Showing posts with label haunted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haunted. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 July 2024

Ghost at the Royal Derwent Hospital - New Norfolk, Tasmania.

  


Ghost at the Royal Derwent Hospital - New Norfolk, Tasmania. 

In 1991, the Canberra Times (newspaper) reported on a haunting in the Royal Derwent Hospital in New Norfolk, Tasmania. Staff at the hospital, which is part of the Willow Court Asylum complex, reported hearing music from an unknown source, and doors and windows opening and closing of their own volition.
 One staff member reported being physically assaulted by an apparition that threw him through a doorway on three separate occasions. 
I have transcribed the newspaper story below, which can be found on Trove here:


'Tas hospital staff report seeing ghost', The Canberra Times. (25 July 1991), p. 5., 2021, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article122373029



Tas Hospital staff report seeing ghost



HOBART: Professional counsellors have been called in to help frightened hospital workers who say they are being terrorised by a ghost at Tasmania's major psychiatric hospital.
One male nurse told management he had been grabbed by "an apparition" and thrown into a doorway on three separate occasions last week while on duty in Ward 5 of the Royal Derwent Hospital at New Norfolk, 30km north of Hobart. He has since been moved from duties in the ward and was undergoing counselling.
Other workers reported hearing strange music, doors banging and windows opening of their own accord.
Disability and community support services manager Mark Francis confirmed yesterday that six employees had reported seeing an apparition in the ward.
He said they worked for the nearby Willow Court Centre, which cared for moderate to severely intellectually handicapped patients. The centre, built in the 1830s to rehabilitate convicts, is using the Royal Derwent's Ward 5 on a short-term basis.
Mr Francis said he was told on Tuesday of the poltergeist after staff gave a report to the general manager of Willow Court last Friday.
He said 25 patients were kept in the ward but there had been no change in their behaviour to indicate they may have been disturbed by any paranormal activity.
Mr Francis said his department was adopting a "wait and see" attitude and would assess reports from counsellors after they interviewed staff.

 

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024




Sunday, 30 June 2024

A Haunting at Tellicherry, India.

 A Haunting at Tellicherry, India.

 


In 1931, it was reported globally that a former Deputy Collector in Tellicherry, (Thalassery), Kerala, India, was being haunted. British Collectors administered Kottayam, Malabar (as it was then called).[1] 


This deputy collector had recently built a new house and lived in it briefly before the haunting began.
One day, the man’s pillow caught fire for no explainable reason. The pillow burnt through, but the mattress underneath remained unburnt. A new pillow is purchased and goes missing in just a few days. The pillow is then found in a well by a local drawing up water.

One day, the man’s pillow caught fire for no explainable reason. The pillow burnt through, but the mattress underneath remained unburnt. A new pillow is purchased, and in just a few days, goes missing. The pillow is then found in a well by a local drawing up water.
 The crockery in the kitchen of the house began to leap from shelves, smashing all over the floor. On occasion, large stones are seen to be flying through the house at great speeds. One whizzes past the head of a witness. The key to a cash box disappears, so a new one is made. The new key disappears, and the old key returns. The cash box is opened, and the new key is found inside.
The victim’s spectacles disappeared. The household utensils…and the last indignity, while sitting for dinner, dirt is thrown from an unseen hand, landing on the victim’s dinner.
He decides to leave and never return to Tellicherry.[2]

Researched and written by Allen Tiller ©2024





[1] Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Thalassery." Encyclopedia Britannica, (September 13, 2023). https://www.britannica.com/place/Thalassery.

[2] 'BULLIED BY GHOSTS!', Northern Territory Times, (16 October 1931), p. 1.

Sunday, 26 May 2024

Bishop Exorcises Ghost

 Bishop Exorcises Ghost

 


The Canberra Times reported in September 1952 that the Assistant Bishop of Perth, the Right Reverend C.E.S. Muschamp visited a house in Claremont, west of Perth, to ‘lay a ghost’ that had been harassing a family. Rev. Muschamp was assisted by the Rector of St Andrews Church of England, the Rev. A.F. Blain. The two men blessed the house while saying prayers and sprinkling holy water.

A female occupant of the house awoke one night to find the apparition of a lady standing next to her bed. The following night, the same apparition appeared. When the woman described the apparition to neighbours, they recognized it as a former owner. The former owner was a woman who died in hospital just after World War II. Her body was returned to the home, and a wake was held before her funeral.  Since her death, three other families had lived in the home, without incident.

