Skip to content

Country Fox Exploring

  • Home
  • Blogs
    • Ghost Towns
    • Holidays
    • Local Events
    • National Parks, Museums and Education
    • Places to Eat and Drink
    • Trails
    • Unique places to shop
    • Uncategorized
  • Contact Country Fox
  • Meet the Author

Gettysburg and the Start of Spooky Season

October 4, 2022 by Debbie
Gettysburg and the start of spooky season
Evening on the battlefield.

What better way to come back from our unexpected hiatus than a blog about Gettysburg and the start of spooky season! As our loyal readers know, we love visiting Gettysburg. Recently we took another trip back.

Lightner Farmhouse B&B

Gettysburg and start of spooky season
Front of Lightner Farmhouse B&B

During this trip we stayed at the Lightner Farmhouse B&B. This building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is an 1862 Federal-Style house and is only a couple of miles outside of the Gettysburg National Military Park. Like many homes in the area, the Lightner Farmhouse was used as a hospital during the battle.

Gettysburg and start of spooky season
Just inside the front door.

The B&B has six rooms available to reserve. Each has their own bathroom, the original hardwood floors and door hardware. New owners have made a few changes to the atmosphere of the Lightner Farmhouse. Each room has been renamed and ties into the history of the battle.

Lightner Farmhouse B&B
The Parlor, one of the rooms used for surgery.

Breakfast is served each morning from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m., but there is water, soda and a Keurig available all day. Interested in staying? Visit their website and get booked in for a lovely stay.

Gettysburg Field Hospital
Breakfast room. The other room that was used for surgery during the Battle of Gettysburg.

A Ticket to the Past

Gettysburg and the start of Spooky season
Street view of Ticket to the Past.

Ticket to the Past is one of the museums we visited on the trip. Created by the Gettysburg Foundation, this museum offers an immersive virtual reality experience. Visitors spend a few minutes in a room learning a little history of the area and the people you will follow in the Virtual reality experience.

Visitors are given instructions on what will happen over the next 20 minutes. You will choose one of three real people to follow on your immersive virtual reality journey. The first ten minutes are spent wearing VR Occulus head gear. A word of warning, if you are easily made motion sick you may not want to do this. Each headset is programmed with the person you have chosen to follow. After this, the group is shown into the next room. Here a video is played, immersing viewers into the world of 1863. After this video, visitors are shown out back to where the trains would have arrived during 1863.

Interested on visiting? Check out the website here.

Train Station Gettysburg PA
Side view of the Train Station.

Gettysburg Heritage Center

This was the second museum we visited. Somehow, we had never made it in here before. This was really a nice museum for a low-ticket price. It only costs $9 for adults. Depending on the showing of the movie, you can either watch the movie first or walk through the museum.

The hollowed out remains of a witness tree.

The museum had a lot of great info and some really interesting displays. One display was a witness tree. Some pictures are even 3-D, don’t worry they give you glasses when you buy your tickets.

Gettysburg before the war.
Core of the witness tree marked with dates.
Gettysburg and the start of spooky season
Display of an amputation.

To view the video, visitors enter the theater. The lights are kept low, but you can see the life size display beneath the seating area. The movie starts and is a video describing the Battle of Gettysburg and the history. During the movie, the lights come up slightly on the figures below. After the movie is over, the lights ramp up, and visitors can take photos.

Gettysburg and the start of spooky season

There was also a gift store, which had a great selection of books. Some even signed by the authors! If you are interested in visiting, their page is here.

Miscellaneous

We didn’t eat anywhere new. We ate at Hoof, Fin and Fowl, The Garryowen Irish Pub, and the Dobbin House Spring Tavern. I covered these three locations in a previous post found here. I did have an amazing drink at the Dobbin House Spring Tavern. It was called “Pumpkin Pie Bourbon Smash”. Basically, it tastes like ‘Fall’ in a glass.

For anyone planning a visit, please keep in mind that many businesses are short staffed. Some restaurants are not taking reservations. I would suggest getting all your ducks in a row and have a backup plan in place.

Gettysburg and the start of spooky season.
On the left is Jason’s beer and my Pumpkin Pie Bourbon Smash on the right.

Some areas of the Battlefield were closed off to visitors. The Little Round Top and Devil’s Den areas have been closed so that they can complete repairs to pathways and address any safety hazards. It is expected to be closed roughly 18 months. To check in on the status, visit the National Parks page here.

Gettysburg and the Start of Spooky Season

Gettysburg is a great place to be at any time of the year, especially the spooky season. While we have had some ghostly encounters at a B&B, we did not have one at the Lightner Farmhouse. There are many haunted locations in and around the town of Gettysburg. You may be luckier than we were.

If you are interested in Ghost Tours, you have many to choose from. We haven’t gone on an official ghost tour in about 10 years, and we haven’t done them all. From the few that we did try, we really enjoyed the Farnsworth House ghost tour.

If ghost tours are your thing, a quick search will turn up all sorts of local ghost tours. Johnstown’s State Theatre is hosting one in October. Find out more info here. And I can’t forget about the Cresson Sanitorium. Learn more about their events here.

Keep checking back for more spooky stories and locations!

Country Fox in the Dobbin House Spring Tavern.

Post navigation

Previous Post:

Exploring the Shrines and Sunken Gardens at Mount Assisi

Next Post:

Eastern State Penitentiary: History and Terror

Subscribe

Loading

Recent Posts

  • The Feast of St. Brigid
  • Sunday Market at Cambria City
  • Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site
  • The Man They Could Not Hang
  • 7 Things to do on Earth Day

Recent Comments

  • Debbie on Wall Art: DIY
  • Paul Bolinger on Wall Art: DIY
  • Dr. I. Fillmore Butz, Colonoscopy Specialist on Cresson Sanatorium: A Chilling Exploration
  • Cindy Rummell on A Morbid Excursion
  • Bruce Bolinger on A Morbid Excursion

Archives

  • January 2024
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • June 2022
  • March 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019

Categories

  • DIY
  • Ghost Towns
  • Holidays
  • Local Events
  • National Parks, Museums and Education
  • Places to Eat and Drink
  • Spooky Tales
  • Trails
  • Uncategorized
  • Unique places to shop

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
© 2025 Country Fox Exploring | Built using WordPress and SuperbThemes