Thursday, 30 October 2014

Would You Clean A Haunted Window?

“We’ve probably been to 360 locations throughout the Midwest. The Belvoir Winery is probably the most haunted place we’ve ever investigated,” said Nick Spantgos, co-founder of Paranormal Research Investigators.
http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/community/816-north/article3424309.html
Spooky Kansas City - A paranormal paradise: Kandice Walker was relatively new on the job at the John Wornall House Museum in 2006 when she had the first of what was to become many odd experiences. “It was my third day, and I was opening the museum for the first time,” she said. But as she pulled in and looked up at one of the museum’s windows, she was alarmed by what she saw. Two little girls were apparently inside. Having children locked all night in the museum is never a good thing to have happen on your watch. “I was fairly freaked out,” Walker said. But when she worriedly searched the premises, there was no sign of them.
Only later did she learn that two small girls had lived at the house and had died of childhood disease, and that people frequently claim to have seen them. Walker didn’t know it at the time, but the Wornall House had a long-standing reputation as being haunted, with numerous sightings not only of the girls but of soldiers and the Wornall family. Walker, who went on to become director of the museum, can laugh about it now. “Nobody told the new kid about the ghosts,” she said.
That wasn’t the only weirdness Walker experienced with locking and opening up. Another time, Walker arrived early to unlock and found the door open enough that leaves had drifted inside. But the motion-sensitive alarm didn’t sound until Walker herself entered. That happened twice in a row. The third day, all the doors were shut but none locked, including a “widow’s balcony” door that was never unlocked by museum staff, she said.
Distinct and unaccounted-for footsteps are a common occurrence, say staff members, as well as the smell of cherry pipe tobacco, which is attributed to John Wornall, the home’s former owner. Children seem to be a common sighting as well, according to docents who spend a lot of time there. A few years ago, a little boy whose family lived nearby asked if he could play with the girls he saw in the windows. Another childlike spirit is thought to be that of Mittie Pigg, an orphan who became a servant during the Civil War.

This is the Oliver Family Mansion in Chester, PA. The Oliver family went missing in 1898. The mystery baffled investigators and the family was never found but locals say they can see them in the windows of the mansion.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/29/seph-lawless_n_6063654.html
Photographer Seph Lawless is a master of the abandoned - his frames are filled with eerie portraits of shopping malls, factories, homes. All dilapidated, all empty, all but forgotten. He usually travels across the United States via hybrid vehicle, equipped with a camera and a knack for finding ways inside strange structures, collecting stories of his adventures along the way.
It shouldn't be surprising that Lawless' travel logs include more than a few ghostly tales. He is, after all, venturing through the detritus of tougher times. He was bound to stumble upon a few terrifying properties, left to crumble while the rest of us are too afraid to notice. Just in time for Halloween, Lawless has compiled the most hauntingly beautiful of the bunch in a book titled "'13: An American Horror Story."
Essentially, the tome is a high quality coffee table book for the macabre obsessed. From Texas, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Kentucky, Wisconsin and Connecticut, Lawless shows off the real life haunted houses he's visited throughout his work, and the slightly startling histories and personal stories that make them unique.

http://www.wiltsglosstandard.co.uk/news/11564660.Most_haunted_places_in_Cirencester_revealed/
Most haunted places in Cirencester revealed: The night where ghosts and ghouls come out to play is upon us again. As Halloween approaches, Cirencester Ghost Society describes its top places to visit on a spooky walk around the town. Black Horse pub haunting..  There have been several unknown apparitions in the popular pub. In one incident an evil looking lady appeared in a bedroom, scratched a signature in a black window, before disappearing. Others have smelt lavender by the pub’s fireplace. It is thought that it comes from a ghost of a previous cleaner who always spayed lavender polish near the fireplace.

