Creepy Irish Castles and Houses
by Bridget Haggerty
Only in Ireland will you hear terrifying tales of shots still
being heard in the execution yard of St. John's Castle in Co. Limerick;
of a Cistercian monastery and graveyard where a strange ball of fire is
sometimes seen; of Cuffesborough House with its phantom horse; of
Castleboro House where Lady Carew still tries to rescue her needlepoint
from fire; and then, there's Aughanure, where the Hangman Hempenstall
still walks, and let's not overlook Mullingar and Lord Belvedere's
"jealous wall"....
With a history steeped in violence and bloodshed, it should
come as no surprise that Ireland can claim dozens of locations where
grisly deeds have given rise to ghastly hauntings. Come with us as we
explore a few of the more notorious haunts - places where spine-tingling
tales of murder and mayhem will make the blood run cold.
McMahon's Castle in Co. Clare
Here, in the derelict shell, is a sealed room which contains
an evil so great that no one has looked upon it and lived to tell the
tale. The last time the stones that seal the chamber were opened was in
the late 1920s. It's said that an exorcist went into the chamber to deal
with whatever dreadful creature was there. He was found the next
morning, lying in the remains of the great hall. His death certificate
recorded heart failure as cause of death. However, no one who saw the
remains is likely to forget the look of pure terror engraved into the
features of his face.
Seaforth House in Co. Sligo
Seaforth lies in the shadow of Knocknarea Hill, on the shores
of Sligo Bay. It's said that Owen Phibbs, an archaeologist, filled the
house with artefacts from the Far East, Syria, and Egypt. Almost as soon
as the ancient treasures were installed, unpleasant and malicious
activities began to happen. A strange evil figure would be seen on the
stairway at night and terrible loud crashes were heard throughout the
house. Crockery and ornaments would be found smashed. On one occasion,
the whole house shook. Servants would not stay and a gardener was
terrified by a tall dark shadowy figure who disappeared into the sea,
followed by maniacal laughter. Jesuit priests were unable to rid the
place of its ghosts and it was eventually abandoned in the 1940’s. It
now stands an empty shell.
Skyrne Castle, Co. Meath
Nestled between the ancient Hill of Tara where many skeletons
have been unearthed and the Gnoc Ghuil, ‘Hill of Weeping,’ lies Skyrne
Castle. Built by the Norman knight, Adam de Feipo, in the 12th century,
Skyrne is said to be haunted by several spectres that include a nun, and
a tall, cloaked figure and his dog. But it is the spirit of a woman in
white that gives Skyrne its notoriety. The ghost is believed to be that
of Lilith Palmerston who was raped and murdered by Phelim Sellers in the
18th century; it is her ghastly shrieks that many believe can still be
heard echoing through the castle in the dead of night.
Friar's Bush, Belfast
Not a house or castle, but worthy of note is a dark
underground tunnel connecting the Ashby and David Keir wings of Queen's
University. It's located near Friar’s Bush, one of the city's oldest
graveyards. It's also close to the site of a former monastic settlement
that is believed to date back to the fourth century. Many academics
refuse to go down the tunnel on their own, spooked by the intense,
unnatural coldness. Three men once ventured down. Unknown to the first
man, the other two stopped behind him, refusing to go on. The first man
felt someone holding his hand but didn't look behind him until he
reached the far end, when he realised he was alone.
Glenarm Castle, Co. Antrim
There was once so much paranormal activity here, that the
mistress of the house had every room exorcised except the attic - to
which, according to the story, all the ghosts immediately fled. The son
of the owner says that there used to be a terrible stamping noise from
the attic and that one night, the noise was so loud, he was sent to
investigate. He switched on the light at the bottom of the stairs and
went up. Suddenly, the light turned itself off and he realised that
whatever was making the noise had gotten behind him. Somehow, he managed
to get back down the stairs and never went up again. The noises
continued for years afterwards, and after a skeleton was found on the
grounds, the theory is that the house is haunted by someone who was
murdered there.
Loftus Hall, Co. Wexford
The structure was built by the 4th Marquis of Ely in 1870-1871
on the ruins of Redmond Hall, which had existed since 1350. Redmond
Hall became the property of the Loftus family in 1666, and afterwards
the old mansion became known as Loftus Hall. It was here that the famous
"ghost" story originated in the middle of the 18th century.
