Shadows & Signals is an intimate, after-dark paranormal investigation inside the Conrad-Caldwell House Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. The evening pairs museum-grade history with hands-on investigative work: a guided walkthrough introduces documented hauntings and unexplained occurrences tied to the house’s layered past, including more than forty confirmed deaths recorded on the property. After the tour, a capped group of twenty participants becomes the investigation team, rotating through rooms under staff supervision and using professional tools such as a REM pod, spirit box, and EMF reader to capture observations and attempt real-time communication.
The event runs roughly two hours and follows a clear itinerary—check-in and orientation, a focused ghost tour, an hour of coordinated investigation, then a group debrief and questions. Check-in begins at 9:00 PM; late arrivals may not be admitted. The program is wheelchair accessible but requires moving through dimly lit historic spaces and some stairs, so comfortable footwear and careful footing are recommended. Guests must sign a waiver; tickets are non-refundable unless the museum cancels. Participants under eighteen must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, and personal paranormal equipment is not permitted.
What sets Shadows & Signals apart is access: many of the rooms investigated are not normally available to daytime visitors, and the small group size makes the experience participatory rather than performative. Guides provide historical context alongside investigative technique, so the night functions as part history lesson, part field exercise. For skeptics the value is procedural—observe, document, compare—while believers gain structured opportunities to engage with the house.
Practical benefits extend beyond the investigation. The event offers rare interior access to a historic Louisville landmark, staff-managed use of professional equipment, and an intimate setting that encourages questions and measured experimentation. It’s a good fit for history buffs, amateur investigators, and curious travelers seeking an unusual evening activity in Louisville’s cultural landscape.
Respect for the museum’s collections and for fellow guests is central: follow staff direction, stay with the group, avoid touching artifacts, and keep cameras or phones discreet if a photo release is required. The experience is designed to be educational and participatory rather than sensational—book if you want an evidence-minded look at claims and a controlled opportunity to investigate a house with a long and layered history.
After the wrap-up guests have access to the museum’s gift shop for merchandise; staff may announce additional investigation opportunities during the visit. The program’s disclaimers are clear: paranormal activity is not guaranteed and results vary event to event, so the value is the process and company rather than certainty. The site does not feature notable geological formations—its appeal is architectural and historical—and visitors should treat the building and its stories with curiosity and care.