The cemetery of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Philadelphia, located in the Society Hill neighborhood, dates to 1761 and contains the graves of many prominent colonial-era citizens. The churchyard has been the site of ghost reports for generations. The most frequently described apparition is a figure in dark colonial-era clothing who has been seen walking among the headstones at night, pausing at specific graves before moving on. Security guards and local residents have described the figure as a man of medium build wearing a tricorn hat and long coat, consistent with 18th-century fashion. He has been seen from windows of the surrounding rowhouses and by pedestrians passing along Pine Street. Other phenomena reported in the churchyard include cold spots that appear near the older graves, the sensation of being watched from the windows of the church, and the faint sound of a funeral bell tolling when no bell is being rung. St. Peter's Church itself, a beautiful Georgian colonial building where George Washington and other Founding Fathers worshipped, adds historical weight to the haunting. The church and its cemetery sit in the heart of one of Philadelphia's oldest neighborhoods, surrounded by 18th-century architecture that has been continuously occupied since before the American Revolution.