Charles Tottenham came to live there for a time, and on a
stormy winter's night, as the family relaxed before a roaring log fire, a
stranger arrived on horseback; he was invited to stay the night. After
the refreshments, the stranger participated in a game of cards. During
the game, a card fell upon the floor. A lady who bent down to retrieve
the fallen card was shocked to discover that the stranger had a cloven
foot! Immediately she screamed in terror. The "stranger" vanished
through the ceiling in a puff of smoke. This was just one of many
terrifying experiences associated with Loftus Hall. Fr. Thomas Broaders
was called upon to exorcise the disturbing evil spirit, and apparently,
his powers worked. He died in January, 1773, and on his tomb in Horetown
Cemetery is the following epitaph:
"Here lies the body of Thomas Broaders,
Who did good and prayed for all.
And banished the Devil from Loftus Hall."
Clonony Castle, Co. Offaly
This great square ruin of a tower in the middle of Offaly
certainly looks creepy enough. It dates back to the 16th century, and
has a connection with Anne Boleyn - two of her cousins are buried in a
cave beneath the castle. The ghost that people see is that of a man
standing on top of the tower in old-fashioned dress. His identity
remains a mystery, but he is still regularly seen by passing motorists
at night, who have described a tall, thin, almost skeletal figure,
surrounded by a hazy, luminous light.
Killua Castle Co. Westmeath
The family seat of the great T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of
Arabia), it is said to be haunted, by the land steward (Jacky Dalton) of
Sir Benjamin Chapman. No one knows why, but his eccentric spirit has
terrified several nocturnal visitors to the castle. The house was long
ago abandoned after too many complaints about things that went bump in
the night. To this day, a white phantom is said to encircle the ruins,
and a hideous, evil-eyed figure has often been seen within the walls.
Athcarne Castle, Co. Meath
This sombre 16th-century ruin lies only 6 miles from the site
of the Battle of the Boyne. People have told of hearing the cries of
dying soldiers, the manifestations of a soldier hanged from a great oak
tree in the grounds have been seen, and the spectre and demented face of
a young girl, whose hands are dripping with blood, was witnessed by a
labourer a few years ago.
Ballygally Castle Hotel, Co. Antrim
Not all hauntings are malevolent or sorrowful; Ballygally is
reputed to be haunted by the ghost of a Madame Nixon who lived there in
the 18th century. After she died, it was said that she wandered the
passages at night and amused herself by knocking on the doors of
different rooms.
Her fleeting appearances have recently been confined to a
room in a corner turret. Another story is fascinatingly eerie. Two
elderly guests booked in for several days over the Christmas season. On
arrival they were intrigued to discover the staff were preparing for a
fancy dress ball. That night there was a knock at the bedroom door and
there stood one of the waiters clad in medieval costume. He had arrived
to invite them to the ball. They went and enjoyed a lovely evening
surrounded by staff and other guests all bedecked in wonderful attire.
The next morning at breakfast they enthused to their hostess about what a
wonderful evening it had been. This came as a bit of a shock, for the
ball had not taken place yet and was not due to take place for another
two days. The elderly guests hurriedly checked out.
Dower House, Killackee, Co. Dublin
Ghostly apparitions and a large phantom black cat have all
seen on the premises of this house. The owner, Mrs Margaret O’Brien, was
sceptical until she saw the cat squatting in her hallway. She said all
doors of the house were locked and it couldn’t have entered by any
normal means. On another occasion, Tom McAssey, a workman at the house,
felt a room go icy cold and saw a locked door open. He called for who
ever it was to come in, only to be greeted by a deep growling noise. He
slammed the door, but it sprang open again, and this time there was a
large cat with red and orange eyes sitting there. A shadowy figure
growled "You cannot see me. You don’t even know who I am". Mrs O’Brien
had an exorcism performed which apparently got rid of the fearsome
feline.
Springhill, Co. Derry
Springhill is a 17th-century house which was once the home of
ten generations of a single family from Ayrshire. In the late
19th-century, a certain Miss Wilson was residing at Springhill and saw a
tall female apparition standing at the top of the moonlit stairs. The
ghost approached a door to a room and mysteriously threw its hands up in
the air in a grief-stricken manner before vanishing. The same room was
occupied in later years by another guest, Miss Hamilton, who reported
having witnessed excited servants pouring into the room before the door
to the room opened, a light shone in, and the activity ceased. Miss
Hamilton was dumbfounded to hear that the owner of the house had papered
over that particular door. A governess reported having heard two
children in the next room to hers holding a casual conversation about a
ghostly woman standing by the fireplace. Teddy Butler, an administrator
of the property for a number of years, saw a woman in black at the foot
of the stairs, heard the sounds of marching and heavy footsteps on the
stairs and landing, and even collided with a woman going through the
back door in the middle of the afternoon. This woman is said to have
been the wife of Colonel Conyngham who served in the Crimea. Her
portrait disappeared from Springhill a few years ago, mysteriously
re-appeared wrapped in brown paper, and vanished again. It hasn't been
seen since.