The town hosted its first haunted house tour (Chesterfield) - "This is the first year of what is to be an annual event," said Keith Reimann, adding there is plenty of material to make each year’s tours different. Stories of ghosts have been around this town for generations, he said. He said he had a disclaimer and a warning before continuing the tour. "Nothing you are going to hear tonight has been made up by me or anyone else for the sake of this tour," he said. "And now, the warning: The history of Crosswicks is full of events that are cruel, violent and tragic and I won’t be sparing any details."
Mr. Wolverton told his guests that if they were brave enough, they could continue with him to their next stop, the Garden Hand Inn, a stagecoach stop up until the 1850s. He told of new homeowners who moved in the early 1990s. The mother was outside cleaning windows one day and ran out of the commercial brand of window cleaner and didn’t want to stop cleaning so she went to the closet, but there was no more, only Uncle Al’s window cleaner. "Her Uncle Al was a favorite," he said. "He liked to invent things and make his own solutions and give it away as gifts to friends." He said Uncle Al had died so she just kept it as a memento.
"It was then she noticed smoke coming in the window," he said. "She looked out; no one was there. She went all the way around the house, and there was no fire. She went back to work. It was then she realized that it was not just any smoke, but it was pipe smoke, and it was the very flavor of cherry pipe smoke that her Uncle Al use to smoke." It comforted her to know her Uncle Al is always here, he said.
July 15, 1962, John Wine came home from a weekend fishing trip sponsored by the insurance company he worked and arrived home around 8 p.m. when he opened his front door and was blown into the middle of Main Street by an explosion, Mr. Wolverton said. "It was a back draft caused by a sudden rush of oxygen to a fire that had been smoldering all day," he said. "His wife, Ethel, 51, had been smoking in bed and was burned beyond recognition." It might have been Ethel’s ghost waiting for the new owners in the late ’70s when the Seahuts moved in, he said. "Someone was trying to keep them out of one of the bedrooms," he said, adding they kept finding the door locked from the inside with a deadbolt. They had to climb out on the roof and go in through a window to unlock it, he added.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/watch-moment-ghost-reveals-itself-3852415
Watch moment 'ghost' reveals itself in the window of Britain’s ‘most haunted’ pub: This video footage is believed to show the moment a ghost reveals itself in the window of Britain’s ‘most haunted’ pub. The 19 second clip shows a strange light flickering in a first floor window of Bolton’s 763-year-old Ye Olde Man and Scythe. The footage was taken by a tourist who  - speaking in Portuguese - describes the old Churchgate boozer as ‘one of the oldest’ in England, adding: “And the most haunted.”
Just after he refers to a famous CCTV clip - which became an internet hit after it was first published it in February - something strange can be seen in the first floor window. As the man talks about the ‘crazy cider’ for which the pub is known, a flickering light appears in the window. Pub manager Tony Dooley says the clip is further proof the pub is haunted. Tony, 36, said: “I’m not too happy about it. That’s my flat behind the window. My attitude before I became the manager nine months ago was not to believe in ghosts. I’m convinced now.”
Only a few weeks ago he said he was woken by what he thought what his partner’s pet dog Kallie licking his feet only to discover the animal was fast asleep. “My feet were clammy and wet, like sweaty palms only worse. I went straight to the bathroom and took a shower with the dog in the room making sure nothing else happened. It was creepy. My attitude is as long the ghost doesn’t harm me then that’s fine,” said Tony.

The first ‘ghost’ video emerged after spooked Tony had checked CCTV cameras and discovered a strange, luminous figure flickering into view in the bar. The pub’s owner Richard Greenwood said he is now trying to get in touch with the person who shot the latest video. Asked whether it was a stunt, he said: “I wish I’d have thought of it if that’s the case.” He insisted the pub is haunted, adding: “This gives the original video more credibility, I suppose.”
Factfile on Britain’s ‘most haunted’ pub: The pub, which dates from 1251, is the fourth-oldest pub in Britain and is reputedly haunted by the Seventh Earl of Derby, James Stanley. The royalist, whose family originally owned the inn, is said to have spent the last hours of his life there before he was beheaded in 1651 towards the end of the Civil War. The chair he sat in before he was taken outside and executed is still in the pub today - and some say so is he.
Hundreds of soldiers and civilians were also killed outside the pub in the Bolton Massacre of 1644. With such a bloody history, it has long been considered a hotspot for paranormal activity and a psychic evening held there in 2006 reportedly found it to be haunted by at least 25 spirits. Among them is said to be a woman who hung herself in the cellar several centuries ago as well as an eight-year-old girl and a phantom dog.