The ghost reportedly was dressed normally and had grey hair and China blue eyes. The ghost was troubling one of the young children in the home, which led to the appeal to the church for an exorcism.[1]

Despite knowing who the lady was when alive, the Christian ministers claimed the lady was an ‘evil spirit’, and at ‘unrest.’ How horrendous for living relatives![2]

 

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024



[1] 'Claremont Service to Exorcise 'Ghost'', The West Australian, (11 September 1952), p. 1. 

[2] 'Bishop Exorcises Ghost In Perth Home', The Canberra Times, (11 September 1952), p. 1.

Sunday, 28 April 2024

Exorcism for Headless Ghost: Part 2 – Exorcism.

 Exorcism for Headless Ghost:

 Part 2 – Exorcism.



A headless ghost haunting the London head office of Coutts and Co. bank was claimed to be identified by Eddie Burks. The ghost was often seen during the day and sometimes in the evening. In the presence of the apparition, the temperature would change, and electrical devices would malfunction.

Thomas Howard (1536 – 1572) 4th Duke of Norfolk, was a second cousin of Queen Elizabeth I. He was involved in a plot to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I in favour of Mary Stuart, the daughter of King James V of Scotland. Mary’s husband, King Francis II of France died, and Mary returned to Scotland where she became Mary, Queen of Scots.
Queen Elizabeth suggested Howard as a possible husband for Mary, but Mary chose someone else. Her husband was murdered shortly after the wedding. Elizabeth appointed Howard to investigate the murder. Howard discovered Mary was complicit in the murder. Mary’s advisors encouraged a union between Howard and Mary to stop his investigation. Howard agreed as he believed Elizabeth would be pleased.[1]
 Elizabeth, however, decided that a union between Howard and Mary would be dangerous for her, so in 1569, she had Mary imprisoned. She had Howard arrested and detained in the Tower of London. Howard was later released, but with the stipulation that he would not be involved in any plots with Mary against Queen Elizabeth.[2]
 A plot was envisioned to kidnap Elizabeth and place Mary on the throne. In 1571, Queen Elizabeth was made aware of the plot, and the fact that Howard had been sending money to Mary’s supporters in Scotland. Howard, who was not part of the kidnap plot, was named as the head of it by Mary. He was arrested and again placed in the Tower of London. On June 2, 1572, at age 37, Thomas Howard was beheaded.[3]

Eddie Burks was able to persuade the spirit that the time had come for him to depart the earthly realm. On 15th November 1993, an exorcism was conducted, and a congregation that included the present Duke and Duchess of Norfolk and the Earl and Countess of Arundel gathered at the nearby Catholic church.[4] They prayed for the repose of Thomas Howard’s soul.[5] Burks claimed to assist the ghost in resolving his bitterness. The ghost’s daughter (in spirit) appeared and took Howard’s hand. They moved into the light together.[6]

On leaving the service the present Duke was asked by a reporter if he was glad that his ancestor was finally at rest. “Actually” came the reply “I don’t believe in ghosts.”

 

Despite the exorcism, Thomas Howard's ghost visited Burks on occasion. Howard’s ghost returned to give his thanks for his releasement. He was now in a beautiful place with his daughter. On June 2, 1994, the anniversary of his execution, Howard came again and said he still felt sad about his execution but knew he could let go of those emotions.

 

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024



[1] Robert Stedall, ‘Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk,’ Mary Queen of Scots.net, https://www.maryqueenofscots.net/peoplelist/thomas-howard-4th-duke-norfolk/.

[2] Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Thomas Howard, 4th duke of Norfolk." Encyclopedia Britannica, (29 May, 2023). https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thomas-Howard-4th-duke-of-Norfolk.

[3] ‘Queen’s Bank: Haunting of Coutts & Co.,’ Occult World, (2023), https://occult-world.com/queens-bank-haunting-of-coutts-co/.

[4] 'Exorcism for headless ghost', The Canberra Times, (15 November 1993), p. 7.

[5] Esther Oxford, ‘Execution victim finds peace after 400 years,’ Independent, (1993), https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/execution-victim-finds-peace-after-400-years-1504569.html.

[6] ‘Newspaper: Psychic ‘departs’ London Ghost,’ Tampa Bay Times, (1993).

Sunday, 21 April 2024

Exorcism for Headless Ghost: Part 1 - Coutts and Co Bank.

 Exorcism for Headless Ghost: Part 1 -

 Coutts and Co Bank.

 


In 1993, world media reported on a headless ghost that was haunting Coutts & Co Bank. The bank is sometimes known as The Queen’s Bank (now King’s) as the Royal Family are customers.  Coutts & Co. was founded in 1692. The bank's headquarters has been located at 440 Strand in London since the late 1970s, in a building constructed in the 1820s.

 In 1992, several female employees began to complain of a ghost. Computers and electric lighting would fail, the temperature would plummet, and a shadowy figure would be seen floating through the building. A receptionist reported witnessing a full-bodied apparition crossing the atrium floor, that she knew as a ghost. After this experience, many female employees refused to work in the building.[1]
 Meanwhile, other employees in the building were reporting a headless phantom at the bank entrances, coinciding with temperature drops. This apparition was most often seen during the day and early evening.[2]

 The bank sought someone to investigate the alleged haunting. They contacted the College of Psychic Studies in Kensington, who recommended, Eddie Burks. During his investigation, Burks held a séance. He claimed he contacted Thomas Howard, who told him, ‘I was beheaded on a summer’s day… I have held much bitterness and…I must let this go. In the name of God, I ask your help…’[3]

After the story broke in the media, a Jesuit priest and member of the Royal Historical Society, Father Francis Edwards, identified the headless ghost as Thomas Howard, the fourth Duke of Norfolk. Howard was married to the daughter of the 12th Earl of Arundel and was widowed in 1557.

Next week, the story continues with Exorcism for Headless Ghost: Part 2

Researched and written by Allen Tiller. © 2024



[1] Burks, Eddie & Cribbs, Gillian. Ghosthunter: Investigating the World of Ghosts and Spirits, (1995), pp. 37-57.

[2] Rosemary Ellen Guiley, ‘The Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits, (2007).

[3] Burks & Cribbs, Ghosthunter (1995), pp. 37-57.

Sunday, 25 February 2024

Guitar Playing Ghost

 Guitar Playing Ghost

 


In 1965 it was reported that the ghost of an Australian Army Lieutenant was haunting the hamlet of Kundiawa in the New Guinea Highlands. It was claimed the ghost had been identified as Lieutenant George Charlton Tuckey.
Tuckey died in 1945 while serving with the Angua Administration of the Kundiawa Territory and was buried in a local cemetery.

A local police corporal known as Arambi reported that he often heard guitar music coming from inside a police inspector's house. There were no signs of life in the home, which was in total darkness. Armabi investigated the grounds and house and could find no source for the music, but as he neared the grave of Tuckey, he noted that the music ceased.
 Arambi later claimed that he saw the ghost. It was wearing a white shirt and shorts. He knew Tuckey, as they had worked together for two years, and identified the ghost as him. Tuckey’s ghost shuffled through the compound, and Arambi followed it into the Kundiawa courthouse…where it disappeared.[1]

researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024

[1] 'Guitar-playing ghost now walks about', The Canberra Times, (6 May 1965), p. 22.

Monday, 29 January 2024

The Haunted Wardrobe – Oxfordshire, England.

The Haunted Wardrobe – Oxfordshire, England.



In 1937, the Northern Standard, a Northern Territory newspaper reported on the case of a haunted wardrobe in Oxfordshire, England. Mrs Barclay of Carterton Manor, Oxon, had advertised in the Morning Post, an English newspaper that she was selling a haunted wardrobe.

Barclay explained that she purchased the wardrobe for ten pounds at a sale. Three months later, after having it in her house, the doors and drawers of the wardrobe would open and close of their own volition, causing a ruckus. Not long after this happened, she witnessed the ghost of an elderly man, Barclay claimed, ‘the figure of an elderly man, dressed in old-fashioned clothes and wearing a kind of deer-stalker cap appeared in the house.’ Every evening, the ghost would walk from the bedroom, down the stairs out the front door.[1]
 Barclay stated in an interview, ‘I am not nervous, but the wretched ghost will make such a noise. He clatters across the landing and shuffles down the stairs and the noise is exasperatingly loud.’[2] Barclay also claimed the ghost had terrified and frightened away her cook.[3]

 

The night before the auction, Mrs Barclay claimed that the ghost was upset with the sale. He (the ghost) banged the doors of the wardrobe with more than his usual venom. It clattered down the stairs louder than she had ever heard it before, so she had the wardrobe taken out into the grounds of the manor.
 A group of practical jokers, dressed as ghosts, invaded Carterton Manor that evening, and refused to leave until Mrs Barclay's secretary dispersed them by firing a shotgun![4]

Mrs Barclay auctioned the wardrobe. A bidder asked if she could guarantee that the ghost would come with the wardrobe, which she could not. Bidding for the wardrobe saw it sell for much more than the 10 pounds she had previously purchased it for. Mr E Rundle, an ex-R.A.F. officer, who owned an inn, purchased the haunted wardrobe from Mrs B. Barclay for 50 pounds.[5] Mr Rundle stated after making the purchase, ‘I am having my bedroom enlarged and am having the wardrobe put in it. Anyone who wants to do so may sleep there. Personally, I do not believe in ghosts.’[6]

Rundle took the wardrobe to his Clanfield Inn and soon reported the same strange occurrences. Being a sceptic, he decided to pull the Victorian-era wardrobe apart to investigate why the doors and drawers would open of their own volition. Finding no hidden mechanisms, or reason for the wardrobe to act in the manner it did, Rundle closed his investigation and carefully restored the wardrobe. After restoration, Rundle reported that it never acted in the same manner again.

