Bodmin
Moor Gaol

Bodmin
Gaol, the former County Prison, was built in 1777 and replaced
the old Debtor’s Prison (now the Hole-In-The-Wall
Public House). The Prison was rebuilt in the 1840s and again
in the 1850s each time increasing in size as the population
grew. A grand total of 55 hangings took place of which 51
were public hangings. The last public hanging took place
in 1909 prior to the prison’s closure in 1922.
During
the First World War, the Domesday Book, and it is said by
some, the Crown Jewels, were amongst the treasures entrusted
to Bodmin Gaol for safe keeping.
Bodmin
Jail has been opened as a museum, with exhibits re-creating
the awful conditions in which many of the prisoners spent
their final days. All those who met their end in the jail
were buried in its grounds. The crimes and fates of many
prisoners are displayed in the exhibits.
The
Ghosts of Bodmin Gaol are varied in the nature and manifestation.
Eerie sound of footsteps and rattling keys are accompanied
by inexplicable voices and misty figures often seen roaming
on balconies and cells high above. Visitors are always struck
by the feeling of misery and sadness that seemed to fill
the air and be contained in the walls. Truly an atmosphere
of death is encased in the structure. Many people lost their
lives within the walls and conditions were diabolical.
Some
of the people who apparently still haunt the Gaol to this
day include:
Matthew
Weekes who was hanged at the Gaol for the brutal murder
of Charlotte Dymond. It’s believed that he haunts
the gaol because he was innocent.
Selina
Wadge was hanged by William Marwood on the 15th August 1878
at Bodmin for the murder of her illegitimate son. Its often
reported that to this day she tries to grab young children
or put her feelings of remorse on pregnant women.
William
and James Lightfoot, who were hung for the murder of Nevell
Norway. William admitted the brutal murder of Nevell in
which he repeatedly hit Nevell with the butt of his gun
until he died before dumping him in a nearby river.
Anne Jefferies, was ordered by Bodmin’s High Court
to be starved until she confessed that she was a witch.
Her survival without nourishment for three months was cause
for wide speculation and furore, and it was suggested that
she had supernatural powers. Does she haunt the Gaol?
Dalston
Hall

http://www.dalston-hall-hotel.co.uk
History
taken from their website
The
Romans with their passion for organisation appear to have
established a community at Carlisle around AD 120 (Luguvalliam).
Some historians believed the area around Dalston Hall to
have been used by the Romans. After the Romans left during
the 5th Century came the Danish invasion of the North, and
of course, as always during this time we had our most frequent
visitors, the Warrior Scots. In 945 Carlisle was ransacked
by the Scots and left in complete ruin for over a century.
It
is believed that when Cumberland was ceded to Scotland,
David King of the Scots gave the Manor of Little Dalston
to his brother. We have it on the authority of a Dalston
man himself that there is some evidence to support the theory
that the Dalston family begins with a certain Robert de
Vallibus, brother of Hubert de Vallibus first Baron of Gilsland
by Robert de Meschines, Earl of Cumberland. Who was granted
the Manor in 1301. For the next two hundred years the Dalstons
appear to have been small landowners taking part in the
usual pastimes of the period - fighting the marauding Scots
in border raids or undertaking garrison duties at Carlisle
Castle. Gradually they managed to increase the family fortunes.
After
the death of Henry 1st, Stephen the Usurper gave Cumberland
and Carlisle to Scotland as a peace offering. In 1157 the
City was retaken and has remained ever since as part of
England.
Records
describing the building of Dalston Hall refer to the times
when the first John Dalston dedicated the Pele Tower to
his wife Elizabeth whom he married in 1507. Elizabeth’s
father owned the Manors of Kirkbride and Dockerey. An inscription
on an outside wall said “John Dalston Elizabeth mi
wyf ys byldyng” this has been written in Gothic script,
the letters are all in reverse and can be seen to date.
There
are also four coats of arms. Two of Dalston (three daws’s
heads within a border indented) and two of Kirkbride. At
first the tower stood alone. The first floor consisted of
the usual vaulted chamber (the Library), originally the
cellar to store house, later became a chapel which had the
Ten Commandments painted on the walls. The spiral staircase
was entered through an Iron door (yatt - which is one of
the very few still in existence in the country). The two
upper levels were a living room and a camber respectively.
Above this was a fighting deck with battlement. From the
time of John Dalston onwards the family became of great
position in the counties of Cumberland and Westmorland John’s
son Thomas Born 1523, increased the land possessions by
purchasing from the Crown (HenryVi 11), six Manors and various
monastic lands after the dissolution of the monasteries.
As
family fortunes increased Dalston Hall was enlarged first
with buildings on the East of the Pele Tower and then on
the West.
When
Thomas died (1550) the family were of some importance in
the County for the next 150 years. Thomas’s son SirJohn
Dalston was born in 1523 and married Catherine Tolston of
Bridekirk. In 1529 when John was six, arrangement for the
children to be changed over and brought up in the other
family until they were 15 years old and agreeing that if
John died, Catherine should marry John’s younger brother,
and vice versa, and setting out also the details of their
upbringing.
SirJohn
was Sheriff in 1568 and 1578 he was also Knight of the Shire
in 1556. John’s son, another Sir John Dalston born
1556 to 1633, was knighted by James 1. In 1592 he was commandant
of the Citadel of Carlisle, which was a position of great
trust. Also in 1592 he appears to have been involved in
the local sport of Hanging the Scots, in return for their
raids, and he is named in a claim by the Provost and Bailiffs
of Kirkcudbright involving £2,000 for 24 horses, etc.
The
next Sir George Dalston was Knight of the Shire on several
occasions and his court chose him as their representative
in parliament for more than 40 years. The family fortunes
reached a peak when Sir William Dalston, George’s
son not only not only married Anne Boles a considerable
heiress but inherited property from his mother. During the
Cromwellian wars,
William
who took the side of the Royalists was created a Baronet
by Charles 1 in 1640/41.
In
1644/45 during the Civil War which began in 1642 events
kept troubles away from Carlisle. However in 1644 the Royalist
Commander, Sir Thomas Grenham occupied Carlisle with a small
force. The Parliment General Leslie came chasing after him,
came within sight of the City which was then occupied by
Royalist forces and thought his represented an Army which
he could perhaps have easily defeated, he drew his men off
to Newcastle.
