Utah has many places to visit that are said to be haunted. The Utah Ghost Organization is a good resource for residents or travelers looking to visit some particularly haunted places. It will give you listings, let you look through its own paranormal findings and keep you updated on its latest experiments. A lot of Utah history has to deal with Brigham Young and the Mormon Church, and many historical buildings associated with the Youngs are said to be hotspots for ghost activity.
According to Haunted Places To Go, the Brigham Young Farmhouse at Pioneer State Park in Salt Lake City is one of the most haunted buildings in the state. It's is an old Mormon village called Old Deseret Village. Built in the mid-17th century, there is a lot of history to the farmhouse. The ghost of Brigham Young himself has been sighted on the property, usually as an old man. Other paranormal activities like disembodied sounds of children laughing and the presence of an intelligent ghost named John Young have been documented at the farmhouse. You must make an appointment to tour the house but it is open to anyone daring to enter.
Once one of the best rated schools in the nation, Roy High School was built in 1965 and was Weber County's largest high school. This building has been haunted by the ghost of a young girl called Mabel, according to Haunted Hovel. Witnesses of paranormal activity at the school claim that Mabel will turn lights off and on, move stage props and make things disappear. The cause of her death is still unknown and she seems to like the auditorium. Some have reported additional ghosts, such as a woman in a red hat that tries to convince you to follow her. Roy High School is still an active high school. With permission from the administrators, you are allowed to tour the premises on weekends.
Brigham City is just north of Ogden. The Union Pacific Railroad constructed a train depot here in 1906. Since then, the train depot has been adopted and preserved as a historical structure by the county. According to Haunted Hovel, the Utah Ghost Organization has recorded electronic voice phenomena (EVP) and orbs at this location. Believed to be the ghost of a worker who is known to have died during construction on the building, employees and visitors claim to feel a presence. The historical building is open to the public and is a good place to visit, even if not looking for ghosts, according to Haunted Hovel.
South of Salt Lake City on the northern tip of Utah Lake, the Lehi Historical Hospital was first constructed in 1891. It was built as a bank, then in 1924 the basement started being used as a crematorium. Bodies had to be cut into quarters to fit into the incinerator. Two years later it became the Lehi Hospital. Many have died here, according to Haunted Hovel; a head doctor is said to have hung a nurse from the flagpole. Many psychics have visited the haunted building, and one claimed the property could have hundreds of ghosts.