Divider

Divider

Thursday, 22 February 2024

Heartbroken ghosts


While the season of February is full of positivity, there remains some very creepy hauntings by spirits of broken hearted people. These vary and most of them are residual energy, leaving behind sorrows and misery in the walls. 

A sinister and creepy ghost haunts Veremont House in London. There was an angry spirit described as having long dark hair and wearing a purple dress who frightens those who encountered her. It's believed that she is the spirit of a woman named Bertha Rungate, who lived in the 1900's and was angry because she felt spurned by a man who loved another woman. It's believed that she murdered him in rage, and he disappeared. The hauntings ceased when the remains of this man were found in the basement of the property and removed. 

In the early 20th century, a female figure dressed in black funeral garb haunted the railway track from London to Cardiff. It's believed she was the ghost of a woman who mourned the death of her fiancĂ© who was killed in a horrific accident while taking a train journey ride with her. Their dream wedding was planned shortly in a few days but he died and this wedding never happened. 

A phantom white lady is often crying as she walks the grounds of Old Ranelagh in London and when she reaches Lower Richmond Road, she disappears. It's believed that she's sobbing for her lost lover who mysteriously vanished but it's not clear why. It's likely that her ghost uses that same pattern because it was where she was going to meet him. It's not even known what happened to her.

Two female ghosts have been seen fighting at Christ Church, Greyfriars. It's the ghosts of Queen Isabella and Lady Alice Hungerford who are jealous of one another and get into a cat fight. That location is full of other ghosts including a greyhound dog that runs around the gravestones, a monk that often appears late in the year, and a visionary psychic woman that was executed during the time of Henry VIII. She haunts the graveyard.

She Wolf Night            

No comments:

Post a Comment