A Louisville riverboat with a rather haunted past has docked on the banks of the Ohio River in Downtown Cincinnati for America’s River Roots Festival.
Built in 1914, the iconic Belle of Louisville steamboat has lived a colorful life and welcomed equally vibrant characters, including ghosts (yes, ghosts) since it first started cruising.
The vessel is the oldest operating Mississippi River-style steamboat in the world and claims to be the “most widely traveled river steamboat in the nation,” per the City of Louisville’s website.
As legend has it, four spirits linger on the antique vessel.
Captain Mark Doty, who’s worked on the Belle since 1981, said he isn’t a believer in the paranormal world, but an incident left him somewhat spooked while filming “Ghost Hunters,” a reality television show that follows a paranormal investigative team as they explore allegedly haunted locations.
“Well, there’s an old story,” Doty told The Enquirer. “(Ghost Hunters) came on here looking for Captain Ben Winters.”
Four haunting tales of the Belle of Louisville
The Belle of Louisville has carried a lot of history (and apparitions) since it first ferried the Mississippi River between Tennessee and Arkansas more than 110 years ago. According to previous reporting by the Louisville Courier Journal, the riverboat is said to have four ghosts that walk amongst guests and crew:
The Belle of Louisville appeared on ‘Ghost Hunters’
The steamboat’s most famous ghost, arguably, is Captain Ben Winters, who was featured on a 2013 episode of “Ghost Hunters,” and is rumored to haunt the Belle of Louisville’s pilot house.
“During prohibition, they had gambling machines on (the Belle of Louisville) and alcohol, and they were up in Iowa somewhere, and the federal government stormed the boat and (Captain Winters) keeled over with a heart attack,” Doty said.
Although the former captain didn’t actually die on the boat, Doty told The Enquirer that Winters’ spirit is “supposedly” still wandering around the boat.
Winters also allegedly played a role in another ghost story.
“Rumor has it that Floyd and the captain were smitten over the same maiden who was on the boat,” Doty said, “And (Winters) ordered the wheel to start rolling while Floyd was back there fixing the paddlewheel and, supposedly, he died.”
Doty told The Enquirer he doesn’t think the deckhand died, but when he was on “Ghost Hunters,” and the crew played electronic voice phenomena they collected, he heard something say “Amy.”
“Was the girl they were smitten with named Amy? I don’t know, but I did hear that,” the captain said, adding that the show warned viewers he was a skeptic.
However, that wasn’t the only paranormal incident Doty experienced. The captain had taken a woman, who was with another paranormal group, into the pilot’s house (which Winters is said to haunt) to ask the spirits questions.
“We went into the captain’s quarters down below, and I was telling her the story that I was filling out the captain’s log a couple of days prior to that, and I felt something tug on my pant leg and I was the only one in there,” he told The Enquirer.
Doty said no lights lit up on the paranormal investigator’s machine until he asked, “Are you the one who tugged on my pants leg the other night?” and the machine went wild.
The Belle of Louisville captain said the incident made him think maybe there are spirits on the boat after all, but it didn’t make him believe enough to “scare (him) off the boat.”
“I’ve spent many nights over the last 44 years doing night watches and stuff[…] the boat is always moving and creaking, so there’s nothing I couldn’t explain that I’ve heard, other than somebody tugging on my pant leg.”
Louisville Courier Journal reporter Maggie Menderski contributed to this report.
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Watch out for these ghosts on the Belle of Louisville at America’s River Roots Festival
Reporting by Kaycee Sloan, Cincinnati Enquirer / Cincinnati Enquirer
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect