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024

[1] 'A Haunted Wardrobe Complete with Ghost', The Catholic Advocate, (25 November 1937), p. 6.

[2] Ibid.

[3] 'Haunted Wardrobe', The Argus, (21 August 1937), p. 13.

[4] '£50 Highest Bid for Haunted Wardrobe', Lachlander and Condobolin and Western Districts Recorder, (6 September 1937), p. 6.

[5] Ibid.

[6] 'HAUNTED WARDROBE FETCHES £50', Northern Standard, (31 August 1937), p. 4.

Sunday, 31 December 2023

A List of Offences and Punishments Extracted from the Port Arthur “Punishment Book”

 

A List of Offences and Punishments Extracted from the Port Arthur “Punishment Book”



July 1, 1840 – Having a spoon in possession contrary to orders. Twenty-four hours’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

December 26, 1840 – Absent without leave. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

January 13, 1841 – Absent without leave. Twenty stripes on the breech.

January 21, 1841 – Absent without leave. Ten days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

February 12, 1841 – Absent without leave. Twenty stripes on the breech.

April 14, 1841 – Disorderly conduct on the chain. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

June 1, 1841 – Misconduct un using improper language to the overseer. Four days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

June 23, 1841, Repeated disorderly conduct. Forty-eight hours’ solitary confinement.

December 31, 1841 - Absent without leave. Twenty-five stripes on the breech.

January 28, 1842 – Absent without leave. Two months’ labour in chains.

March 3, 1842 – Disorderly conduct. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

May 27, 1842 – Absent without leave. Ten days’ solitary confinement.

November 7, 1842 – Absent without leave. Twenty-five stripes on the breech.

November 9, 1842 – Insolence to the Superintendent. Ten days’ solitary confinement.

December 19, 1842 – Misconduct in sleeping out of his berth, and further, with breaking up the flooring of his silent apartment. Fourteen days’ solitary confinement.

January 7, 1843 – Misconduct in having a quantity of potatoes improperly in his possession. Five days’ solitary confinement.

 

Extracted from the book “Convicts of Van Diemen’s Land”, p. xi for educational purposes.

Allen Tiller 2023

Sunday, 17 December 2023

Richmond Congregational Cemetery - Tasmania

 

 Richmond Congregational Cemetery - Tasmania

 


In her 2007 book, ‘Tasmanian Tales of the Supernatural,' Margaret Giordano writes of the apparition of a man seen wandering the Richmond Congregational Cemetery on Torrens Street. The old cemetery is now a reserve.

Reports indicate that the apparition is of a man seen as ‘hazy.’[1]

Currently, it is not known who he may be.

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2023

[1] Margaret Giordano, Tasmanian Tales of the Supernatural, (Launceston, 2007), p. 74.

Sunday, 10 December 2023

Hells Gates - A Tale of Sorrow - Cape Sorell - Tasmania

 

 Hells Gates - A Tale of Sorrow - 

Cape Sorell - Tasmania

Aerial view of Cape Sorell Lighthouse –  (Source: AMSA, 2014)



The Cape Sorell Lighthouse is located on the west coast of Tasmania, approximately 12 kilometres from Strahan. It was built in 1899 and is the second-tallest lighthouse in Australia. The lighthouse is named after Tasmanian Lieutenant-Governor (1817-1825), William Sorell.
Sarah Island was seen by convicts as ‘hell.’ It was a remote penal colony within Macquarie Harbor established in 1821.[1] Hells Gates was the name given to a narrow passage entry to Macquarie Harbour by convicts serving on Sarah Island.

