short breaks ludlow
Ludlow's Ghosts
short breaks ludlow

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You may find the text below interesting to read if you are planning to stay in our holiday cottages.

ludlow ghost


It is said that there is more to fear from the living than the dead. Well tell that to someone on a winter's moonlit evening, as they see a phantom hurrying up Corve street stagger then turn into the gateway of St. Leonard's graveyard. The odd cold feeling, something touching you when no one is near, a sighting of something supernatural, objects being moved, these all add to the telling of Ludlow's ghosts in stories that have a grain of truth in them somewhere. The most famous Ludlow Castle haunting of all is that of Marion de la Bruyere who, having been betrayed by her lover, who had tricked her into committing treachery, ran him through with his own sword before she then jumped from the battlements of Ludlow Castle. She is also seen in St. Laurence's church yard where, it appears, she is not alone, as the phantom of an elderly lady dressed in blue has been seen to shuffle among the headstones. The Inns and Alehouses are said to abound with spectres and the supernatural, as we shall see. Never expose a sealed up priest's hole, unwisely this was done in the course of some restoration work to a fireplace at the Bull Hotel. Soon afterwards dismembered footsteps began to be heard all about the building, and invisible hands tapped people on their arms. The Wheatsheaf Inn is home to a mischievous bottom pinching ghost, (oh yes?), an officer from Ludlow castle who enters the pub through a secret passage, he is also heard walking around upstairs. The Globe can boast two spectres, the first is an old man in a nightshirt and night cap carrying a candle, with a flame that never flickers, as he moves about upstairs, then there is the other which is a gentleman with lace shirt and velvet jacket, or maybe the same one but with day wear. The Feathers Hotel has "something" that opens wardrobes, clapping is heard and then footsteps hurrying by. The Blue Boar has more than it's fair share of spectres and mysterious happenings. It seems on entering you could be met at the door by a 17th century cavalier called George, who walks the length of the pub downstairs tugging peoples sleeves, also blamed for turning off the taps of the barrels in the cellar. On the first floor there is a lady who walks along the corridor with a fixed expression on her face, a teacher in the late 1830's it seems. The next floor has a room that is always extremely cold come heat wave or turned up heating, it is occupied by an elderly man who sits on a stool smoking his clay pipe, sobbing his heart out. It is said that his young unmarried pregnant daughter committed suicide in this very room sometime in the 18th century. Add to this the weird noises heard, keys displacing themselves and a mobile phone flying across the room by itself and the Blue Boar could be said to be alive with ghosts. So when you come to Ludlow to visit you may meet some very old friends.
 

Please contact us for bookings and enquires

Tel: 01584 873418
Email:
margaret@ludlow-cottage-lets.co.uk

Website created by Jane Ashbridge  www.freelance-consultant.co.uk