Seeing as it’s late October, what better time to talk about spooky happenings at the Castle Museum. No, not the janitor in a ghost costume about to be unmasked by those meddling kids and their strange mutant dog , but genuine spooky going-ons witnessed (allegedly) by many staff over the years.
As you may or may not know, the Castle Museum is housed in two eighteenth-century prison buildings, so if anywhere is going to be haunted, this is the place.
The most common supernatural happenings are actually sounds – more specifically people singing. A few years ago, a local TV news crew were filming after hours in Kirkgate (the Victorian Street) and asked staff to turn off the sound effects in the gallery which overlooks it. The guide went up the stairs to the closed doors and could hear women singing. But when he opened the doors, it abruptly stopped and when he checked the equipment, the sound effects were already off.
On another occasion, Des, our Health and Safety Manager volunteered to stay in the Condemned Cell on his own overnight for charity. Bear in mind that this is the cell where criminals such as Dick Turpin spent their last night on Earth before going to meet their maker at the end of the hangman’s rope. Anyway, Des had settled in with his laptop for company when he heard people singing. He assumed it was Dave (one of the guides and a bit of a joker), who had sneaked in and was playing a trick on him. It wasn’t. Des checked everywhere but couldn’t find the source of the singing, at which point discretion got the better part of valour and he fled up to the offices for a cup of coffee and some nice bright anti-ghost fluorescent light.
Various spooks have also been seen. A little dog has been spotted a number of times by both staff and visitors and one of the guides once saw a lady in Victorian dress. When he went to look for her, there was no sign of her and this was in the days before staff were dressed up for Kirkgate.
Another time, a teacher with a school party approached a guide in a very agitated and flustered state, saying there was an old woman sitting in one of the hearths, but again, she had disappeared when he got there.
A little boy in 1930′s or ’40s clothes has been seen a few times on the Military Gallery, sometimes just disappearing around the corner so you can’t quite be sure you saw him properly…
Because of all this supernatural activity, the museum has become quite famous for its spooks and this has attracted a number of ghosthunters over the years. Most famously was Derek Akorah last year, filming his Ghost Towns series, though he didn’t find anything definite. Before that, a group came in to do an overnight vigil and Dave (he of the pranks) stayed with them. He left them to their own devices for a few hours then went to check on them. When he found them, they were obviously spooked (no pun intended). They said they had been up to the old prison chapel (now the Cradle to Grave Gallery) but refused to return as there was “too much activity”! Apparently, their psychic said there was the spirit of an “Angry Vicar” in there and it was far too frightening for them to go back up. This group also photographed orbs on Kirkgate, which are apparently manifestations of spirits and we still have the photo.
Whatever the truth of all these sightings, I have yet to see or hear anything myself in the three years I’ve worked at the Castle, but I can definitely vouch for the spookiness of the buildings at times.
It’s not so bad when we’re open and busy with visitors, but when you’re all on your own, unlocking at 7am in the dark on a cold winter’s morning or last to leave in the evening, well then, it’s just you and over 300 years of history and all those long dead prison inmates.
That’s when the hairs on the back of your neck stand up…

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