Sitting just off the Parkway, nestled between the neon glow of modern Gatlinburg and the misty backdrop of the Smoky Mountains, the Gatlinburg Inn is one of the city's most iconic buildings. Family-run for generations, it’s been a gathering place for celebrities, politicians, and thousands of everyday travelers since it first opened its doors in 1937. But behind its charming facade and southern hospitality, there are stories — strange stories — that have quietly circulated for decades.
Ask around town and you’ll hear the same thing: the Gatlinburg Inn has history. And where there’s history, there are ghosts.
A Landmark Born in the Mountains
The Gatlinburg Inn was built by R.L. Maples Sr., one of the city’s early pioneers and a major force in establishing Gatlinburg as a tourist destination. At the time, it was one of the first hotels in the area, built to accommodate the growing number of travelers visiting the newly formed Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The inn quickly gained a reputation for comfort, charm, and hospitality. It became the temporary home of famous figures like Lady Bird Johnson and Tennessee Ernie Ford. In fact, the song “Rocky Top” was written here — penned in Room 388 in 1967 by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant. Over the years, the Gatlinburg Inn transformed into a time capsule — maintaining much of its original decor, and with it, an atmosphere that feels like stepping into a different era.
But not everything inside the Inn is from the past. Some things, people say, never left.
The Woman in White
One of the most common sightings at the Gatlinburg Inn is that of a woman in white — not an uncommon trope in the world of ghost stories, but unnerving just the same. She’s typically seen on the second floor, drifting silently down the hallway near the older section of the hotel.
Housekeepers have reported seeing her walk into rooms that were supposed to be vacant. One even chased after her, assuming it was a guest who had gotten lost. But when she rounded the corner, the hallway was empty. The doors were still locked. No one was there.
Some believe she may be connected to the Maples family — perhaps a former guest, or even an employee from the early years of the hotel’s operation. She never speaks. She never shows her face. But she returns, again and again, especially during the fall and winter months when the mountain fog settles in low.
The Elevator that Doesn't Obey
The elevator at the Gatlinburg Inn is vintage — a small, creaky box with brass accents and an old-school charm. But for years, employees and guests alike have reported strange behavior. The elevator will open on its own. It will stop at random floors. It has even been known to go up and down with no one inside and no button pressed.
Several guests have stepped into the elevator and felt an immediate drop in temperature — one described it as “walking into a freezer.” Another guest claimed the elevator doors closed on her before she could step inside, only to reopen a second later with a low hum that “sounded like breathing.”
Hotel staff have had the system inspected multiple times, and nothing has ever been found wrong. One technician reportedly joked, “If something’s controlling this thing, it’s not coming from the wiring.”
The Voices in the Walls
Some rooms at the Gatlinburg Inn carry more than charm — they come with whispers.
Guests have reported hearing muffled voices at night — not from the hallways, but from inside the walls. One family checked out early after their daughter claimed someone kept whispering her name through the air vent. Another couple thought the people in the room next door were having a heated argument... except the room was unoccupied.
When these events are reported, staff usually offer to move the guest to a different room — and that almost always solves the problem. Almost.
The whispers are usually described as urgent. Not angry. Not sad. Just... insistent. As if someone is trying to say something — or warn someone — but the words never quite come through.
R.L. Maples and the Spirit of the Innkeeper
The most persistent legend at the Gatlinburg Inn is that its original founder, R.L. Maples Sr., never fully left. Known for his attention to detail and hands-on management style, Maples was the kind of hotelier who believed in personal service and maintaining high standards — something he passed on to his children and grandchildren.
It’s said that some of the longtime staff still feel his presence, especially in the lobby and behind the front desk. One night manager claimed that when he forgot to lock up a storage closet — something Maples was adamant about during his lifetime — he returned later to find it mysteriously locked, with the key still hanging on the wall.
Another employee swears she saw a man in a tan suit walk into the staff hallway, only to vanish as she turned the corner. When shown an old photograph of R.L. Maples, she went quiet and nodded. “That’s him,” she said. “That’s the man I saw.”
There’s no fear in these stories — just a quiet respect. If Maples is still roaming the halls of the inn he built, he seems more concerned with making sure things run smoothly than scaring guests.
A Hotel that Lives Between Worlds
Unlike some haunted locations that trade heavily on their spooky reputations, the Gatlinburg Inn doesn’t advertise its ghosts. It doesn’t need to. People come for the charm and the history, and many leave with stories they didn’t expect to tell.
Maybe that’s what makes the hauntings here feel so real. The Gatlinburg Inn isn’t trying to sell you a ghost story. It’s just a place with a lot of memories — some of which have refused to fade.
If you find yourself staying there, keep your eyes open and your ears tuned. Listen for the whisper in the vent. Watch the elevator doors. And if you see a woman in white drifting past your door in the middle of the night — don’t be too quick to assume it was a dream.
Some guests check out of the Gatlinburg Inn with more than a souvenir. They leave with a story they can’t quite explain.