In its early days, the lighthouse had a lighthouse keeper and two assistants. The last lighthouse keeper left in 1971. Originally the light was lit by vapourised kerosene. A solar-powered light was installed in 1998. Today the lighthouse today is fully automated.[2]

In 1908 Henry John Hooper was the assistant signalman at Cape Sorell Lighthouse. On a wild and stormy night, a small steamer called Kawitiri was voyaging through Hell’s Gate as best it could in the storm, using the light as a guide. Onboard was Hooper’s wife and his two sons, one aged 5, the other 7; they had gone with their mother to Hobart for a holiday.
The small vessel was caught in the storm and capsized. The crew and passengers were launched into lifeboats and attempted to make it to shore. Mrs Hooper and her boys' boat smashed into the rocks not far from the lighthouse where Hooper was on duty. From high upon the lighthouse balcony, Hooper heard his wife’s cries ‘John, Save Me!” – but there was nothing he could do, so he sent his mate to assist. He waited many hours for his mate to return, and when he did, Hooper had to suffer more when he learned his wife and sons had drowned.[3]

Cape Sorell - west coast of Tasmania


Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2022

[1] ‘Sarah Island’, Tasmania, (2022), https://www.discovertasmania.com.au/things-to-do/heritage-and-history/sarahisland/

[2] Sinclair, Ian, ‘Old lighthouse goes automatic.’ (2012).

[3] 'Tasmania's Tragic Lighthouse Keeper', Smith's Weekly, (2 January 1926), p. 9., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article234435469.


Sunday, 3 December 2023

Oatlands Gaol - Tasmania

 

 Oatlands Gaol - Tasmania


The largest building remaining in the former Oatlands Military Precinct, the Oatlands Gaol opened in 1837.[1] The gaol was built to hold 300 inmates and was the ‘only regional gaol in the colony where executions were commonplace.’[2] Oatlands Gaol was designed by Colonial Architect, John Lee Archer and was erected between 1834 and 1836.[3]

The gaol held female and male prisoners and was the largest gaol complex outside of Hobart and Launceston.[4] It was the only regional gaol in Tasmania to have its own Supreme Court House attached.[5]

The Oatlands Gaol operated for 26 years, being decommissioned in 1863. It then became a municipal gaol.




18 men were hung at Oatlands Gaol between 1844 and 1860.

  • Alexander Reid - 24 April 1844 – Hanged at Oatlands for shooting and wounding Constable Murray.[6]

  •  Thomas Marshall – 24 April 1844 – Hanged at Oatlands for the murder of Ben Smith.[7]

  • Richard Jackson - 1 May 1845 - Hanged at Oatlands for the rape of Elizabeth Davis.[8]

  • John Phillips – 4 February 1846 – Hanged at Oatlands for setting fire to the magistrate's oat stacks following a conviction for sly grog selling.[9]

  •  James Sullivan – 9 May 1848 – Hanged at Oatlands for the attempted murder of Constable James Kelly at Swanston, near Andover.[10]

  • Patrick Shea – 9 May 1848 – Hanged at Oatlands for the attempted murder of Constable James Kelly at Swanston.[11]

  • James McGough – 9 May 1848 – Hanged at Oatlands for the attempted murder of Constable James Kelly at Swanston.[12]

  • John Shale – 9 May 1848 - Hanged at Oatlands for wounding John Connell with intent to murder.[13]

  • Thomas Smith – 4 August 1848 – Hanged at Oatlands for stabbing with intent to murder Constable Clough at Jericho.[14]

  • Jeremiah Maher – 4 August 1848 – Hanged at Oatlands for stabbing with intent to murder Constable Clough at Jericho.[15]

  • William Henry Stevens - 25 April 1851 - Convict. Hanged at Oatlands for Assaulting James Moore, being armed with a gun on the high road between Antill Ponds
  • and Tunbridge.[16]

  • George Mackie – 21 July 1851 – Hanged at Oatlands for the murder of Thomas Gilbert at Waters Meeting, near Cranbrook.[17]

  •  John Crisp – 27 October 1851 – Hanged at Oatlands for Wounding with Intent Constable William Donohoo at Swansea.[18]

  • William Henry Stephens – 25 April 1851 – Hanged at Oatlands for the attempted murder of Thomas Moore at Antill Ponds.

  • Patrick McMahon – 28 October 1852 – Hanged at Oatlands for rape of a child.

  • Michael Casey – 5 August 1856 – Hanged at Oatlands for the attempted murder of John Hewitt at Falmouth.

  • Abraham Munday – 27 October 1857 – Hanged at Oatlands for attempted murder by poison of George White at Courland Bay.

  •  Richard "Long Mick" Ennis – 27 October 1857 – Hanged at Oatlands for the murder of George Sturgeon at Kitty's Corner, near Antill Ponds.

