Halloween Nights at Eastern State Penitentiaryįairmount’s historic prison has been divided into separate haunted house attractions - including Delirium (in 3D!), Machine Shop, The Crypt, Big Top Terror and Nightmares. $40-$125 September 23rd-October 31st, 1835 Middletown Road, Glen Mills.Ĭreepy clowns at Eastern State Penitentiary’s Halloween Nights haunted experience / Photograph by Erin Davis Plus, you can walk through a haunted corn maze (who knew that was a thing?) called Revenge of the Scarecrows! You can also take a 25-minute haunted hayride through Arasapha Farm, complete with its own sets and special effects. This haunted motel in Delco is a longtime favorite for a reason, and worth the drive if you’re looking for a haunted house with high production value. $30-$50 select dates through October 31st, 2200 South Swanson Street. The basement of this 120-year-old factory is split into three frightening themes to explore, complete with lots of scare-actors, special effects, and elaborate set design. $40 Saturdays and Sundays in October, Chaddsford Winery, 632 Baltimore Pike, Chadds Ford. After your 45-minute jaunt, you can buy more wine (or beer) by the glass, plus food from the Common Good Food Truck. (There’s spiced-apple wine for Snow White, naturally.) You’ll get a keepsake Halloween wine glass, plus plenty of wine and snacks, in a one-of-a-kind trick-or-treat experiences that’s 21-and-up only. This year’s theme is “Twisted Fairy Tales,” with each station named accordingly. Join a Chaddsford Wine Guide on a walking tour to visit five Halloween-themed pairing stations - and get wine tips along the way. Pay-as-you-go October 13th-31st, 116 South 12th Street.Īdult Trick or Treat at Chaddsford Winery This Halloween favorite’s opening has been delayed till mid-October (tentatively Friday the 13th), but that still leaves lots of time to enjoy it. Expect lots of themed cocktails like the Blood Bag (it’s cranberry juice, don’t worry), skull-shaped specialty shots (yes, you can keep the skull), and other fall flavors served up in Halloween-themed take-home vessels. And, of course, the drink menu does not disappoint. This Halloween pop-up bar located in an abandoned jewelry store has everything: skeletons, creepy baby dolls, and more spooky scares. Pay-as-you-go through October 31st, Craftsman Row Saloon, 112 South 8th Street.Ĭraftsman Row has transformed into a Halloween bar with spooky (and boozy) milkshakes and cocktails. Expect special menu items (Spook-ghetti and Meatballs, anyone?), cocktails, boozy milkshakes, and lots of decorations! New for this year, they also have Spooky Brunch menu items, including a pumpkin-spice mimosa topped with a toasted marshmallow. Known for their over-the-top milkshakes and penchant for theming, Craftsman Row is getting into the haunting game with a Nightmare Before Christmas pop-up experience. Nightmare Before Christmas Pop-Up at Craftsman Row $43 for potion making through November 5th, 1305 Locust Street. They’ll also be hosting Halloween events, like a Halloween Disco dance party on October 28th and a “”spectacular seance” on Halloween night itself. Midtown Village’s magical, wizard-adjacent bar hosts “potion making” mixology sessions all year long, but they kick it up a notch during Halloween season with “The Veil.” The experience lasts just under two hours and includes an “ectoplasm shot” and all the ingredients and directions to make a special themed cocktails like the Maleficaria, the Monster Mash, and other spooky potions. Pay-as-you-go now through October 31st, Uptown Beer Garden, 1500 John F. They’re taking it back to circa-1983 Hawkins, Indiana, with plenty of photo ops based on the show (Demodogs! Demogorgons! Vecna!) and other general Halloween-y decor, plus themed cocktails in take-home souvenir glassware. Uptown Beer Garden is getting into the spooky spirit with a reprise of last year’s Stranger Things-themed experience. Ongoing: Halloween Pop-Ups, Haunted Houses and More In fact, there are more options than ever, with brand-new pop-up bars, haunted houses, spooky soirées and so much more. But if you’re a grownup who wants some extra Halloween festiveness, you’ve got options beyond tagging along with your kids (or your friend’s kids who you’ve suddenly befriended in hopes of fun-size Snickers leftovers) for trick-or-treating. Watching Hocus Pocus for the 25th time? No problems there. Cocktails at Nightmare Before Tinsel pop-up Halloween bar / Photograph by Society Hill Films
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