Aired: October 26, 1999
In the series premiere tales of ghosts in a Greenwich Village brownstone, on board a World War II ship, a Mohawk Valley castle, and a Revolutionary War house on Staten Island. Also featuring "The Lavender Story" about a mysterious lady in a lavender dress as retold by folkorist Chuck Stead.
Aired: October 27, 1999
Aired: October 28, 1999
Legendary ghost ships are examined, including the Flying Dutchman, the Great Eastern, the Rouse Simmons and the Duchess II. Also: omens and apparitions of the sea.
Aired: October 29, 1999
Notable ghosts of Washington, D.C., include Abigail Adams, Dolley Madison, Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant.
Aired: October 30, 1999
Aired: May 10, 2000
Aired: August 12, 2000
Aired: August 26, 2000
Aired: October 21, 2000
A tour of historic Savannah, Ga., features the extravagancies and eccentricities revealed in John Berendt's bestseller "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil." Included: an 18th-century pirate said to haunt the notorious Pirates' House tavern; Fort Jackson's phantom soldiers; and tales of deceased slaves who frequent the waterfront where they once labored as shipwrights, caulkers and ropemakers.
Aired: Unknown
Aired: November 25, 2000
Aired: December 02, 2000
Aired: December 23, 2000
Aired: February 02, 2001
Aired: February 09, 2001
Aired: Unknown
Aired: August 12, 2000
A tour of Tombstone, Ariz., one of the Wild West's most notorious towns.
Aired: Unknown
Aired: May 10, 2000
A tour of historic Savannah, Ga., features the extravagancies and eccentricities revealed in John Berendt's bestseller "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil." Included: an 18th-century pirate said to haunt the notorious Pirates' House tavern; Fort Jackson's phantom soldiers; and tales of deceased slaves who frequent the waterfront where they once labored as shipwrights, caulkers and ropemakers.
Aired: February 16, 2001
Aired: April 06, 2001
Aired: November 04, 2000
A tour of the scary sites in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Aired: April 20, 2001
Aired: Unknown