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Uninvited Guests At
Britain's Haunted Hotels!

Many of Britain’s
hotels have taken on a ghostly aura. Far from scaring off potential visitors,
inexplicable phenomena seem to be a highly marketable asset these days. In
hostelries throughout the land, Grey Ladies (or Ladies in Black, or White, or
Blue, occasionally a daring shade of Red) are reported to drift through walls
and float over lakes, accompanied by spectral orbs and sudden icy chills. Hooves
clatter at midnight, ghostly legions march past along old Roman roads, doors
lock and unlock of their own accord, and hidden children laugh or sob on secret
stairwells.
Historic buildings
in atmospheric surroundings – of which Britain, with its long history, has many
-- predictably take the lead in these alleged phenomena, coaxing medieval monks,
Victorian serving girls, and unhappy lovers to revisit old haunts. If some
grisly tale of a tragic death can be unearthed from bygone days, or better
still, a skeleton in a cupboard somewhere, the psychic portents perk up no end.
Specialist short-break operators can arrange all sorts of hair-raising
experiences involving séances, dowsing rods and ouija boards for hopeful
ghost-hunters, or at least, a promising setting in which they might just happen.
Of course, nothing is guaranteed and the chances are you will enjoy a perfect
night’s rest.
For most of us, the
faint chance of some other-worldly experience adds no more than an amusing
frisson to a hotel stay – at least, in broad daylight. For others, it’s a
serious quest to prove there are more things in heaven and earth, undertaken
only with quantities of recording equipment and a determination to stay awake
all night.
Certain
hotels crop up repeatedly on the paranormal lists. Cornwall, in South-West
England, famed as a land of myths and legends, is a classic venue for ghosts.
Guests and staff of the Wellington Hotel in Boscastle have experienced many
strange apparitions, dark shapes and inexplicable sounds, including a figure in
period dress vanishing into a wall and an old lady passing through a closed
bedroom door. Not to mention the mystifying case of a small dog (a real one
belonging to a writer staying at the hotel), which suddenly got up and trotted
out one night yapping and wagging its tail as if being taken for a walk by some
unseen presence.
Immortalised in Daphne du Maurier’s novel, Jamaica Inn, once on a wild and
lonely turnpike road across Bodmin Moor, has strong associations with smugglers.
Disembodied voices speak in the long-dead Cornish language, and a coach and
horses crunches across the gravelled courtyard at midnight ... In fact, that
courtyard was resurfaced with cobbles recently, yet the noise of the
metal-rimmed wheels remains the same as in olden times. Odd, isn’t it? But even
odder is the stranger in 18th-century dress repeatedly observed sitting on a
wall outside the inn. He neither speaks nor moves, but bears an uncanny
resemblance to a former guest summoned by a message to meet someone outside. He
left the bar and his half-finished tankard of ale, and was later discovered
murdered on the moor. Has he returned to finish his drink?
Coaching tales are
a recurrent theme in some of our fine old former coaching inns. The Molesworth
Arms in Wadebridge is reputedly visited by a ghostly stagecoach at midnight on
New Year’s Eve, its four horses whipped on by a headless coachman. At
Dartmouth’s Royal Castle in Devon, a mysterious coach and horses draws up at the
entrance to collect an unknown passenger and vanish into the night. The
15th-century Holt Hotel at Steeple Aston in Oxfordshire is haunted by the
notorious highwayman Claude Duval, a former footman to the Duke of Richmond. He
was apparently so popular with lady victims that tearful petitions for his
pardon accompanied him to his execution.
A handsome timbered
inn called The Feathers in Ludlow, Shropshire has several interesting ghosts.
One is a woman who tries to drive rivals away by pulling their hair (beware Room
211 if you’re the female half of a couple staying here). Another is a Victorian
gentleman with a dog, and a third seems to be a more modern apparition who
confines her appearances to men only. She’s a pretty thing in a miniskirt and a
see-through blouse who walks straight through cars parked outside. One shocked
guest who witnessed this young lady felt in urgent need of a restorative brandy.
Relaying his experience to the hotel barman, he was soon interrupted with the
news that she had appeared to several guests on previous occasions.

One of London’s
most haunted hotels is the five-star Langham opposite the BBC’s Broadcasting
House. Its spectral residents include a silver-haired doctor who murdered his
bride while on honeymoon, and a German officer who killed himself shortly before
the outbreak of the First World War. Room 333 is said to be a haunted bedroom,
as numerous BBC journalists attest.
Ruthin
Castle, now a hotel in Denbighshire, North Wales, has a resident Grey Lady,
believed to be the wife of one of King Edward I’s lieutenants. She murdered her
husband’s mistress with an axe in a jealous rage and was later executed herself.
The hotel is noted for its medieval-style banquets.
Not all ghosts are
sinister or ill-intentioned. In the spa town of Cheltenham’s De La Bere Hotel, a
15th-century manor house once used as a girls’ school, a former matron paces the
corridors at night to check that her charges are behaving. In Scotland,
Edinburgh’s four-star Royal Terrace Hotel is another much-haunted venue, whose
blithe spirits include a nurse in 19th-century uniform, a child from the 1800s,
and a gentleman enjoying a drink at the bar. There are also reports of cupboards
opening and unbidden noises and movements.
For details of
supernatural stays in some of the hotels mentioned above, contact Haunting
Breaks, www.hauntingbreaks.co.uk; tel: 01686 420301. Other spooky websites
include iwww.hauntedhotelguide.com and www.paranormaltours.com.
About Visit Britain
Visit Britain markets Britain
to the rest of the world and England to the British, building the value of
tourism throughout Britain and throughout the year by creating world-class
destination brands and marketing campaigns. It also builds partnerships with –
and provides insights to – other organizations that have a stake in English and
British tourism.
Visit Britain works in
partnership with the national tourist boards in England, Northern Ireland,
Scotland and Wales to promote an attractive image of Britain. It provides
impartial tourism information and gathers essential market intelligence for the
UK tourism industry.
For more information
please visit www.visitbritain.com.my.
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