The Bama Theatre was constructed between 1937–38 and serves as the city's performing arts centre. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 30, 1984.
According to reports, various phenomena are experienced. These include doors slamming shut, elevators going up and down of their own volition.
Audible effects comprise of a dog barking and voices talking and whispering. Some have also reported sighting figures and unusual shadows, as well as sudden and intense temperature drops.
Pictured left is the Alabama Historical Association Fort Mims marker courtesy of Don W. Robbins.
Greenwood is one of the oldest cemeteries in Tuscaloosa County, having been laid out shortly after the first survey of the city of Tuscaloosa in 1821, although burials started there in 1818. In it are the graves of many of early Tuscaloosa’s most prominent citizens.
According to reports, phenomena include the sound of a banjo being played eminating from between the tombstones, said to be from an old man that once played in life on the riverboats on the county waterways.
The apparitions of children are reported here, including that of a girl aged about 12 years old has been sighted playing hide-and-seek; the crying of another girl named Abby Snow has been heard around her gravestone; and a spectral teenage boy walks the pathways.
Others have reported Confederate soldiers marching the walkways after dark.
Pictured left is the Alabama Historical Association Fort Mims marker courtesy of the Alabama NewsCenter.