Wilton Castle, Co. Wexford
Looming above the landscape of South-eastern Ireland, only the
fire scarred-walls remain of once stately Wilton Castle. Until it was
ravaged by flames in the early 1920's, this rambling structure was home
to generations of the Alcock family, prominent in the region since the
early 17th century. If the local legends are to be believed, a fair
number of ghosts are now harboured within the castle walls. One story
recounts strange lights that are sometimes seen in the ruins of a castle
tower where an old woman who was once an actress, died in a fire.
Another tale has it that every year on the anniversary of his death, the
shadow of Harry Alcock, who died in 1840, is seen driving slowly away
from the castle in a ghostly carriage. Crowds once gathered in
anticipation of the event, and a local shoemaker claimed to have spoken
with the phantom. The strangest tale, however, is that of neighbour
Archibald Jacob, who served as a magistrate and captained the local
militia company at the time of the rebellion against Britain in 1798.
Jacob flogged and tortured many people in the parish. While returning
home from a ball at at the castle, he was killed by a fall from his
horse. For years afterward, his ghost was said to haunt both the scene
of his death and the castle. On one occasion, a Catholic priest was
summoned to the castle to conduct an exorcism. When he made the sign of
the cross, the ghost of Archibald Jacob allegedly appeared in the
fireplace, then disappeared in a cloud of smoke.
Charleville Castle, Co. Offaly
A clock chimes where there is no clock; chairs rock with no
occupants; a child cries and there is no child; glowing fogs float by;
bodiless voices and footsteps are heard in the night... As the story
goes, the castle was built in the 1700s on top of an ancient druid
burial ground where people were once buried alive. It's said that the
the man who built it had practiced devil worship; other tales talk of
men going mad and locking children in the basement. As recently as the
turn of the 20th century, a young girl fell to her death from a
staircase banister and it's said her spirit still haunts the stairwell.
Leap Castle, Co. Offaly
While there are literally dozens of haunted houses and
castles in Ireland, we've saved the best for last - Leap Castle, once
owned by the O'Carrolls.
According to the stories, it was built on a Druidic site. When
the O'Carrolls came here they had a nasty habit of murdering people and
dropping the mortal remains down a hole in the wall - an oubliette -
where they promptly forgot about them. One O'Carroll chieftain murdered
his own brother, a priest, for starting Mass too promptly. Hence, the
top floor of the castle is called the Bloody Chapel. It was, however,
lower down in the castle that "It" was seen - an elemental force of evil
with the head of a sheep and the stench of death.
Herewith, a first person account of a visit to Leap:
"Burnt out during the 1920s, Leap's looks lived up to its
reputation. Narrow Gothic windows, ivy covered towers, bats and a barn
owl, it was like a set from a Vincent Price movie. We crept in through
the gaping doorway. Our flashlights revealed a huge hole in the stone
floored front hall and we gingerly made our way around the edge, heading
for the spiral staircase. No ghost would make us nervous - we were the
Dublin Ghost Busters! Despite our confidence, we found ourselves talking
in whispers. A slight sound behind me and I spun like a ballerina to
see the cause. But as I spun around. I slipped and then dropped through
the hole in the floor. The flashlight hit a rock and went out. Just
above me, just out of reach, I could see the jagged outline of the
floor. I could hear friends coming to help me. And then, in the
darkness, I could hear a sniffling snorkly sort of noise. There was a
smell, too. A horrid, rotten smell. I am not athletic, but that night,
terror put rockets into my heels. I shot upwards. Scrabbling madly I
made the doorway and did not stop running till I was safely in the car.
That was nearly twenty years ago. Since then various psychics have
attempted to purge the place. Priests have said masses there, a medium
has planted a special tree there. The last time that I visited it, the
castle was being restored and much of the evil atmosphere had gone.
