out of the way, just to have more space.
I don’t even know what the building above is, but check out the buck!! You couldn’t pick a better city in America to take a walking tour.
Our last stop on the tour was the Carlisle house. It used to be much larger than this when it was a hotel. In person, you can see the marks on the red brick building next to it where the buildings used to touch. The house used to extend far forward and out to the side.
The ghost stories for this house occurred outside and in the torn down hotel. This is also a museum that you can tour during open hours.
We didn’t ride the trolley, but I took a photo of it. I think it’s an important staple of Old Town, and if you do get to go tour Alexandria, definitely take a ride on the trolley. It goes up and down the length of King Street, and it is free to everyone.
After our tour, we headed back to the haunted coffee and gelato shop, as I mentioned before. I highly recommend it, and don’t worry about the haunted part. Most people don’t even know that’s the case. We just learned so much on our tour!
I should’ve photographed my refreshing iced latte. It was the perfect way to end the night. Instead, I’ll leave you with one last Old Town photo, and a link you can click to check out a ghost tour near you, or an Alexandria one like we went to. They do ghost tours like this everywhere!
They do tours in Washington, D.C. too.
Not into the spooky side of things? Alexandria and D.C. Ghost Tours also offer ones that are more centered on history and spy activity. You could check that out instead.
We had a blast, and I can’t wait for our next adventure. Many thanks to US Ghost Adventures for the tickets. This is an unsponsored review, and all opinions are my own.
Drop me a comment below, and tell me what you think!
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