Scandal
says that General Leslie knew that Carlisle could have been
taken easily, since it was not provisioned for a siege.
He and his men draw pay for a much longer period. Having
granted them a breathing space, he brought his men up in
October 1644 and settled down for the winter, using Dalston
Hall as his headquarters. He blocked all the roads and prevented
supplies from reaching the City and the siege was on.
William
subscribed towards the upkeep of Carlisle Garrison and later
in 1655 had to pay £3,000 (the largest amount levies
on anyone in the Country) to compound for his estates. One
of the estates came to William was Heath Hall in Yorkshire,
and from this onward the Dalston family seem to have lived
increasingly at Heath Hall rather than at Dalston.
Through
many months the citizens of Carlisle were beleaguered, food
became scarce and they were reduced to eating the proverbial
cats and dogs. Finally, on 25th June 1645 the City was surrendered
to General Leslie and it needs but little imagination to
conjure up scenes which must have enacted within this hall.
Messengers on horseback arriving with news of Royalist and
Parliament battles in other parts. Encampments of men dispersed
throughout the grounds, seeking shelter in the woods and
of their conversation in assessing the line of the siege.
Sir
Charles Dalston baptised in 1686, who died in 1723, resided
chiefly in Yorkshire was Sheriff of Cumberland in 1741,
this was the year of the Hanoverian succession. Sir Charles
first married Susan, daughter and coheir of Sir Francis
Drake of Whitney.
Sir
Charles had one son and six daughters and thus Sir George
Dalston baptised 1718 (died 1765) was the last male of his
line. Perhaps lacking a male heir, he sold his estates at
Dalston in 1761, according to Daniel Defoe, to a Mr Monkhouse
Davidson, grocer of London for £5.060.
Dalston
Hall had by this time been extended. The large hall for
example had been added. Commencing in the latter part of
the 15th Century we find extensions and alterations occurring
right through to this later period. The more recent modifications
are those which probably created much of the interior beauty
which we so much admire today. But, older hands and minds
created the original proportions and symmetry which acted
as a base for making this balanced picture in red sandstone
which is seen today.
In
1897 the Hall adjoining estates were purchased by the late
Edmund Wright Stead whose more recent restoration of this
historic home earned the appreciation of such an antiquarian
expert as the late Canon Wilson who wrote “Not one
stone of interest was interfered with” and yet the
result was “a magnificent mansion surpassing perhaps
even its ancient glories”.
In
later years Dalston Hall was used as a Youth Training Centre
and then in 1971 was converted to a Hotel.
Dalston
Hall is very old, built over 600 years ago. At night it
the towers are floodlight and the stone an orangey red sandstone
- more mellow than the deep red of Penrith sandstone. It
is approached up a drive through trees. But look out for
the ghost of the Victorian handyman as you drive up at night.
He has been seen in the grounds.
The
current entrance of Dalston Hall is actually the most modern
- dating from 1899 - but this hides a more ancient heart.
The door into the hotel leads from bright sunshine to a
subdued dimness. All around dark wood panelling makes the
place intimate and yet strange. Passing into the hotel from
the reception, you go past the stairs and into the Banorial
Hall. The hall dates from around 1500. An inscription reads:
"Iohn Dalston Elisabet mi wyf mad ys byldyng"
- the letters are in Gothic script, and curiously in reverse.
Above the manorial hall is a gallery. It is here that the
oldest ghost - known to the staff as Lady Jane, can be seen.
She appears in Tudor dress and may well be one of the Dalston
families who owned the Hall for such a long time.
Off
the Banorial Hall, to the left, an old wooden doorway opens
onto a staircase. Near the bottom of the stairs is a heavy
iron gate, which is almost certainly from the date of the
first building. The staircase spirals, up with worn stone
steps, into the top of the left tower. As you ascend you
can almost imagine footsteps behind you, though if you turn
you know no one would be there. The stairs come out in what
is now the honeymoon suite with its four-poster bed. The
walls are the original stone and the windows cut through
stone blocks three feet thick. This was one of the defensive
Pele towers of Cumbria from the times of the border skirmishes
with the Scots.
This
room is not haunted but it is atmospheric enough despite
that. It is possible to climb the spiral stairs still further
and emerge onto the battlements and even higher to the top
turret. From here you can survey the estate and look south
to the Lake District fells. Going down again, on the ground
floor there is a small library, which serves as a lounge
for residents. There is also a cupboard for hanging coats,
which when the back panel was removed, revealed a staircase
going up to nowhere; it meets a blank wall. From this floor
the staff can go down to the extensive cellars that wind
like a rabbit warren underneath the hotel and go from century
to century revealing modern bricks, Victorian building,
medieval stone.
There
are storm drains down here from when the rain is exceptionally
heavy. More than one of the night porters has heard noises
from the cellars when making their rounds in the depths
of the night. It has been described as the sound of wooden
barrels being rolled around. Wooden barrels have not been
used for a long time at Dalston Hall. In 1997, one brave
fellow called Richard actually went down to investigate
and saw the figure of a man down there. He turned and came
back up again, asking the receptionist whom the other fellow
was. Of course the receptionist told him that he must be
mistaken. There was no one else working down there.
Room
4 is said to be haunted by a poor maid who threw herself
from the Pele tower above. It has an original fireplace
with inglenooks to either side. One of the staff and her
partner stayed there one night and both tossed and turned.
She told me that she had a strong feeling of a presence
in the right hand inglenook - as if someone were carefully
watching her as she slept.
One
guest came down in the morning and asked to be moved from
Room 4. She said that she woke up to hear her dog growling
at the door. He kept growling on and off all night though
there was no one to be seen there. She said that she herself
had felt a presence in the room.
Room
12 is perhaps the most interesting. It has half a bathroom.
It is difficult to see this from inside, but if you go outside
the Hall and look into the bathroom window, you will see
that the room has been cut in half with a false wall. The
other half of the bathroom, in faded decor is visible from
outside, but there is no way to get to it without knocking
a hole in the new wall. Room 12 has a lovely view of the
gardens, perhaps the best view of any room in the hotel.
It also has a four-poster bed. People who have slept in
the room - not everyone but a significant number over the
years have complained of being woken by girls voices whispering.
It is said that they are completely benevolent - as if they
are just having a giggly time. The trouble is - there is
nobody actually there.
