Monday 27 September 2010

Wingfield Manor, Chesterfield

Wingfield Manor - geograph.org.uk - 1478940

I visited Wingfield Manor a few years ago, that was the time when you could wander around alone, this is where I purchased Simon Marsden book, 'A spectred Isle'. Now you can only go in on a pre-booked tour. Here is Simon Marsden's Wingfield Manor entry

There is a pond on the walk up and my good friend Toby spotted a guy slumped over his fishing rod at the pond there, but we were sure if he wasn't asleep that he was dead; we dared one another to have a look, fortunately he wasn't dead it was a dummy :D

People have reported that they have felt like they are being followed by a spectral presence.

Source: Paranormal database

Mary's Lights
Location: Wingfield - Wingfield Manor
Type: Haunting Manifestation
Date / Time: Unknown
Further Comments: The spirit of Mary' Queen of Scots is reported to have taken a liking to the ballroom, while it is in debate whether the spheres of light seen floating around the site after dark are part of the same entity.

Whitby Abbey, North Yorkshire



Valle Crucis Abbey, Wales




Harlech Castle, Wales






Sunday 26 September 2010

Beaumaris Castle - Anglesley, Wales






Caernarfon Castle North Wales

Boddelwydden Castle, North Wales

Photo - JPTUK
Bodelwyddan Castle 

The castle was bought from the Humphreys by Sir William Williams, Speaker in the House of Commons from 1680-1681.

The castle which stands today was reconstructed between 1830 and 1852 by Sir John Hay Williams, who employed the architects Joseph Hansom (inventor of the Hansom cab) and Edward Welch to refurbish and extend the house, though the Williams' family fortunes had started to decline since the 1850s, due to the loss of the main source of income for the estate, lead mining. The castle has been described as one of Hansom's most ambitious projects, "being wildly dramatic and owing nothing to its predecessors".

At the same time works were carried out to construct an estate wall and formal gardens. Further refurbishment work was carried out in the 1880s by Sir Herbert, 7th Baronet, who inherited Bodelwyddan Castle from his heirless cousin.By the First World War the house had become a recuperation hospital for wounded soldiers. During this time, the grounds of the estate were used by soldiers based at the nearby Kinmel Camp for trench warfare training.

Traces of these trenches can still be seen. By 1920, the cost of maintaining the castle and estate had grown too burdensome, and the Williams-Wynn family leased Bodelwyddlan to Lowther College, a girls private school. In 1920, the house became a private school for girls, Lowther College. The school was formed in 1896 at Lytham St. Annes in Lancashire, by Mrs Florence Morris (later Lindley).

The school originally moved to Bodelwyddan as tenants of the Williams family, however Lowther College purchased the property five years later, in 1925. The school is thought to be one of the first private schools for girls to have its own swimming pool. It also had a private golf course. The Lowther College Tableaux were well regarded within the community for their musical excellence. Boys were admitted from 1977. The school closed in 1982 due to financial problems. In the 1980s, the site was bought by Clwyd County Council with the aim of developing the castle as a visitor attraction. Partnerships were formed with several prominent museums and art galleries, such as the National Portrait Gallery and the Royal Academy of Arts, so that the castle could be used to display objects from these collections. In order to house these items, the interior of the castle was restored by Roderick Gradidge, an expert on Victorian architecture. Part of the site was leased to the Rank Organisation in 1994 for development into a luxury hotel, Bodelwyddan Castle Hotel and this use remains today. The historic house and grounds are not part of the hotel but are managed by an independent trust and are open to the public. Bodelwyddan Castle2 
There have been many reports of ghost sightings at the castle, including that of a soldier in one of the galleries. Sir John Hay Williams wrote in 1829 that, during a period of refurbishment, human bones were found near one of the chimneys. They were built back into the wall, which means they remain there to this day. The castle has also been the subject of two episodes of Living TV's Most Haunted and Syfy's Ghost Hunters International. The castle is set within a large area of parkland, and formal gardens, the most recent of which was originally designed by Thomas Hayton Mawson in 1910.

The castle structure seen today is mostly a Victorian facade, but that covers a core that is believed to date back to the 13th century. Archaeologists have found Roman remains on the site, and suspect they relate to a settlement adjacent to the nearby Roman road. The castle has a distant view of Rhuddlan Castle and St. Asaph Cathedral—which was damaged in the 15th century by both the English armies and the Welsh Owain Glyndŵr's forces. However, the Bishop was sympathetic to Owain's men, whilst he excommunicated the English.

Edinburgh Castle


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Looking down into the cellars

Edinburgh Castle is built on top of an old volcano!

The sun trying to come through the cloud makes the castle look eerie.

In the cellars

The skeleton of a soldier, one of 15 found recently in another part of the castle.
The evidence indicates that the dead were all victims from the 1689
siege, who may well have died here in the cellars.