  •  John Vigors – 31 January 1860 – Hanged at Oatlands for Shooting with Intent at John Baker at Ellerslie.[19]
For more information on Oatlands please visit Southern Midlands Council's website here: https://www.southernmidlands.tas.gov.au/oatlands-gaol/


Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2022


[1] Brad Williams, ‘Oatlands Gaol Historical Study and Archaeological Survey’, Southern Midlands Council, (2004), p. 9, https://www.southernmidlands.tas.gov.au/assets/southernmidlands_williams_arch_survey_2004.pdf.

[2] Ibid., p. 2.

[3] Barry and Eleanor Bjorksten, ‘Oatlands Gaol Remedial Works Report.’, Southern Midlands Council, (2004), p. 11, https://www.southernmidlands.tas.gov.au/assets/southernmidlands_bjorksten_2004.pdf.

[4] Williams, ‘Oatlands Gaol Historical Study and Archaeological Survey’, p. 9.

[5] Brad Williams, ‘Oatlands Gaol Interpretation Plan.’, Southern Midlands Council, (2011), p. 4, https://www.southernmidlands.tas.gov.au/assets/southernmidlands_gaol_interps_plan.pdf.

[6] 'Execution at Oatlands.’, The Courier, (26 April 1844), p. 3., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2951132.

[7] Ibid.

[8] 'Oatlands Assizes.', The Courier, (8 April 1845), p. 3., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2948998.

[9] 'Oatlands Assizes.', The Courier, (17 January 1846), p. 2., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2946459.

[10] 'Domestic Intelligence.', Colonial Times, (12 May 1848), p. 3., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8762811.

[11] Ibid.

[12] Ibid.

[13] Ibid.

[14] 'Domestic Intelligence.', Colonial Times, (8 August 1848), p. 3., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8763241.

[15] Ibid.

[16] 'Oatlands.', The Courier, (30 April 1851), p. 2., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article296097.

[17] 'Execution at Oatlands.', The Cornwall Chronicle, (26 July 1851), p. 468., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article65574090.

[18] 'Executions.', The Tasmanian Colonist, (27 October 1851), p. 2., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226525096.

[19] 'Execution and Confession of Vigors at Oatlands.', Launceston Examiner, (2 February 1860), p. 3. (AFTERNOON), http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article38999069.

Sunday, 26 November 2023

A Haunting at the Bush Inn – New Norfolk - Tasmania

 

A Haunting at the Bush Inn – New Norfolk - Tasmania

The Bush Inn November 2022
© Allen Tiller



Constructed in 1815, and first licensed as an Inn in 1825, the Bush Inn holds the record for the longest continuously licensed pub in Australia. The name ‘Bush’ comes from DW Bush, the clerk of Reverend Bobby Knopwood who was the first Chaplain in the Tasmanian colony.


The first licensee of the Inn was Ann Bridger, a 54-year-old widow, who arrived in Hobart in 1823 with two daughters and her son Henry. Ann came with ($1,000) in cash and £200 ($400) in ‘various merchandise for investing in agricultural pursuits, and a desire to succeed.[1]

There is a tunnel underneath the Inn that is believed to have been used to transport patients from the Royal Derwent Hospital (the original name of the New Norfolk Insane Hospital) to the Derwent River. The basement is mostly original and still contains a skittle alley.[2]

The hotel was the meeting place for locals and was at one time used as a Methodist Church, with a baptismal font still on display in the Inn. In 1837, Lady Franklin visited the hotel and planted a pear tree. Irish composer, William Vincent Wallace is believed to have written the theme song to his most famous Opera, ‘Maritana’ while staying at the Hotel.
Dame Nellie Melba is another famous visitor, who when finding out ‘Maritana’ was written here, sang the song for hotel guests.

Ghosts


The Bush Inn is alleged to be haunted by the ghost of a young girl. For reasons unknown, she is most often seen and felt in Room 6 of the Inn. It is alleged, but yet unproven, that she either fell or was pushed, down the staircase.[3] The little girl is also one of several ghosts seen walking the hallways of the building.[4]
It is also alleged that guests often hear disembodied footsteps walking through the halls of the building. Others have seen apparitions walk past them in ‘period clothing.' These spirits are seen in rooms, hallways, and the main bar, with reports of them being residual hauntings. Others claim the lady’s downstairs toilet to be haunted, with women reporting paranoia, being touched and seeing an apparition of a woman in the mirror.
 
Owners in 2015, Don and Peter Smith reported to local media about the haunting,

“One time I was here working behind the bar -- there was no one else here -- and the bell up near the kitchen where you order your meal, it rang for no reason at all. I looked up there, and there was no one there.”[5]

It is also claimed the basement is haunted, with reports of shadow people, disembodied voices and other bizarre, otherworldly noises reported.