A
Report into Psychic Investigations of Ghosts at Dalston
Hall between 28 March and 1 April 2001
Mr
Fingernails in the Cellar
There
have been various stories of barrels moving in the cellar
and sightings of workmen, even ghostly workmen handing tools
to real workmen, but these can be put down to The Handyman
below. Two psychics have independently described an entity
that is non-human and appears to them as a black fog. It
appears to have something protruding from its forehead,
which has been described by one psychic as a hat, though
the other disagreed. They did agree that it could move fast,
move through floors, and had long fingers with long weird
fingernails and liked to loom over people to scare them.
In fact it turned out to be a big bully and though it got
a kick out of scaring people, couldn't really harm them.
The
Handyman
The
Handyman lives in the cellar with Mr Fingernails, though
whether they get on is unknown. He is described as having
tweed or check trousers, being big and physical. He enjoyed
his job with the barrels so much he never wanted to leave.
It is a physical job but he's proud of being the breadwinner
and a real man. Or was he?. He has a significant armband
on his right arm which is to do with his job - maybe a badge
of rank. He also has a horse with long hair on its fetlocks
so I guess he's some kind of drayman.
Girl
Being Dragged By Hair
This
poor girl who is described as having a pale face, possibly
powdered was seen being dragged by her hair, beaten up,
raped and possibly thrown out of the window to her death,
by a burly man dressed in leather. We have no idea of period
for this but it could be 1500s. The psychics felt she was
a courtesan or 'floozie'. This scene happened in the corridor
outside Rooms 4,5 and 6.
Sad
Emily
This
poor girl stands by the window in Room 4 gazing south. Three
psychics have independently felt great sadness here and
two of them reported the sensation that the girl had looked
out of the window thousands of times. She is described as
having a headdress, like a bonnet, but more in the style
of a headband? With flowers and frills in white cotton.
It holds her head back. Her waist is drawn in tightly as
if by stays. She has a ring on her finger, which she fingers.
It is felt that perhaps she is pining for a man who never
returned. An older lady comes in to check if she is all
right.
The
Dogs and Party
There
is a party going on in the Baronial Hall, there are fat
dogs and people and high-pitched pipe music. Possibly medieval?
A woman also haunts the grille at the bottom of the tower
that leads into the hall, and there are strong feelings
that there is a void under the hall floor (now bricked up)
and Mr Fingernails comes up from this. The party may be
the same one from which the girl dragged by her hair (above)
was taken.
Three
Women and a Young Girl
On
the stairs, there are three young women and a small blonde
girl. They watch people going up and down, but what they
are really doing, and why is it a mystery?
Somerleyton
Hall

http://www.somerleyton.co.uk
One
of the premier stately homes in East Anglia, Somerleyton
is an early Victorian mansion built upon the foundations
of a 13th century house. That first manor was built by Sir
Peter Fitzosbert in about 1240, though it later passed through
marriage to the Jernegan family, who owned the estate until
the early 17th century.
In
1610 the Hall was rebuilt by John Wentworth in the Tudor
red-brick style so often seen in East Anglian houses of
this period. The house was sacked by Parliamentary troops
during the English Civil War, and the estate eventually
passed to the Anguish family, who owned it until the mid-Victorian
period.
In
1842 Somerleyton was purchased by a successful businessman
Sir Morton Peto. It is to Peto that we owe the house we
can see today at Somerleyton.
Sir
Morton Peto
The man responsible for rebuilding Somerleyton was a fascinating
character, who rose from the position of apprentice builder
to become head of an international construction empire responsible
for building railways in Denmark, Canada, the Argentine,
Russia, and his native Britain. At one time Peto's company
was the largest employer of labour in the entire world.
Among
the projects which he helped build are the Houses of Parliament
and Nelson's Column in London, and, closer to home, Lowestoft
harbour and esplanade. A tireless worker for bettering condition
of his workers, Peto was also a great public benefactor,
putting large sums of his own money into public projects.
Peto
spared no expense in his lavish rebuilding of Somerleyton
Hall. From 1844-1851 he had the house and grounds completely
rebuilt in sumptuous style. The architect of Peto's vision
was John Thomas, who had previously worked for Sir Charles
Barry on the Houses of Parliament. Thomas kept little from
the older Jacobean mansion, replacing it with an ornate
structure with touches of French, Italian, and Dutch styles.
In
1863 Somerleyton was sold to Sir Francis Crossley to pay
off Peto's rising debts, and the Crossley family holds the
estate to this day. Crossley, who, like Peto, was a prominent
philanthropist, made his fortune in the cloth industry by
automating the process of making carpets.
Highlights
of the Hall
The house is built around three sides of a courtyard, approached
through the gardens built for Peto. The entrance is an imposing
three-storied structure in Elizabethan style which overlooks
the gardens. Within, the oaken staircase is lined with coats
of arms from the 14 families who have owned Somerleyton
from the 13th century.
The
marvelous domed Entrance Hall is supported on a dozen oak
pillars, and features some very attractive stained glass
with patterns of birds. Less expected, and all the more
striking for it, are two large stuffed polar bears, souvenirs
of Lord Somerleyton's 1897 excursion to the Arctic.
The
Oak Room is worth noting; it is lined with paneling from
the Jacobean house, and the wood for the paneling was milled
from trees grown on the Somerleyton estate. A magnificent
gilt mirror hangs between the windows of the Oak Room; this
was originally built in the early 18th century for the Doge's
palace in Venice
Prideaux
Place

http://www.prideauxplace.co.uk
For
over 400 years, Prideaux has been the home of the Prideaux-Burne
family. The family's origins date back to the 11th century;
today's Prideaux-Burnes are directly descended from William
the Conqueror. Prideaux Place was completed in 1592 and
has been enlarged and modified by successive generations.
Today it combines the traditional E-shape of Elizabethan
architecture with the 18th century exuberance of Horace
Walpole's Strawberry Hill Gothic. Of its 81 rooms, 44 are
bedrooms -- only 6 of which are habitable today. Many of
the other bedrooms are just as Company B of the U.S. Army's
121st Engineer Combat Battalion left them at the end of
World War II, after occupying the House from Oct 12, 1942
until Apr 24, 1944. During the 1980s a hidden ceiling in
the Great Chamber, now acknowledged to be a masterpiece
of Elizabethan plasterwork, was uncovered.