Superb carvings and gargoyles

Edinburgh Castle is allegedly haunted by several ghosts, a headless drummer as been heard and seen in the 1960's, his apparition is said to be a warning to all that the castle is about to be besieged.  A piper went missing down a tunnel towards Holyroodhouse and was never seen again, but people still hear the pipes.  There is a dog cemetery at the castle, a spectral dog has been seen here. Ghostly prisoners are said to haunt the cellars. 

More information: Guide to castles - Edinburgh Castles ghosts 


Viscount Dundee
Location: Edinburgh - Edinburgh Castle
Type: Crisis Manifestation
Date / Time: 2000s
Further Comments: Viscount Dundee was seen by Lord Balcarres while the lord was held in the castle. He later discovered that the Viscount had died at Killiecrankie around the time of the sighting. Note that Colinburgh Castle also claims this event for itself. A phantom drummer has been reported at the castle, said to forewarn of bad news. This ghost was blamed when the arms of a tunic on display apparently moved as if beating an invisible drum. Early in the twenty-first century, a group of workmen claimed to have photographed a glowing ball of light, though the image looks more like the reflection of the flash in glass.

Wycoller Hall and Village - Lancashire




Wycoller is a famous Hamlet outside Colne in Lancashire only 3 miles North of Howarth; Charlotte Bronte took her walks here. Wycoller Hall was thought to be 'Ferndean Manor' in Charlotte Brontes 'Jane Ayre' novel. The hall is said to be Haunted by a spectral horseman that comes out only when there is a full moon also the ghost of a black woman wanders the grounds. Pearson House joined on to the tea-room has the ghost of the blue lady who walks through walls. Wycollar House has a poltergeist.
We visited Wycoller Hall on a very pleasant summers day. The ruins looked very romantic surrounded by wild flowers. Not at all creepy on a sunny Saturday. Too many children running amongst its stone-work. Definitely a spooky hot spot for wanabee ghost hunters. We shall certainly be paying the spectral horseman a visit one moonlit night soon.

Hardwick Hall Old and New





Thursday 9 September 2010

Aberconwy House, North Wales


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Conwy is a glorious town and it boasts not only a marina but a massive castle built by Edward I and two excellent haunted houses nearby; Plas Mawr and Aberconwy House.

After I quick wander around the exterior part of Plas Mawr house, we walked only a few metres down the same street to Aberconwy House. What could be more convenient! Having not one but two haunted houses in the same street! Aberconwy house was a 14th-century merchant's house known to be one of the oldest recorded houses of its kind anywhere in Wales and probably one of the oldest haunted houses around.

It has probably got ghosts from three different times in history, the Jacobean the Georgian and the Victorian; lots to go at there then! But it is the wife of the first owner who frightens people the most, she has been seen near the fireplace and wafts pleasant flowery perfume in the loft area, she has been seen near the fireplace.

A man in Victorian attire has been seen wandering down the Victorian corridor, apparently he just disappears into thin air; nicknamed Mr Jones because between 1850 and 1880 a Mr Jones lived there with his lady wife. People say that he died on the same day his seventh child was born and they think it is he who haunts the Victorian corridor.

The floorboards creak and doors rattle all the time, plates and pens move in their displays most nights on their own. One employee said that she had her hair platted in the Victorian Bedroom! It is a creepy little house because it has no overhead lighting. If you fancy a visit there, don’t be surprised if you get a door slammed in your face!

Lindisfarne, Northumberland - Castle, tidal Island, priory



LOCATION: HOLY ISLAND, NORTHUMBERLAND
LINDISFARNE PRIORY
NUMBER OF GHOSTS 3
ST CUTHBERT
SPECTRAL PROCESSION OF MONKS
LONE MONK


Fantastic and picturesque location, be prepared to walk a short distance from the carpark. Entry into the castle and  priory is not free. Dont forget to pay the Lindisfarne mead shop a visit.

Plas Mawr, North Wales - Hall, house, manor, mansion


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Plas Mawr,  'The Great Hall' Conwy in Wales. The building wasn't hard to find, a gorgeous Tudor house built by Sir Robert Wynn (1576 1585) possibly the finest in Britain now owned by CADW who refused to give out any information regarding said ghostly inhabitants.

The story goes that, Sir Robert Wynn was away abroad fighting in a war and was due home anytime, his wife and young son waited for his return. They would repeatedly climb up the steps to the watch tower to see if he had returned home. With no sign of Wynn, they descended the precarious steep stairs again and again in the cold with a howling wind gusting around them.   
Still holding on to her sons hand, she missed a step and lost her footing, they both fell all the way to the bottom.