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2022


[1] Geoff Ritchie, The Bush Inn, New Norfolk, On the Convict Trail, (2014), http://ontheconvicttrail.blogspot.com/2014/03/the-bush-inn-new-norfolk.html.

[2] Mick Roberts, The Bush Inn, Tasmania, Time Gents, (2014), https://timegents.com/2014/11/30/the-bush-inn-tasmania/.

[3] Leah McLennan, The terrifying story behind this haunted hotel, Travel – News.com.au, (18 Oct 2015), https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/travel-stories/the-terrifying-story-behind-this-haunted-hotel/news-story/6c68647bfa43d83f763770559bd8ccf4

[4] Andrea Beattie, ‘Brothers Raise a Glass to Pub's Ghostly Residents’, Huff Post, (23 Oct 2015), https://www.huffpost.com/archive/au/entry/ghost-hotel-business_n_8344186

[5] Andrea Beattie, ‘Brothers Raise a Glass to Pub's Ghostly Residents’, Huff Post, (23 Oct 2015), https://www.huffpost.com/archive/au/entry/ghost-hotel-business_n_8344186

Sunday, 12 November 2023

Eaglehawke Neck and Pirates Bay Lookout - Tasmania

 

 Eaglehawke Neck and Pirates Bay Lookout

 - Tasmania



 Eaglehawk Neck is a 100-meter sandbar connecting the Tasman Peninsula to the Forestier Peninsula this area was home to the infamous Dog Line, which stretched from Pirates Bay across the Isthmus and into Eaglehawk Bay.

Eaglehawk Neck Bay had its own officers’ quarters and at its busiest had an officer, sergeant and 25 soldiers stationed. There was a customs hut, sentries tower, storehouses, guardhouses, and barracks. All that remains today is the Officers’ Quarters.

The Officer's Quarters were eventually turned into a private home. It is the oldest wooden military building still standing in Australia dating back to 1832.

 People have reported the sounds of phantom dogs growling here. There have also been reports of odd noises in the building and lights turning on and off of their own volition.


Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2023

Monday, 6 November 2023

A Shot of Spirits: Ep 16: Oak Lodge Tasmania

  


A Shot of Spirits: Ep 16: Oak Lodge Tasmania


Oak Lodge was built between 1831 and 1842 by Henry Buscombe.
Oak Lodge has a plethora of ghosts. Volunteers and visitors have witnessed full-bodied, and partial-bodied apparitions. The spirit of a young lady has been witnessed climbing the stairs.

Sunday, 5 November 2023

A Shot of Spirits: Ep 19 - Kelly’s Steps - Tasmania

 


A Shot of Spirits: Ep 19 - Kelly’s Steps - Tasmania


Kelly’s Steps at Battery Point, Hobart, Tasmania are steeped in history…and ghosts!


A Haunting at Oak Lodge - Richmond, Tasmania

                                              

 

A Haunting at Oak Lodge - Richmond, Tasmania

18 Bridge Street 

Oak Lodge was built in 1831 by Henry Buscombe, the younger brother of James Buscombe.[1] The property was sold in 1843 to Captain James Richard Booth. A highly regarded Royal Navy Captain who commanded the H.M.S. Tricuno. Booth’s brother, Charles O’Hara Booth was the former commandant of Port Arthur. In his time at Richmond, James Booth was a magistrate and Churchwarden at St Luke’s Anglican Church.[2]

Oak Lodge was sold to Reverend David Galer in 1855. It was sold again in 1880 to William Stevens and his sister, widow Mary Bedgood. Mary stayed in the house until 1909 when it was sold to Arthur Oglivy. Oglivy rented the property to an American doctor, Dr William Goodwin Chadbourne Clark. Clark used the Lodge for his medical practice until retiring in 1947. 

In 1962, Oak Lodge became the property of the Horsfall sisters. In 1998, Muriel Horsfall donated the property to the National Trust to be a museum. In 2002 it opened as Oak Lodge Museum. Miss Horsfall died in 2008 aged 102. 

Ghosts:

Oak Lodge is alleged to contain a plethora of ghosts. Volunteers and visitors have claimed to witness full-bodied, and partial-bodied apparitions. It has been alleged that the spirit of a young lady was witnessed ascending the stairs. There are claims that one spirit likes to grab people on the arm, and the same spirit may be responsible for a ghostly hand that slides up the inside of people’s thighs.

Some people have claimed to be pushed or pulled as they walked through the building, and yet others claim a spirit has played with their hair! There are also claims of disembodied voices, often calling out swear words.