Golden
Fleece, York

http://www.goldenfleeceyork.com
This
is one of the oldest coaching inns in york and is mentioned
in 1503. Before 1557 it be;longed to the Merchant Adventurers
whose ancient hall is behind the Inn and access can be found
in both Piccadilly and Fossgate.
The
adventurers were responsible for the woolen trade with York
being the principle woolen centre outside the capital in
medieval times.
The
present sign appears on a half penny inscribed: "ye
golden fleece 1668" and
bearing the name Richard Booth.
The
rear entrance to the Inn is from Lady Peckett's yard. John
Peckett, whose wife Alice gave her name to the yard, owned
the Inn and in 1702 became Lord Mayor of York.
Lady
Peckett is said to haunt the Fleece.
The
yard became a coaching station for travel between York -
Manchester - Liverpool. many couriers also worked form the
fleece including William Dawson (York to Pontefract), William
Haggard (York to Pocklington) and W. Watson (York to Wetherby).
The
Landlady Elizabeth Triffit, advertising in 1836 in the Yorkshire
man stated:
The
fleeces excellent beds and sitting rooms and excellent stables
and coach houses, thanked the great preference given to
her public house by witnesses, jurymen and others having
business at the assizes (Law Courts).
In
the 19th Century the inn was usually called the 'Fleece'
but in an 1852 map it shows it as the "Golden Hart".
The present owners of the Inn claim it has no foundations
and that this accounts for the uneven floors. The whole
building is wooden framed and originally had three gables
into the street, shown in an 1827 drawing by George Nicholson.
There
once was a wide entrance to the front - the original arch
now surrounds the front door and window. The old entrance
is recorded in a 1910 photo with the sign saying "Golden
Fleece Hotel". Next door is the picturesque Sir Thomas
Herbeists house which he bought from the Adventurers in
1557. On the otherside was a banqueting hall where Charles
II was entertained by Lord Mayor Roger Jacques in 1639.
During
WWI the fleece seemed to have been a popular drinking place
for the army. In 1915 the landlord was taken to court for
allowing soldiers to drink outside the hours permitted by
military orders. (Landlord Frederick D Jackson).
Being
an ancient building which is mentioned in the York Archives
as far back as 1503, the Golden Fleece stands directly opposite
York's most historic and picturesque street, the shambles.
The
rear yard is named after Lady Alice Peckett whose husband,
John, owned the premises as well as being Lord Mayor of
York around 1702.
Many
guests have reported seeing the late Lady Peckett wandering
the endless corridors and staircases in the wee, small hours
and, including ghostly apparitions and moving furniture,
hers is just one of the five resident spirits.
Lower
Well Head Farm / Tynedale Farm
Description:
Both these working farms built in the Pendle Hill area
Era: It is thought that Lower Well Head Farm was built in
the 1500's, while the building at Tynedale Farm was probably
built in approximately 1750 although there was a house on
the site dating far earlier.
History:
- These two farms, along with the surrounding area, were
allegedly used as meeting places for the notorious Pendle
Witches and their coven during the early seventeenth Century.
-
The Pendle Coven was believed to have been responsible for
the murder by witchcraft of seventeen people in and around
the forest of Pendle.
-
The Device family who were at the centre of the witchcraft
charges lived at a place called Malkin Tower, thought to
have been somewhere in the fields surrounding these two
farms.
-
On Good Friday 1612 an important meeting of the witches,
thought to be a 'Sabbat', a major Wiccan festival, took
place at Malkin and many of those who attended were later
tried and hanged.
- It is widely considered that the coven collapsed because
various witches incriminated each other and their families
to the local magistrates. There was a particular feud between
members of the Device family and their rivals, the Chattox's.
-
Elizabeth Sothernes, otherwise known as Old Demdike, confessed
that the usual method of murder was to make an effigy of
the intended victim, known as a 'picture of clay'. It was
then crumbled or burned over a period of time causing the
victim to fall ill and die.
-
Tynedale Farm is now owned by the Nutter family, descendents
of Alice Nutter, one of the Pendle Witches executed in 1612.
-
Little is known about the history of Lower Well head Farm,
but it is believed to have previously been used as a morgue
and the pathway adjacent to the farm is referred to as Corpse
Way.
Ghost ratings:
- An apparition of a monk is frequently seen in the area
surrounding Tynedale Farm
-
A hooded figure has been seen kneeling by the road outside
the farm
-
A servant girl in a cloak has been witnessed flitting across
the land between the two farms
Spooky experiences:
- A group of men out shooting reported to have spoken to
a strange woman in a cloak and skullcap who later vanished.
-
Footsteps are heard regularly upstairs at Lower Well Head
Farm; in particular they are said to echo through the building
at 6pm on Saturdays
The
Ghost House, Nottinghamshire
Name
and location: "Ghost House" Nottinghamshire
Description:
This stone hall is believed to have been built out of material
stolen from Roche Abbey.
Era:
The current hall was built in 1848 by C. Challoner, a wine
and timber merchant from Liverpool, while the back portion
of the house which is owned by the Riddell family dates
back to the 16th Century.
History:
- According to legend there was a battle near the area that
the hall now stands on and the grounds were used as a hospital
and a place to keep the dead. A Roman road runs through
the property and apparently a Roman villa was situated just
metres from the house.
-
There has been a building on the site since as early as
1100 AD when the Cressy family lived there until 1408. The
Cressy's had strong connections with the Knight's Templar
It is said that the hall was built on the foundations of
a far greater property that was never finished. The person
responsible for this earlier building is said to be Bess
of Hardwick and potholers have found foundations of a different
house under the floor.
-
After the Civil War the area went into decline and from
1765 the Mellish family became connected with the area as
they held 20,000 acres of local land.
-
It is thought that in the early part of the 19th Century
Edward Challoner killed someone in an illegal duel here
and fled north where he married into the Riddell family.
In order to further distance himself from the crime he allegedly
had himself canonized as a Catholic Bishop.
Ghost ratings:
- Roman soldiers have been spotted marching along the driveway
and in the cellars.
-
woman with red hair and black Elizabethan clothes is seen
in the grounds. Is she perhaps Bess of Hardwick?
The
ghostly figures of a man and a boy have been seen in one
of the 16th Century cottages, located within the grounds.
-
A previous gardener, long since dead, likes to watch the
current gardener as he works around here.
Victorian
servants are often seen in the corridors and a man in a
top hat likes to hand around in the toilet near the entrance.