Plas Mawr
One of the male servants heard a commotion and went to investigate only to find his mistress and son badly injured. The family doctor could not be raised so a passing doctor came to their assistance but the young doctor didn't know what to do and shouted for a more experienced doctor, the servants refused to help and locked him in the lantern room with his patients. Wynns wife and child had died, stone cold Dr Dic panicked when he heard that Wynn had arrive at the house and there was no where to hide.
Plas Mawr, Aberconwy - geograph.org.uk - 218747
Wynn was distraught and was gunning for the young Dr but he had strangely disappeared in a room with no windows. Wynn searched and searched, pacing backwards and forwards with great dispair. Frustrated, he couldnt find the Dr and couldn't cope with his loss, so he stuck a dagger into his own neck and killed himself.

Nobody new where Dr Dic had gone, people say that he may have crawled into the chimney space, but he was never found. Such a mystery!

Footsteps are sometimes heard pacing the lantern room in the dead of night, it is believed to be that of  Sir Robert Wynn, maybe his spirit still roams the house, presumably still looking for Dr. Dic.

Newland Village, Gloucestershire


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In this quiet historic village of Newland, you fail to miss the very tall skyscraperesque church that looks just like a cathedral that looms out of the trees.  Funnily enough it is called the 'Cathedral of the country' the plaque on the walls says 'this church was built in 1200.    

Newland village is situated on the east side of the river Wye south-east of Monmouth. Opposite the church there is a road occupied by a row of almshouses where the local paupers lived, to purchase one of these today would be very costly indeed.

Whilst taking these photos, I leant on a gravestone to get the angle, as I did I sensed someone stood right behind me, thinking it was my other half I dismissed it until I turned round to find NO ONE WAS THERE !! 

Newland is haunted by spectres from the civil war; Cavaliers have been seen in and around the village.  There are claims that they haunt the village pub, but the owners haven't seen any ghosts.  A ghostly coach with a beautiful lady peering anxiously out of the window has been seen dashing through the village.    On the Newland road lies Swan Pool, created to provide power for the iron smelting funaces in the village. It is said that the cries of a child have been heard here, and the figure of a woman with a baby in her arms emerges from the water, covered with slime and dripping weeds. A large black dog then rushes out of the lime kilns in the wood, circles the pond once, then slinks back to its lair.

Shibden Hall, Halifax, West Yorkshire



Anne Lister, 1791-1840, a Yorkshire landowner, industrialist, traveller and diarist. She was a lesbian, who, despite needing to keep her orientation secret from society at large, in private defied the conventions of her times by living with her female lover.

Anne kept a detailed account of her life, her loves and her emotions in a fascinating and painfully honest 4,000,000-word journal. A sizeable portion was written in code, and the recent deciphering of the diaries provides an astonishing insight into the life of the woman who has been called Britain's first modern lesbian.

After following Captain Slow in the car for what seemed like an eternity, we eventually arrived at our destination.  Shibden Hall in Halifax, West Yorkshire a 600 year old Tudor house. The hall was built in 1420 but its location goes much further back in time.  I spent the majority of my time alone with tripod and camera in hand set on automatic timer and left to wander both the grounds and the house as Richard went off with the dog, bird spotting Kingfishers at the halls reed pond.

Admiring the beauty of the house and its grounds in the autumn season, I took a couple of high dynamic photographs then ventured into the house. I was told that I had timed my arrival well, as a large and very noisy school party milled around the outside gate, so thanks to Captain Slow it was well orchestrated.

Walking through the kitchen I saw three ladies wearing period clothing, I approached a lady in a black dress and asked if I could take a photo of her, which she kindly agreed and posed for me by the fire in the main room.

The house felt warm and comfortable, lived in in-fact.  After a brief walk around downstairs I went up on to the mezzanine level and looked down, it was a wonderful place and I had it all to myself! Unable to contain my excitement no longer and feeling like a child in a sweet shop, I walked along the first floor corridor in search of the ‘Red Room’ where the spirit of Anne Walker is said to reside. Not quite red, but more of a dirty brown colour, I found the room.

The story goes that Anne Walker who Anne Lister left Shibden hall to after her death in Russia of a fever, was neurotic, paranoid and surrounded by rotting food, Anne complained that gangs of men were outside her window and she constantly complained that they were out to get her with guns, whether or not there were men lurking in the shadows outside her window remains to be seen, but she was confined in Dr Belcombe's asylum.

I stood for a while in the red room, asking out to any who were interested, asking patiently into the quiet, listening, waiting………..nothing.  I entered each room repeating the process, again, nothing.  I accepted at this point that nothing  remotely paranormal was going to  happen whilst I was there.

