Haunted Field Hospitals in Getttysburg | Haunted Battle of Gettysburg

Haunted Field Hospitals of Gettysburg

learn where you can find some of the haunted field hospitals in Gettysburg

When the smoke cleared after the Battle of Gettysburg in July of 1863, more than 51,000 men were dead, wounded, or missing. In a town that had a population of just 2,400, that meant Gettysburg itself became a massive, makeshift hospital. Homes, barns, churches, schools—even orchards and yards—were converted overnight into grim facilities where soldiers from both sides received whatever help overworked surgeons could offer.

These field hospitals weren’t sterile operating rooms. They were blood-soaked and chaotic scenes filled with the screams of the dying and the smell of infection. And while many men found life-saving treatment within their walls, thousands more never left. Today, the spirits of those men—and perhaps even the doctors who tried to save them—are said to haunt these locations.

At Ghost City Tours, we don’t just study haunted history—we were born from it. Our founder, Tim Nealon, spent years investigating the field hospitals of Gettysburg. It was a late-night EVP session in one of these hospitals that started his obsession with ghosts—and ultimately inspired him to create Ghost City Tours. And trust us: there’s something very different about the ghosts you meet in a place where so many people suffered and died.

Where Were the Field Hospitals in Gettysburg?

During and after the battle, nearly 160 buildings in and around Gettysburg were used as field hospitals. These included:

  • The Lutheran Theological Seminary (used by both sides)
  • The Gettysburg College’s Pennsylvania Hall
  • The Evergreen Cemetery Gatehouse
  • The George Spangler Farm
  • The Daniel Lady Farm
  • The Dobbin House
  • Dozens of private homes and barns, like the Schriver House, the Schmucker House, and Trostle Farm
  • Even peach orchards and open fields were turned into open-air triage zones.

The choice of location often depended on proximity to the battlefield and access to water. Some buildings treated hundreds of soldiers at a time. These were overcrowded, unsanitary, and emotionally charged spaces where the boundaries between life and death blurred.

Why Were These Hospitals Needed?

The violence of the Battle of Gettysburg overwhelmed every aspect of the town. By the end of the three-day conflict, roughly 21,000 Union soldiers and 28,000 Confederate soldiers had been wounded. And with medical care being primitive by modern standards, timely treatment was often the difference between life and death—or between life and amputation.

Doctors, often with little more than bone saws and laudanum, were tasked with making impossible decisions. Most field hospitals were manned by overwhelmed surgeons, exhausted nurses, and civilian volunteers. They did their best with what they had—but in many cases, it wasn’t enough.

What Happened in These Field Hospitals?

Some of the most brutal and traumatic medical procedures took place in Gettysburg’s field hospitals:

  • Amputations: Done without proper anesthesia and often within minutes. Soldiers were often held down while limbs were removed.
  • Bullet Extractions: Sometimes performed with unsterilized tools, risking deadly infection.
  • Trepanation (drilling into the skull): Rare but sometimes attempted to relieve pressure from head wounds.
  • Morphine and Laudanum Overdoses: Administered to relieve pain but often hastened death.

In buildings like the Spangler Farm, the walls and floors were covered in blood. Arms and legs were tossed out windows and piled high outside. Survivors often reported seeing rows of men screaming, praying, or whispering goodbyes as surgeons moved quickly down the line.

It was in these very buildings where the trauma was so intense, the air still feels heavy more than 160 years later.

The Ghosts of Gettysburg’s Field Hospitals

There’s no shortage of paranormal activity in Gettysburg, but the field hospitals may be the most haunted locations of all. Visitors, investigators, and even casual tourists have reported shadow figures, disembodied voices, cold spots, and full-body apparitions—often near where surgical procedures took place.

George Spangler Farm

Now operated by the Gettysburg Foundation, this farm saw over 1,900 wounded soldiers pass through its barn. Today, visitors report moaning sounds, the clink of surgical tools, and phantom footsteps in the upstairs loft. Several EVP sessions have captured voices crying out “Help me,” “Don’t let me die,” and one that simply whispers “Cut.”

Tim Nealon has spent multiple nights investigating this location and reports some of the clearest EVP evidence he’s ever collected—intelligent responses, phantom knocks, and shadow figures that seem to peek from behind beams and disappear on command.

Lutheran Theological Seminary

Used as both a lookout tower and a field hospital, the seminary’s main building is rife with paranormal stories. Apparitions have been seen in the windows late at night, and staff have heard doors slamming, cries, and the dragging of boots in empty corridors. Some believe a Confederate soldier still haunts the attic where he died alone after being wounded on the first day of battle.

Gettysburg College’s Pennsylvania Hall

Another place where Tim had early paranormal experiences, Pennsylvania Hall at the haunted Gettysburg College was converted into a massive field hospital. Staff members have reported "time slips", where elevators open to reveal active Civil War hospital scenes—only to vanish seconds later. Guests have reported phantom nurses, whispers in empty rooms, and strange light anomalies caught on camera.

Daniel Lady Farm

Used as a Confederate hospital, the Lady Farm barn still has visible bloodstains on the floors from amputations. Investigators report high levels of EMF activity, ghostly voices speaking in Southern accents, and shadows that move against the flow of light. Some guests have described seeing figures peeking from behind trees near the tent sites, long after the reenactors have gone home.

Tim Nealon and the Haunting That Started It All

Long before Ghost City Tours became a national name in haunted travel, Tim Nealon was a paranormal enthusiast exploring Gettysburg with a digital recorder and a camera. It was during an overnight visit to one of the battlefield field hospitals that Tim recorded his first intelligent EVP, heard the distinct sound of boots shuffling on floorboards, and saw a shadow figure cross an empty room.

“You could feel it in your chest—the weight of the pain, the fear. I walked out of that house different than when I walked in,” Tim recalls. “That’s when I knew—I needed to create something that would help others experience these stories, and the places where they happened.”

And from that moment, Ghost City Tours was born.

A Note on Visiting

Many of Gettysburg’s former field hospitals are still private homes, working farms, or museum properties. Please be respectful when visiting and never trespass on private property—especially at night. Some of the most haunted locations can be visited during daylight hours or through authorized tours.

If you want to experience the haunted side of these historic places, consider joining a Ghost City Tour or another licensed investigation group.

Our Haunted Take

The field hospitals of Gettysburg are where medicine met mayhem, where bravery met brutality, and where thousands of souls passed into the unknown. It’s no wonder that these locations remain among the most active paranormal hotspots in America.

If you’re searching for the heart of Gettysburg’s haunted past, don’t just visit the battlefield—step into the places where the wounded cried out and the walls still echo with their last words.

Just be prepared. Some of those cries? They’re still being heard.

An illustration showing the chaos at the Field Hospital located at the Cashtown Inn
During and after the battle, the Cashtown Inn was used as a field hospital by the Confederate Army. Many soldiers died here.

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