-
The back corridors and stairs play host to phantom children,
a ghostly cat and the spirit of a toddler playing a piano.
-
The ghost of a little girl dressed in Victorian clothing
has been seen playing in the dining room.
-
An officer in uniform has been seen in the Boudoir, as has
the ghost of a white lady.
-
The current owners believe that The Bishop's Room is haunted
by the ghost of a particularly unfriendly Bishop. Could
this be the spirit of Edward Challoner?
-
The menacing spirit of a woman haunts the attic.
-
An old housekeeper has been seen walking from the office
and down the stairs in the old servants' quarters.
Spooky experiences:
- Red mists and orbs in the cellars have been captured on
camera.
-
Many have felt the weird sensation that they are being watched.
-
Low voices are regularly heard coming from the Dining Room,
and the smell of tobacco is often detected.
-
Cold spots are common throughout the hall, as is a feeling
of uneasiness.
-
People have often had their hair felt or pulled in the Billiard
Room.
-
EMF readings have been off the scale!
-
A child's handprint has been found on the window of the
Chinese Room even though there are no children living in
the house.
-
Chillingly, the sound of screaming has been heard in the
Patchwork Room.
-
Something in Bishop's Room seems to induce feelings of oppression,
headaches and queasiness.
In
the old servants' quarters strange mists have been seen
and the servants' bells have been known to chime on their
own.
-
In the attic, orbs have been caught on camera and individuals,
particularly men have felt as though they are being strangled.
The
London Dungeons

http://www.thedungeons.com
Name
and location: London Dungeon, London
Description:
This major tourist attraction is housed under some of the
existing arches of the London and Greenwich Railway line.
Twisting corridors and curving stone walls make this a suitably
atmospheric location.
Era:
The London and Greenwich Railway line was opened in 1836,
and was London's first passenger railway line and ran between
London Bridge and Greenwich.
History:
- There is very little actually written about the history
of the building as it is today but it is has previously
been used as a stable block, wine cellar and possibly an
orphanage.
-
London Bridge was built by the Romans in 43AD, with the
construction of the first modern bridge starting in 1176.
-
From 1212 The Hospital of St. Thomas The Martyr stood on
the site of the dungeon. It was run by a mixed order of
nuns and monks and provided shelter and treatment for the
poor, sick and homeless.
-
By the 17th Century the area around London Bridge - including
Tooley Street - had become a popular place for bear, dog
and cockfighting.
-
During WWII this part of London was the most bombed place
in Britain. The railway arches were used as air raid shelters
but were themselves bombed in February 1941. Reports conflict
as to how many people died, some say 64 others 300. It's
believed though that the bodies of many of the victims were
never recovered and that they remain entombed in the arches
to this day.
Ghost ratings:
- Shadowy figures have been seen throughout the dungeon
-
A male figure dressed all in black is seen, who's thought
to have a really evil, negative presence. It's speculated
by some, that he's 'Jack the Ripper' and that by recreating
his murderous deeds for tourists his spirit and also the
spirits of the prostitutes he murdered have been attracted
to this part of the site.
-
A member of staff has also seen a group of children playing
ring-a-ring-o-roses in this area.
-
In the 'Pre-Plague' area a man and two children are regularly
seen but who then mysteriously disappear upon approach.
-
The naked top half of a man has been seen apparently floating
in the 'London Bridge' area.
-
There is a mock operating table in the 'Mortuary' area which
features two waxworks of men operating on a body. However,
people have seen a phantom third man looking down at the
body.
Spooky experiences:
- Doors open and close of their own accord.
-
Waxworks change position when the dungeon is closed.
-
People experience feelings of panic.
-
Equipment stops and starts of its own accord.
-
Unexplained lights have been seen within several areas of
the dungeon.
-
Unexplained whistling has been frequently heard in the 'Boat
Ride' area of the dungeon.
-
On the lower level of the 'Mortuary' area, people get the
overwhelming feeling that they are being pushed out towards
the opening doors if they are closed.
-
The sound of crying has been heard in the 'Jack The Ripper'
area.
-
The 'Stagecoach' area provided one member of staff with
staff with the unpleasant sensation of someone touching
the back of her neck in here and refused to work in there
ever again.
-
In the Judges box, of the 'Courtroom area an actor was tapped
on the shoulder. The box is only reachable by some rickety
stairs and there was definitely no-one else there.
Petty
France Manor, Badmington

Name
and location: Petty France, Gloucestershire
Description:
A grandiose building, the Manor House is a large, white
building set in two acres of land and is now a four star
hotel.
Era:
the main building was constructed in the late 18th Century
during a time of conflict that pitted England against Napoleon’s
French forces on land and sea
History:
- French prisoners of war may have been kept here during
the Napoleonic wars, but previously it is believed to have
been a Huguenot settlement during the reign of Henry VIII.
-
The famous diarist Parson Woodbridge stayed at the house,
as did Jane Austen, who refers to Petty France by name in
'Northanger Abbey'.
-
In 1800 the house was owned by Charles Jenkinson, formerly
known as Baron Hawkesbury and 1st Earl of Liverpool. His
son Robert Banks Jenkinson inherited it in 1808, and was
Prime Minister for fifteen years. The battle of Waterloo
occurred during this time and it's thought that Lord Wellington
visited the house, which it's believed to have been used
as a hunting lodge.
-
The 1851 census shows two families living there, one being
Charles Long with his wife Anne and children and their eighteen
servants and their families.
-
In 1925 Lord and Lady Allen Apsley bought the house but
in 1942 Lord Apsley was killed in a flying accident
Ghost ratings:
- The figure of a man is often and very clearly seen throughout
the house, described by many witnesses as being over 6ft,
very good looking, tanned skin, wearing a black, possibly
velvet, jacket, sometimes with a tall hat, sometimes without.
It is thought to be the spirit Robert Banks Jenkinson.
-
The previous owner can recall at least 24 reported sightings
of this rather dapper ghost.
-
A phantom woman has been seen regularly walking from the
bathroom into the bedroom and in the corridor outside the
Art Deco room. She may be Robert's mother Amelia, who died
giving birth in this room.
-
Several hotel guests claimed to have encountered the ghost
of William Harford in the Art Deco room.
-
The spirit of a young child has been spotted sitting innocently
on the main staircase
-
In the attic a sad-faced old lady has been seen sitting
quietly on the bed.