© 2023 Allen Tiller


[1] Peter MacFie, A Social History of Richmond, (2017), p. 25.

[2] ‘Oak Lodge … and the incredible stories it can tell …’, Tasmanian Times, (2013), https://tasmaniantimes.com/2013/10/oak-lodge-richmond-linzo/, accessed 16 May 2022.

Saturday, 4 November 2023

The Haunting of Kelly's Steps - Battery Point - Tasmania

 

The Haunting of Kelly's Steps - Battery Point -

Tasmania

Kelly's Steps - Salamanca Place
Photo Allen Tiller 2022
Constructed in 1840 by the adventurer James Kelly, these steps were carved from the cliff face to allow workers to get to Salamanca Place and the wharf faster. [1]

 Captain Kelly circumnavigated Tasmania (then Van Diemen’s Land) in a whaleboat and discovered Port Davey and Macquarie Harbour. He was a well-respected whaler in Tasmania and became incredibly wealthy through his whaling activities. By 1842, Kelly was bankrupt, his wife and seven of his 10 children were dead.  He later was employed by Tasmanian Port Authorities. He died aged 67 in 1859. Ironically, Kelly's eldest son was killed by a whale![2]



Kelly’s Steps were notorious for assaults and other nefarious activities, hidden away from prying eyes. Jan Scott who grew up on Kelly Street in the 1950s stated,

“Kelly’s Steps were spooky to us at nighttime. We would go down in the dark. We would run up there and shout “Let’s go!”. There was always blood there – a lot got assaulted there.… You had to learn to run fast if you were going up there…that’s how we learnt to run I think – Kelly’s Steps and St David’s Park!” (– Jan Scott talking about her childhood in the 1950s and 60s)

 

On 31 October 1863, labourer, John Dunn fell down the steps and died ten days later in the local hospital.[3]  In 1926 Hannah Mollross, aged 41, who lived at 35 Kelly Street, allegedly had an accident on Kelly’s Steps that led to her having a miscarriage. She was taken to hospital and had surgery but died the following day.[4]
 It was discovered during her autopsy that she had had an illegal abortion and that the accident on the steps was a cover-up to hide the crime. The abortion had been botched, and Mollross died from blood poisoning.

Kelly’s steps are alleged to be haunted by numerous ghosts, of which no one knows their identities. Shadow people have been seen here, and the ghosts of wharfies!

© 2022 Allen Tiller



[1] ‘Kelly’s Steps’, Battery Point Community Association Inc, (2021), https://www.batterypointwalk.com.au/locations/kelly-street/


[2] 'CAPTAIN KELLY', World, (1 November 1922), p. 6. , viewed 27 Sep 2021, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article190273194


[3] 'THE REGATTA.', The Mercury, (14 December 1863), p. 3. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8823154


[4] 'MARRIED WOMAN'S DEATH', The Mercury, (28 June 1926) http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article29449270


Saturday, 17 September 2022

Haunted Adelaide



Did you know there are 3 separate (allegedly) haunting incidents reported on the ANZAC Highway?

1. The children at the Morphett Road crossing in their PJ's, sometimes seen covered in blood!

2. The ghost girl asking to be picked up and taken to her mother’s. There are police reports of this incident.

3. The family in their car who drive along next to you, stare at you, and then suddenly distort into a bloody cut-up mess like they've been in a car accident!

All this and more in Haunted Adelaide – available only at Amazon.

Buy it here: HAUNTED ADELAIDE


Wednesday, 4 September 2019

Darwin Ghost Hunt 1948


Darwin Ghost Hunt 1948

Darwin 1948

 In 1948, Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory of Australia, was spooked by ghostly goings-on in the city. A ghost was haunting a prominent location in the city. Rumours spread of the ghosts, and by early October a score of people had arrived on site to catch a glimpse of the ghost.

 Around 12 people showed up to experience the haunting for themselves. Right at midnight, two ghosts appeared, much to the surprise of everyone present. One girl almost passed out at the sight. The real surprise came only a short while later when another ghost appeared.

 The third ghost skirted the fence line and made its way toward the group of onlookers and the original two ghosts. Such was its appearance that onlookers gathered sticks and stones to defend themselves from the ghost. They pelted the mischievous spirits and drove it back from their posse.
The ghost fell on its ghostly garments and took another fall over the fence, all the while being hit with missiles.

 The ghost soon revealed its true origins when it jumped in a waiting taxi and sped off down the street to escape its mortal attackers!


Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2019

Bibliography

'GHOST HUNT', Northern Standard, (8 October 1948), p. 6.