Sharpsburg Ghost Tours

Sharpsburg Ghost Tours Founded in 2008 by Meredith Poffenberger. Candlelit walking tour of historic and haunted Sharpsburg, Maryland. Ghosts of the Civil War, jilted lovers etc

Did you know that Main Street was part of the Beeline March?
05/28/2026

Did you know that Main Street was part of the Beeline March?

The 500-Mile Journey Made by the First West Virginians to Answer their Country’s CallWhen the “Short heard ‘round the world” echoed from Lexington & Concord,...

05/18/2026

Along Main Street in Sharpsburg, Maryland, this was the site of the Lutheran Church in 1862. The modern wooden sign reads: “Used as a signal station by Lee. Was also a Union Hospital."

Famously photographed by Alexander Gardner just after the battle, the original structure that once stood here did sustain some battle damage as incoming Federal artillery rounds would have been coming down around this area. Confederate forces had guns placed just above this location on the high ground across what is today's Antietam National Cemetery. As a bonus, a Civil War Trails, Inc. wayside was placed here just a few years ago…

04/05/2026
On the Sharpsburg Ghost Tours ... First stop of the tour. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1GapJNuewy/
03/27/2026

On the Sharpsburg Ghost Tours ... First stop of the tour.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1GapJNuewy/

In Sharpsburg, Maryland, this is notable battle damage on the historic William Chapline House that is located along West Main Street. Originally built c. 1789 and occupied by Dr. Augustin Biggs during the Battle of Antietam on September 17 1862, it's believed that this structure was hit by incoming artillery fire a handful of times.

Like many other families in their respective homes, Biggs sheltered inside with his. He later tended to the wounded here and ended up serving as one of the very first officials and organizers for Antietam National Cemetery.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1CYcsRmNcT/
03/22/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1CYcsRmNcT/

Stand on the Williamsport side of the Potomac River and look southwest toward West Virginia. That ridge across the water is the Maryland side of Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. One of the most visited historical sites on the East Coast. There's a strong argument it exists because of a woman named Mary Mish, who lived right across that river and refused to let it be forgotten. Most people have never heard her name. That's exactly the problem we're here to fix. Mary Mish lived at Maidstone-on-the-Potomac, an estate on the West Virginia side of the Potomac River directly across from Williamsport. She was not on the margins of this valley's cultural and historical life, she was at the center of it, in ways that history has been content to quietly overlook.

In 1942, she became the first female president of the Washington County Historical Society, serving in that role until 1949. Under her leadership, the Society didn't just preserve documents and artifacts. It preserved places. She led the campaign to acquire and fully restore Hager House, one of the oldest surviving structures in Hagerstown, built by the city's founder Jonathan Hager around 1740, and presented it as a gift to the City of Hagerstown in 1954. She was instrumental in saving Fort Frederick from serious structural deterioration and began planning for its bicentennial celebration. She understood that history isn't just something you catalog. It's something you fight for.

But Harpers Ferry was her defining fight, and it almost didn't happen at all.
Congress authorized Harpers Ferry National Monument in 1944. The authorization was essentially symbolic, it came with no dedicated funding and no mechanism for land acquisition. The federal government had said this place matters and then done nothing about it for years. The site sat there, authorized but unprotected, deteriorating. Mary Mish started making calls.

She met Dr. Henry McDonald, former mayor of Harpers Ferry and president of the Harpers Ferry National Monument Association, at the 1946 rededication of Washington Monument near Boonsboro. McDonald laid out the problem clearly: Congress had authorized the monument but West Virginia wasn't moving on land acquisition, and the Maryland side of the river, which was critical to the park's full scope, had no plan at all.

Mary Mish came home from that meeting and went to work. She lobbied the Maryland governor. She worked contacts at the Department of Forests and Parks. She tracked down and secured the first $40,000 in Maryland state funds for land acquisition in 1952 — extracted from a budget that had not been earmarked for this purpose. She fought for an additional $25,000 appropriation in 1956. She coordinated with state officials so skillfully that Maryland acquired every parcel of its Harpers Ferry land without a single condemnation proceeding. Not one landowner had to be taken to court.

In 1961, she was appointed as a founding trustee of the Maryland Historical Trust. In 1962, she received the first-ever Maryland Heritage Award from the Maryland Historical Society, the inaugural recipient of what remains one of the state's most prestigious preservation honors. She died in 1968 at the age of 63.

Congressman Charles McC. Mathias Jr. stood on the House floor to honor her. He called her "a woman of lively intelligence, tremendous energy, and deep commitment to the future of the Potomac Valley."

The Potomac Valley he was describing is this one. The river you can see from the end of our streets. Hager House still stands. Fort Frederick State Park still operates. Harpers Ferry National Historical Park welcomes visitors from around the world every year.
Mary Mish's name appears on almost none of it. We're saying it today. She was practically a neighbor. 🏛️

Enjoy the paranormal? Are you a "sensitive?" Enjoy history? Well, here's your chance to be a Sharpsburg Ghost Tours tour...
03/05/2026

Enjoy the paranormal? Are you a "sensitive?" Enjoy history? Well, here's your chance to be a Sharpsburg Ghost Tours tour guide! If interested, please text Meredith at 301-991-0265. We'll set up an interview. 👻

03/03/2026

Help us win! Vote daily!
Kelly Moore Sheds & Marketplace under Shopping for Grill Store and/or Sheds & Outbuildings
Williamsport Christkindlmarkt under Arts & Entertainment for Fairs & Festivals
Maryland EGGfest under Arts & Entertainment for Fairs & Festivals
Shepherdstown Ghost Tours under Arts & Entertainment for Family Entertainment and/or Tourist Location
Sharpsburg Ghost Tours under Arts & Entertainment for Family Entertainment and/or Tourist Location

Vote here:
https://bestofthetristate.com/awards/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23436744627&gbraid=0AAAAApJkUaHRdezOGJ9ncVm88aynYqz-L&gclid=CjwKCAiA2PrMBhA4EiwAwpHyC5yQoiLXZrMb1sDR6CM2sX84m6hr3UDvRg0KV8DqFjoUWgJKWaeLUhoCeJAQAvD_BwE

Thank you for nominating us as a Best of the Tri-State! You can vote for us here under "Arts & Entertainment" under the ...
02/18/2026

Thank you for nominating us as a Best of the Tri-State! You can vote for us here under "Arts & Entertainment" under the subcategory "Family Entertainment." Thank you again!

BEST OF THE TRISTATE AND THE UNIQUE LOGO IS A TRADEMARK OF VERSTANDIG MEDIAAND MAY ONLY BE USED WITH EXPRESS PERMISSION © 2024 VERSTANDIG MEDIA

Address

103 E Main Street
Sharpsburg, MD
21782

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Sharpsburg Ghost Tours posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Sharpsburg Ghost Tours:

Share