Spooky experiences:
- There has been a lot of poltergeist activity, mainly cutlery
flying around and electrical appliances failing inexplicably
- Many people have said that when they proceed through the
entrance hall they have felt the strong sensation of someone
rushing towards them.
-
Cats often begin to wail loudly only when they enter the
dining room.
-
A strong burning smell lingers in the games room, and a
particular chair is said to regularly move around of its
own volition
-
In the Art Deco room the sounds of dragging can be heard
coming from above and guests have felt like they are being
watched while they're in there
-
People have been touched by invisible hands in the attic
and the temperature frequently drops dramatically
Arreton
Manor House, Isle
of Wight

www.arretonmanor.co.uk
Description:
The manor combines Jacobean architecture with Tudor designs
and features. A manor has stood on the site for more than
1,000 years.
Era:
The existing building dates back to the early 17th century,
but the East Wing was built in the 14th century and there
has been a manor here since at least AD 872.
History:
- Once owned by Edward the Confessor, Arreton Manor is noted
in the Domesday Book and is specifically mentioned in the
will of King Alfred the Great in 885. The Manor was farmed
by abbots of Quarr Abbey and for over 400 years was in their
possession
-
There is a Saxon Burial ground on nearby Arreton Down and
it's speculated that the first house on the site of the
manor was a Roman villa
-
In the reign of Henry VIII the manor came into the hands
of the Crown following the dissolution of the monasteries
and was leased to the Leigh family for 70 years
-
A particularly grisly incident took place around this time.
In 1560, John Leigh, who was only 13 at the time, smothered
his father, Barnaby, with a pillow. John's young sister,
Annabelle, witnessed the crime, so he dragged her upstairs
and threw her from an upstairs window to her death
-
Charles 1st gave the manor to trustees for the payment of
his debts to the City of London and it was sold to two London
Merchants. Charles visited the manor on several occasions
and stayed there before being imprisoned in nearby Carisbrook
Castle
-
Both Queen Victoria and Queen Mary often visited the manor
-
More recently Arreton Manor has been open to the public
and held a museum of toys and domestic bygones
Ghost ratings:
Arreton Manor seems to be a densely haunted site, with many
restless spirits, including:
-
The ghost of fair-haired Annabelle, seen in many areas throughout
the house and gardens, often crying "mamma mamma"
and wearing a blue dress and white slippers
-
A mysterious lady in a purple dress, seen by the owners
and many visitors
-
Many sightings of a silvery-grey figure by visitors. At
the same time an overpowering sweet smell is often detected
-
A woman in a red tight-waisted, puff-sleeved dress has been
spotted. The ghostly figure is said to have long curly black
hair and is also accompanied by a sweet floral smell but
her face is never seen
-
Monks have been seen walking through walls in the Dining
Room, as well as nodding in silent prayer in the 12th-century
part of the house
-
The ghostly monks have also been seen in the gardens, but
only from the waist up. Research into the lie of the land
shows the original Abbey was set lower than the current
grounds, which may explain this; they are walking on the
original floor level!
-
The manor owner sees the phantom of a man in the rear gardens
at least once a week
-
A dark haired woman in a white shift is often seen gliding
across the Four Poster Room and disappearing through the
window
Spooky experiences:
- Chanting is heard throughout the building and grounds
-
Several visitors have refused to enter the building, because
they felt a dark, foreboding presence on approach
-
The rustling of skirts is heard
-
The sounds of hounds running echo through the Dining Room,
as do the sounds of heavy keys being dropped
-
A strong, sweet smell of pipe tobacco is often noticed in
the rear gardens
-
Children crying is heard in the hall, while footsteps echo
from the empty room above
-
The front door is inexplicably bolted from the inside when
the house is empty and knocking is frequently heard although
no one is there
-
People have reported being pushed by unseen hands in the
cellar
-
In the Solar Room, thought to be where little Annabelle
was murdered, cupboard doors open by themselves and towels
that have fallen out are arranged on the floor in neat piles
by unseen forces
-
Ghostly footsteps are frequently heard in this room
-
In the Culpepper Suite a TV mysteriously comes on of its
own accord
Appuldurcombe
House,
Isle of Wight

Description:
A 300-year-old manor house in Wroxall, with 52 function,
bed and dining rooms.
Era:
The existing building dates back to the early 18th century,
but there has been a house on the site since 1200.
History:
The original building was a religious house, but for 300
years from the early 16th century Appuldurcombe was the
home of the Worsley family and was once the most important
estate on the island.
-
In the 16th century Henry VIII was entertained here. It
was a popular location where he could practice his falconry
skills
-
In 1587 two boys, the young sons of Richard Worsley, were
killed in an explosion at the Gatehouse
-
In 1781 Seymour Dorothy Fleming, the wife of Sir Richard
Worsley, caused a great scandal by having a high-profile
affair. She later admitted to having had 27 lovers
-
In 1867 it became a school called Dr Pound's Academy for
Young Gentlemen
-
From 1909 the house was unoccupied except by troops during
both world wars. In 1943 it was partly destroyed by German
bombs
Ghost ratings:
- The ghost of a beautiful woman has been seen in the Stable
Cottage
-
A ghostly carriage has appeared on the pathway near the
entrance to the grounds
-
Near the Freemantle Gate boy's laughter has been heard
-
From the window of the Gatehouse figures have been seen
moving from the gate down along the drive
-
A flickering candle is repeatedly spotted floating around
the main staircase
Spooky experiences:
- Unearthly noises are heard in the Stable Cottage when
no one is there
-
Many visitors have reported cold spots and unexplained temperature
changes in the Great Hall
-
People often feel that someone is brushing past them on
the main staircase
-
Eerie shadows have been witnessed dancing on the walls of
the cellars, and workers have had the sensation of being
watched
-
A specific presence is felt in the Gatehouse, while unseen
hands leaf through the visitor's book
Fyvie
Castle, Turrif, Aberdeenshire

Description:
An impressive building that was formerly a royal stronghold,
Fyvie features five towers and is possibly one of the finest
examples of Scottish Baronial architecture.
Era:
A castle has been on this site since 1211 but most of the
existing castle was built in the 14th/15th century.
