A bus tour through Kansas City’s haunted past

Kansas City’s Ghosts & Gangsters tour takes riders into the city’s shadowy past — where mobsters ruled, bullets flew, and some say the ghosts never left.

The big picture: Riders visit sites linked to some of Kansas City’s darkest chapters.

  • At Columbus Square Park from the 1890s to the 1920s, the Black Hand gang would threaten local merchants, once using nail-stuffed shotguns to terrorize shopkeepers.
  • A visit to Union Station highlights the 1933 massacre that killed four people. Bullet holes are still visible on the building.
  • At the Power & Light building, people claim to see phantom jumpers diving from the rooftop, but there’s never any sign of a fall — no body, no broken glass, no trace at all.

What they’re saying: “It’s not about scaring you rigid. I want people to walk away loving the history of this town,” tour guide Ryan Mitchell tells Axios.

  • “I love ghost stories, I love gangsters, I love history, and I love Kansas City. So this was a perfect night,” rider Michael Rebein says.

If you go: The 90-minute tour starts in the River Market and runs year-round on weekends, with tickets still available this Halloween.

  • Tickets are $60 a person.
  • Riders are encouraged to bring drinks of their choice, just not glass; water is provided.
  • Expect to hop off the bus for story stops.

Fun fact: KC has more than one way to explore its haunted history, including US Ghost Adventures’ Wraiths & Whiskey tour, which focuses on research-based hauntings and local legends.

💭 Abbey thought bubble: I expected jump scares, but instead learned that this city’s past is wild enough without any ghosts…

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