The 'ghost' in the bottom right window of Michelle Midwinter's house.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/creepy-victorian-ghost-picture-house-4497204
Creepy 'Victorian ghost' picture in house 'haunted by murder suspect' will give you nightmares: Terrified mum saw a spirit staring out from inside her house but on closer inspection, there was no-one was there. This creepy picture supposedly shows the ghost of a murder suspect who is haunting a family home. Petrified mum Michelle Midwinter, 30, spotted the spectre in a photo of her house, which she took to share with friends on her Facebook page. The eerie image appears to show a figure of a man, implicated in an infamous Victorian murder, staring out the window from inside her property in Trowbridge, Wiltshire.
Mum-of-one Michelle took the spine-chilling photo last month, a week after moving in to North Bradley. Mobile phone case designer, Michelle, who has nicknamed the phantom Old Man Kent, said: "I went outside and took a picture but after initially admiring the brickwork the face just sort of jumped out at me. "I ran into the house to make sure no one was in there because I knew everyone else was at work, but it was just me and my two-year-old daughter. "I studied the photo for a while and then put it on Facebook to see if anyone else could come up with an explanation as to how the face could have got there."
She believes the photo shows the spirit of Samuel Kent, whose daughter Constance brutally murdered his three-year-old son in the nearby village of Rode in 1860. The factory inspector, who died in 1872, was originally a suspect in the Rode Hill House murder but was cleared when his daughter was convicted. Michelle added: "The picture caused quite a stir on Facebook, but no one could really come up with any plausible explanation. "Most people thought it was a reflection of the flowers below the window but the angles are all wrong." "It's hard to believe but it clearly looks like the face of an old man."
This terrifying image comes after a spate of reports that ghosts have been popping up in photographs across the nation, most recently at Cannock Chase, in the Midlands, where a black-eyed girl was caught on camera. Michelle, who denies claims that the picture has been doctored, said a number of ghostly goings on has led her to believe her house may be haunted. "Another weird thing was that my friend saw a door handle move down and the door opened in the same room the face in the window was in. "I was just so surprised because I thought someone was in the house. We also checked the attic to make sure no one was living up there. "I can't really say what I think the face in the window is, as I honestly don't know.

The most haunted part of the building is said to be the oak-panelled ‘Dark Room’, so-called because the windows have various stained glass bearing the Giffard family associations with the site. Several members of staff have refused to go into the room unless there is somebody else with them.
http://www.expressandstar.com/editors-picks/2014/10/30/black-country-and-staffordshires-most-haunted/
Giffard Arms, Wolverhampton: Also apparently haunted is the Giffard Arms, in Victoria Street, Wolverhampton. There are believed to be a number of ghosts which haunt the pub, in Victoria Street. One of them is believed to be the spirit of Anne Horton, whose ghost has been reportedly seen following young men back from the pub at night. She is said to have been a prostitute who took her own life on the site in the early 20th century. The pub was built in 1922, but the Giffard family had owned a house on the site prior to that.
There have been other sightings of a girl around the age of 11, who is often seen playing with wooden play bricks in the main bar, in the middle seat by the back window. She is also reported to have been seen in the doorway in the kitchen of the upstairs flat. Another sighting is of a man, who is believed to be an old landlord named John, who has been seen locking up the pub at night. He walks right through the actual bar area as it wasn’t there when he had the pub. There have even been reports about a dog haunting the bar.
Over the years there have been stories of glasses moving and exploding for no apparent reason, cold spots in certain places in the pub, doors closing, strange noises and smells. The most haunted part of the building is said to be the oak-panelled ‘Dark Room’, so-called because the windows have various stained glass bearing the Giffard family associations with the site. Several members of staff have refused to go into the room unless there is somebody else with them.

http://www.harrogateadvertiser.co.uk/news/local/halloween-harrogate-ghost-stories-1-6924254
The White Jockey: A white jockey was once seen in the grandstand of the former Ripon Racecourse, now part of the Cathedral Choir School in Whitcliffe Lane. According to Ghost Stories from around Ripon and other Dark Tales of the Past, written by local historian Maurice Taylor and published by Ripon Civic Society, a khaki-clad First World War soldier has also appeared in the projection box of the former Palladium Cinema in Kirkgate, and a hooded monk at St Anne’s Almhouses on High St Agnesgate. Ripon’s first Mayor, Hugh Ripley, is also said to have appeared at the window of the Wakeman’s House, while clergymen and housemaids have been seen at the Old Deanery. A poltergeist, experienced by Mervyn Usher of the former Cobbler’s Corner in High Skellgate, is also featured in the book. Recalling the day in 2003, he said: “It just came flying across the room towards us. We got out of the way and the plate hit the wall. “It didn’t smash, the middle piece just dropped out and stayed in one piece.’

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