History:
- William the Lion was at Fyvie around 1213 and Alexander
II granted a charter at Fyvie in 1222
-
English King Edward I stayed at "Fyvin Chastel"
in July 1296 during his punitive campaign. Later Robert
the Bruce dispensed justice in an open-air court held at
Fyvie
-
From 1390, following the Battle of Otterburn, five successive
families — Preston, Meldrum, Seton, Gordon and Leith
— each built one of Fyvie Castle's five towers
-
In 1596 the castle was sold to Alexander Seton, later Chancellor
of Scotland. He greatly enlarged the castle and added the
upper works
-
In 1601 Dame Lilias Drummond, Seton's first wife, died.
Some believe she was starved to death by her husband because
she failed to give him a male heir. Tradition says that
she was imprisoned in the Douglas Room. Her family tried
to rescue her but apparently they were caught, slaughtered
in her presence and their mutilated bodies thrown from the
window
-
By 1885 the then laird of the castle, Sir Maurice Duff-Gordon,
was in financial trouble and Fyvie was put up for sale
-
In 1982 Sir Andrew Forbes-Leith sold the castle and its
contents to The National Trust for Scotland
Ghost
ratings:
- The ghost of Lilias, otherwise known as The Green Lady,
has been seen wandering all around the castle. Legend has
it that on the wedding night of Alexander and his second
wife, heavy sighs and scratching noises were heard from
outside their chamber window. In the morning they found
the following words carved upside down on the sill, from
the outside: D LILIAS DRUMMOND
-
The lonely spirit of a man has been seen wandering the library
-
A guest who was staying in one of the guest rooms, woke
to find a woman standing over her, staring at her
Spooky
experiences:
- Recently a terrible loud banging has been heard throughout
the building. The staff are never able to figure out where
the noise is coming from. When they move to where they think
its coming from, the banging then moves to another part
of the building
-
In the Morning Room the sound of a baby crying has been
heard. A skeleton of a baby was found in the fireplace when
the Gordon clan lived there
-
The Library Corridor is said to induce intense feelings
of suffocation and oppression
-
In The Charter Room it is always cold and visitors have
had to be removed from the room because they feel ill and
faint Batteries drain and cameras fail to work properly
in this room
-
The Gordon Bedroom often emits an inexplicable odour of
roses. People will often stand aside as if someone is walking
past them — even though there is noone else in the
room — while some of the staff refuse to enter this
room. They get mysterious feelings of being watched
-
The Douglas Bedroom is said to be the room in which Lilias
was starved to death. There are numerous reports of cold
spots and people often feel overwhelming feelings of sadness
and sickness when they enter the room
-
In Robert's Flat lights turn themselves on, doors open on
their own and taps have turned themselves on
Craigievar
Castle, Aberdeenshire
Description:
This seven-storey castle in Alford is an L-shaped tower.
With its little turrets and pinkish hue, it looks very much
like something out of a fairytale!
Era:
It was built in the early 17th Century and has been called
the "epitome of the Jacobean Renaissance in Scotland".
History:
Craigievar was completed by William Forbes, otherwise known
as Danzig Willie, in 1626. It was built next to his family's
estate, Fintray, to show off his wealth and status —
he'd made a fortune as a merchant in Baltic trade. He created
the new castle from an already-existing castle half built
on the site, sold to him by the Mortimer family.
-
The first William Forbes died in 1627. His son was also
called William and was made a Baronet of Nova Scotia by
Charles 1st in 1630. In turn his son Red Sir John succeeded
him in 1648. He was nicknamed Red because of his complexion
and fiery hair colour
-
During his residency, Red apparently forced a member of
the rival Gordon clan out of the window in The Blue Room,
where he fell to his doom
-
Queen Victoria visited the castle twice and she signed the
visitor's book on her second visit in 1879
-
In 1963 the castle was bought from the Forbes-Sempill family
by a consortium of benefactors and presented to the National
Trust for Scotland
Ghost
ratings:
- The most frequently sighted spirit is rather selective
in his choice of when to appear. He is the ghost of a musician,
a fiddler who fell into the well at the castle and drowned.
He is said to appear only to those who bear the name Forbes
-
The Blue Room is known as 'the ghost room' on account of
the frequent disturbances. Dark figures have been seen here,
particularly by the window where one of the Gordon clan
fell to his death
-
A mysterious apparition has been seen on the stairs, waiting
expectantly for someone who never comes
-
A man has been spotted in the Great Hall, wandering aimlessly
Spooky
experiences:
Many of the supernatural happenings take place in The Blue
Room:
-
There have been countless testimonies of the temperature
dropping suddenly and music coming from within
-
Disembodied footsteps have been heard climbing the staircase
to this room
-
The door often opens and closes on its own
-
One of the guides witnessed his torch move 4 or 5 feet across
the floor of the room by itself
-
On the 4th floor the carpet is said to move erratically
-
In the School Room there have been reports of a ghostly
pair of hands touching guides and tourists
-
Throughout the entire castle, footsteps echo around the
corridors and larger rooms
Whaley
House,
San Diego, California

http://www.whaleyhouse.org
Description:
The house was built by Thomas Whaley in 1856-1857 and is
the oldest brick structure in Southern California. At the
time it was built the Greek-Revival-style house was the
most magnificent example of architecture in the area. It
cost $10,000.
History:
- American parapsychologist Hans Holzer and others have
said that the Whaley House is possibly the most haunted
house in America, some have said possibly the world.
-
The house is certainly one of the best known haunted houses
in America and in the early '60's designated an 'Official
Haunted Site' by the American Commerce Department and is
only one of 29 in the country (one of 2 in California) and
is a State Historical Landmark. - As well as a family home
the house has served as a Protestant Church, City Hall,
Theatre, Public school and Courtroom. It has been a museum
since 1960.
-
The land the house was built on was adjacent to a Native
American settlement where the Kumeyaay Tribe would spend
their winters. The Whaley's bought goods from the Kumeyaay
and employed some of them, though it was often more like
slavery (Thomas Whaley once wrote of how he had bought a
young girl to work for him and when she ran away was irritated
that he had to pay again to get her back).
-
It's thought Kumeyaay Graves may have lain on what became
the Whaley property.
-
Thomas Whaley was born on October 5th 1823, was educated
at the Washington Institute and became a successful Pioneer
and a prominent man in the community. He came from a wealthy
New York Merchant family who owned the land that is now
Central Park.
-
He sailed to San Fransisco in 1849 and set up a hardware
and woodwork store. After a fire destroyed the store in
1851 he moved to San Diego. After setting up a series of
businesses he made enough money to return to New York to
marry his sweetheart Anna Eloise DeLauney.