As for the alleged paranormal activity, people have often smelled tobacco and lavender , these seem to be the most common olfactory manifestations reported.  Staff have seen odd things out of the corner of their eyes, a black cloaked shape was seen by an attendant back in 2007 as he was opening a gate one morning and frightened him badly.  Also groans, footsteps, creaking noises and voices are occasionally heard in the building. The hall is very creaky though as you walk around.

As I was leaving I was reminded to pay the 17th century barn a visit, I am glad I did, it was like stepping back in time seeing all the old vehicles, which consisted of horse drawn carriages, a rickshaw, early bicycle, Romany carriage  and a horse drawn hearse!

To me the hall had a good feeling about it, I’m still digging for 600 years worth of paranormal history.

I hope that one day I may get the chance to wander around the hall in the dead of night!

Kelvedon Hatch Secret Nuclear Bunker, Essex - Underground, shelter, tunnels, offices




Our visit to Kelvedon Hatch was unplanned, we had found out about it by chance in a leaflet in a tourist information hut. My other half is a bit of a military history buff and persuaded me to take a trip there even though it was an 80 mile round trip from Cambridge, but it was well worth the journey! We were lucky enough to visit when the bunker when it was devoid of all visitors, we had the place all to ourselves. I had no idea that there was a paranormal interest with the place. When we reached the end, in the canteen area at the exit, we saw posters for some up and coming paranormal events.

Nestled deep in the Essex countryside and screened by thick woodland is an un-assuming little cottage or so it seemed from the outside.  But inside this fake façade was once one of the most important government military command centres in the whole of Britain.  It hides a labyrinth of rooms uncased in 10 feet thick reinforced concrete and goes to a depth of 100 feet underground.  It is where military commanders would have run their secret operations in the event of an imminent nuclear attack.  Not even the local villages new about this top secret hideout. This tactical control centre would house over 600 personnel including the prime minister of the time, who was involved in organising a survival plan for the civilian population in the aftermath of a nuclear war.  The bunker is relatively new (1950's)  there has been reported paranormal activity within its walls although there hasn't been any terrible incidents except for one,  it is rumoured that a workman accidentally fell into the 'constantly poured' concrete whilst working, apparently his body was never recovered but his spirit may still be about.

How on earth would we find a secret bunker in the middle of the Essex countryside? Fortunately it was signposted all the way. We took the A128 road past Chipping Ongar, then we drove down this long winding narrow track road past ploughed fields and hedgerows, then I spotted a mast and a 4 minute warning siren, we had reach our destination. We then continued to follow the signs through the woods on foot to the bungalow.  The house looked like a typical brick cottage bungalow, although the large surveillance cameras that were strategically placed on each corner of the roof was a dead give-away to the fact that this was no ordinary cottage.

We needed a permit to take photographs inside but I didn't get one.

We had to use the wands to hear the commentary as we walked round, but they reminded me of 1980's mobile phones, big and heavy! Following the route and punching the numbers in on the wand, we walked round taking in the information.  We seemed to have the whole place to ourselves which was great! The entrance corridor was a little spooky and it had a strange smell to it. We walked around each area with interest and I was intrigued at the technology that was used only 20 years ago, teletext printers, old computers and strange gadgets and devices I'd never seen before, it just reminded me of the 1980's film 'war games'.  Back then this technology would have been state of the art, but now it didn't look at all futuristic.

This bunker was like a concrete tomb, I tried to imagine myself as one of the personnel working in there, it would have been a rotten place to work and live, you hoped that you got along with your co-workers!  The living quarters were very basic, the beds in the dormitories were very close together and you would get out of your warm bed and the next person would climb in after you! Fortunately the cold war bunker wasn't used for its intended purpose.

On the top floor of the bunker we headed into the sick bay, equipped with its own make-shift operating theatre and wards.  On display was a light-box x-ray, next to it was a coffin, body bags and boxes for holding corpses. It was all very interesting and not scary..... We then walked through a narrow room which was a make-shift ward, there was a partitioned off room at the end of it with a TV playing to itself at the other end, we then walked back the way we came.  Then something weird happened, there was an over-whelming feeling of oppression and anxiety and  a feeling like we were been watched, we hadn't felt this way anywhere else in the bunker.  My partner complained that the hairs on the back of his neck were stood up on end and I was really jumpy, at one point I flinched and jumped a mile when a voice came over the tannoy, it was absolutely awful in there and I couldn't wait to get out!

Looking at the coffin and body bag, didn't bother us at all.  I don't know the reason why we were feeling this oppression, I suggested to my partner that it may be because we were directly under the electricity transmitter as the sick bay is on the top floor...maybe some weird EMFs or some odd pressure sensation. As I said at the beginning, I didn't know anything about this location, so wasn't influenced by any previous suggestions regarding paranormal experiences.

This was a particularly interesting and unusual location, I'm sceptical that it's haunted, but there certainly is a strange atmosphere about the place.