North Carolina has plenty of history and haunts, with one of our most haunted cities being Asheville. From an architect buried in the walls of his own creation to the Pink Lady of the Grove Park Inn, even to all the mysterious hauntings at the Biltmore Estate - things get both spooky and historic in this mountain city. Yet, there's one place where if you stroll after dark, things might get extra frightening. This very well might be the most haunted street in North Carolina.
Chicken Alley is a small, narrow walkway found in downtown Asheville. The name is derived from the fact that chickens used to congregate here in the city's early days. Today, the main chicken here is the large mural by local artist Molly Musk. Yet, while the mural adds a bit of color and flair, something much darker lurks in this alley.
At the end of the 19th century, Dr. Jamie Smith was a prominent physician in the Asheville community. He was known for his odd attire: he frequently wore a wide-brimmed black fedora hat and long, duster-style coat. With him always were his medicine bag and a can with a silver pommel on it. During those days, Asheville was somewhat a more dangerous and rough around the edges city. Men working in the nearby logging industry would come into town on the weekends for a drink and a good time. Dr. Smith was no stranger to a good time either. Rumors swirled the majority of his clients came from treating various sexual and social diseases that derived from said good times.
In 1902, though, the good times reached a terrible end when Dr. Smith entered Broadway's Tavern at Chicken Alley. In a wrong place, wrong time scenario, he had walked into a vicious bar brawl. While trying to break up the fight, he was stabbed in the heart and died instantly. A year after the stabbing, Broadway's Tavern burned to the ground, and Dr. Smith's killer was never found. For the past 100 years, people who live in Chicken Alley and those who are just passing through have reported witnessing a man lurking the alley late at night.
While Asheville has plenty of haunts, Chicken Alley is considered the most haunted area of the city. Many believe that the ghost seen is that of Dr. Jamie Smith. Usually, the figure appears wearing a long coat and wide-brimmed fedora, and the tapping of a cane on pavement accompanies his figure or is heard by itself. Locals have yet to decide why he still wanders around the place he met his end - some say to fight, others say he just wants a drink.
While those who now call Chicken Alley home have obviously had to make peace with Dr. Smith's ghost (and frequent habit of tapping his cane) it's also an eerie place where a few brave visitors will walk alone down on a dark night. Have you been to the most haunted street in North Carolina before or witnessed Dr. Smith's ghost yourself?
If you're looking to take your ghost investigation to a statewide level, we've compiled the 10 most terrifying, haunted places in the state.
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