-
By 1858 they had three children - Francis Hilton (named
after one of Thomas' business associates), Thomas (Who died
at 17mths - see below) and Anna Amelia. They had also moved
their business into town. However, fire destroyed this business.
After this and little Thomas's death the family relocated
to San Fransisco.
-
June 1860 Augustus S. Ensworth, a lawyer and justice of
the peace moved in and managed the Whaley's business interests.
-
From October 1868 to January 1869 the Tanner Troupe Theatre
operated out of an upstairs bedroom (see related incidents).
It had a small stage and benches for 150 people. Mr Tanner
died within 17 days of opening.
-
From August 1869 the San Diego County Courthouse rented
the former Granary as a courtroom (Whaley only connected
it to the house after the court had left) and also had three
upstairs rooms for records storage.
-
Between 1874-1879 Thomas Whaley returned to New York leaving
the family in San Diego in dire straits and relying on the
oldest child, Francis, to support them.
-
On January 5th 1882 both Violet and Anna Whaley married
in the house. Anna married her first cousin, John T. Whaley
and Violet married George T. Bertolacci. Violet and George
divorced two years later (after their marriage only lasted
2 weeks before he deserted her) leading to her depression
and suicide on August 18th 1885 (see below, Related Incidents).
-
Distraught by this Thomas built a new house for the family
in downtown San Diego where he also owned up a Real Estate
business. After retirement due to ill health Thomas Whaley
died in 1890.
-
In 1889 Mr W.M. Barnes a mine owner from El Paso, Texas
lived in the house with his family.
-
In 1912 Anna Whaley (Thomas's widow), Corinne Lillian, Francis
and George (now a musician) all lived in the house.
-
On February 24th 1913 Anna died at the house.
-
Francis died at the home on November 19th 1914.
-
The last Whaley relative, Corinne Lillian, still lived at
the house right up until her death in 1953 aged 89.
-
In 1956 the County of San Diego purchased the house.
Ghost
ratings:
- It's thought that the ghosts in the house include: an
executed man, 'Yankee Jim', Mr. Whaley, Mrs Whaley, several
unknown apparitions, a little girl and one of the Whaley
children who died from Scarlet Fever.
-
A lady in gingham has been seen, as has a little girl and
a man in frock coat. - In the Kitchen, children's cries
have been heard here and a meat cleaver hanging on display
in here often swings ominously.
-
In the bedroom, a young boy is sometimes seen playing there.
-
In the Garden a ghostly cat and dog are chased through the
walls from the garden.
Spooky experiences:
-- Ghostly lights are seen all over the house.
-
Burglar Alarms go off by themselves.
-
Windows get opened long after the house has been locked
up.
-
People regularly report an icy feeling as if someone has
just walked straight through them.
-
Cuban cigars are smelt (Thomas Whaley is known to have smoked
these)
-
Furniture lifts up of its own accord.
-
Windows open of their own accord.
-
People feel that someone is standing behind them or pushing
them.
-
A spotted dog has been seen.
-
On the ground floor, footsteps are heard on the floor above.
-
In he Archway between Music Room and Parlour, people feel
a choking sensation when they walk past here, the spot where
'Yankee Jim' was hung.
-
In the Courtroom (a room that was also used as a morgue)
faint cigar smoke has been detected - although nobody is
smoking.
-
On the second floor, heavy footsteps are heard running across
the floor from below, Corrine Lillian Whaley never felt
comfortable in the upstairs rooms of the house when she
lived there alone and perfume is often smelled.
Black
Bull, Haworth, West Yorkshire

Description: This is an
old-world pub, which has stood on this spot for more than
300 years
History:
Little is known about the history of the pub. It's always
been a pub and a hotel. The attic used to be a dormitory
and the upstairs bedrooms were B&B rooms until last
year.
This was the pub in which
Branwell Bronte drank his health away (he bought his Opium
in the Apothecary across the cobbled street) whilst his
sisters were writing their novels in the Parsonage behind
the pub (Both Charlotte and Emily also died in the parsonage).
Their father, Patrick, was the vicar at the church next
door (the church that stands there now was built by Patrick
Bronte's successor but it's in exactly the same location).
Branwell Bronte was born
on June 26th 1817 and died of chronic bronchitis and consumption
on 24th September 1848 - He was laid to rest in the family
vault at Haworth Church.
In February 1836 at the
age of 19 Branwell was proposed a freemason and later became
secretary of the lodge. Meetings were originally held at
the Black Bull but then moved to Lodge Street (The chair
on the stairway at the pub is a Mason's Chair and is thought
to be Branwell's chair).
In the pub there's a print
of a picture of Branwell and his famous sisters which he
painted himself out of after a family falling out - the
story is that he was the actual author of Wuthering Heights
and Emily took the manuscript and made slight changes and
sold it as her own work.
There is a big graveyard
behind the church and it's thought to contain 40,000 bodies,
it's also thought that due to subsidence over the years
some of these bodies have slipped down the hill and now
lie under the pub.
It is known that the landlord
at the time Branwell drank there was a man called Dan Sugden.
Ghost ratings:
- In the main bar, a man dressed in beige has been seen
sitting at one of the tables
- On the road outside people
are seen, you look back and they have disappeared.
- Outside, a girl is heard
crying outside in the car park and allotments.
- People often see figures
flitting around - usually out of the corner of their eye
and a has medium picked up on a man looking for a little
girl (his daughter).
- A man in a top hat is
often seen sitting at one of the tables (Dan Sugden, the
landlord at the time the Bronte's lived in Haworth was a
small man who always wore a Top Hat, he was nicknamed 'Little
Nosey').
- In the main bar, a child
has been seen offering sweets to someone no-one else can
see.
- In Room 2, people have
woken up to see the dark figure of a man watching them sleep.
- Room 3 is thought to be
haunted by a maid. When it was still being used as B+B rooms
and one of the owners would clean it she would come back
to find everything put back the way it was before - she
thinks that the maid doesn't want her taking her job.
Spooky experiences:
- Glasses and ashtrays fly to the floor when there is no-one
around.
- The bell by the fireplace
in the corner by the Bronte picture rings of its own accord.
Also every morning the light above the Bronte picture is
turned round.
- People often feel that
someone is brushing past them on the main staircase
- In |