Haunted Homes and Family Traditions of Great Britain

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John Henry Ingram 1897
English
  • Preface
  • Allanbank
  • Bair Hall
  • Barby
  • Beaminster School
  • Bisham Abbey
  • Botathen
  • Bowood
  • The Bristol Vicarage
  • Cambridge
  • Cambridge University
  • Canterbury
  • Cawood Castle
  • Chedworth
  • Cheshunt
  • Corby Castle, Cumberland
  • Cortachy Castle
  • Creslow Manor House
  • Daintree
  • Dunfermline
  • Edge Hill
  • Edinburgh: Canongate
  • Edinburgh: Gillespie Hospital
  • Edinburgh: Trinity
  • Enfield Chace
  • Epsom: Pitt Place
  • Epworth Parsonage
  • Esher
  • Eton
  • Glamis Castle
  • Glasgow: The Hell Club
  • Grayrigg Hall
  • Hackwood House
  • Hanley
  • Heanor, Derbyshire
  • Hereford
  • Henhow Cottage
  • Hilton Castle
  • Holland House
  • Lambton Castle
  • Littlecot House
  • London: Argyle Rooms
  • London: Broad Street
  • London: James Street, W.C.
  • London: St. James's Palace
  • London: St. James Street
  • London: The Tower
  • Lowther Hall
  • Lumley
  • Mannington Hall
  • Milford Haven
  • Nannau
  • Newstead Abbey
  • North Shields: Stevenson Street
  • Ottery
  • Oulton High House
  • Oxford University: Queen's College
  • Peele Castle
  • Plymouth
  • Powis Castle
  • Rainham
  • Ramhurst Manor-House
  • Rochester
  • Rushen Castle
  • Sarratt, Hertfordshire
  • Scorrier House
  • Settle
  • Souldern Rectory
  • Spedlin's Tower
  • Strachur Manse
  • Taunton
  • Tedworth
  • Truro
  • Waltham, Essex
  • Warblington Parsonage
  • Westminster
  • Westminster: King Street
  • Willington Mill
  • Windsor Castle
  • Woodhouselee
  • Yorkshire: --Hall
  • Lord Brougham
  • The Rev. T. A. Buckley
  • Burroughs
  • John Donne
  • Sir John Sherbroke and General Wynyard
  • The Luminous Woman
  • The Result of a Curse
  • Althorp
  • Ashley Hall
  • Bagley House
  • Berry Pomeroy Castle
  • Bettiscombe House
  • Birchen Bower
  • Blackadon
  • Black Heddon
  • Blenkinsopp Castle
  • Bognor
  • Bolling Hall
  • Brundon Hall
  • Burton Agnes Hall
  • Calgarth
  • Calverley Hall
  • Chartley Park
  • Clegg Hall
  • Combermere Abbey
  • Cumnor Hall
  • De Burgh Castle
  • Denton Hall
  • Dobb Park Lodge
  • Dosmery Pool
  • Edinburgh: Mary King's Close
  • Eastbury House
  • Ewshott House
  • Glamis Castle
  • Guildford Grammar School
  • Hampton Court
  • Heath Old Hall
  • Hinton Ampner Manor House
  • Ince Hall
  • Jedburgh Castle
  • London: Brook Street
  • London: The Hummums
  • London: Southampton Fields
  • Lostock Tower
  • Montgomery
  • Okehampton
  • Perth
  • Portsmouth
  • Roslin Chapel
  • Samlesbury Hall
  • Sampford Peverell
  • Skipsea Castle
  • Smithills Hall
  • Souter Fell
  • Swinsty Hall
  • Sykes Lumb Farm
  • Tunstead Farm
  • Ullswater
  • Waddow Hall
  • Watton Abbey
  • Wyecoller Hall
  • Wardley Hall
  • Bath
  • Bowland
  • Clifton Park
  • Edinburgh
  • Edinburgh Castle
  • Glenshiray
  • Newark
  • Wadebridge
  • Captain Blomberg's Apparition
  • Smellie and Greenlaw
Possibly no part in the world is more connected in our minds to hauntings, ghost sightings and gruesome legends than Great Britain with its numerous castles, old manors, shady streets and remote country abodes. Who hasn't yet thought of maybe one day visiting one of those places, only to feel for themselves the thrill of the creepy atmosphere in their rooms and dungeons, enhanced by the chilling stories surrounding them?
In this compilation, John Henry Ingram (1842-1916) is offering the reader some 150 such places, gathering interesting, sometimes horrifying or even supernatural facts about the history and legends of these parts of Great Britain.
- Summary by Sonia

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