Only that small, windowless room underneath the castle still had that
sinister feel."
That small, windowless room was the final resting place for
scores of victims who were intially locked in a hidden dungeon off the
Bloody Chapel. This room had a drop floor and prisoners were pushed into
the room where they fell to their deaths - either impaled on a spike
below, or if they were unfortunate enough to miss the spike and die a
quick death, , they slowly starved in the midst of rotting, putrid
corpses.
Around c.1900, workmen who were hired to clean out the
windowless room discovered hundreds of human skeletons piled on top of
each other. It took three full cart loads to remove all of the bones and
one theory is that some of the remains were those of Scots mercenaries
hired by O'Carroll who had them murdered when it came time for payment.
Mysteriously, among the bones, workmen also found a pocket watch made in
the 1840's. Could the dungeon still have been in use back then? No-one
will ever know.
Shortly after the gruesome discovery in the dungeon, playful
dabbling in the occult may have caused the re-emergence of the evil
spirits. In 1659, ownership of Leap Castle passed in marriage from the
O'Carroll family to an English family, the Darbys. The Darby family
turned Leap into their family home, with improvements and additions and
landscaped gardens. In the late 19th century, descendants Jonathan and
Mildred Darby, were looking forward to raising their family here. The
occult was the fashion of the day, and Mildred Darby did some innocent
dabbling, despite the castle's history and reputation for being haunted.
In 1909, she wrote an article for the Journal Occult Review,
describing her terrifying ordeal. "I was standing in the Gallery looking
down at the main floor, when I felt somebody put a hand on my shoulder.
The thing was about the size of a sheep. Thin, gaunt, shadowy..., it's
face was human, to be more accurate... inhuman. It's lust in its eyes,
which seemed half decomposed in black cavities, stared into mine. The
horrible smell one hundred times intensified came up into my face,
giving me a deadly nausea. It was the smell of a decomposing corpse."
The spirit is thought to be a primitive ghost that attaches
itself to a particular place. It is often malevolent, terrifying and
unpredictable. The Darbys remained at Leap until 1922. Being the home of
an English family, it became the target of the Irish struggle for
independence. Destroyed by bombs and completely looted, nothing but a
burned out shell remained. The Darby's were driven out.
Totally gutted, Leap Castle was boarded up and its gates were
pad locked for over 70 years. Locals have described seeing the windows
at the top of the castle "light up for a few seconds as if many candles
were brought into the room" late at night.
The castle lay in ruin for decades. But then, in the 1970's,
it was purchased by an Australian, who had a white witch brought in from
Mexico to exorcise the castle. She spent many hours in the Bloody
Chapel and when she emerged, she explained that the spirits at Leap
Castle were no longer malevolent, but they wished to remain.
In the 1990's, the castle was sold to the current owners.
They are aware of the castle's troubled history. Shortly after moving
in, they began restoration
of the castle. However, a "freak accident" left the owner with a broken
kneecap which delayed restoration work on the castle for nearly a year.
One year after his "accident", the owner was back at work when the
ladder he was standing on suddenly tilted backwards away from the wall
causing him to jump to the ground. The result was a broken ankle and
more delays with the restoration. The owners say they would be happy to
share the castle with the spirits as long as there are no more
"occurrences".
Recently, the christening of the owner's baby daughter took
place in the Bloody Chapel. For the first time in centuries, the castle
was filled with music, dancing, laughter, and most of all love. To quote
those in attendance, it was a "happy, pleasant, wonderful day".
Have the troubled spirits of Leap Castle finally found peace?
Assuming they haven't left, one can only hope they have.
Further reading or viewing
Castle Ghosts of Ireland - video
This fascinating program explores the eerie halls of Leap
Castle, Castle Leslie and Castle Matrix, where a history of the
supernatural and an aura of mysticism abound.
The Twilight Hour - Celtic Visions from the Past
by Simon Marsden.
Read our Review The Twilight Hour.
Resources
Content:
Loftus Hall
Images:
Most of the images are from the The Twilight Hour by Simon Marsden
Restoring an old haunted castle is not a job many Home Advisor restoration companies would be interested in doing. Home Advisor builders are known for their professionalism but they may have a difficult time working with ghosts causing "accidents."
See our other articles on Samhain and Halloween below:
An Irish Hallowe'en - Part 1
An Irish Hallowe'en - Part 2
How the Irish Invented Halloween
A Triple Treat For Hallowe'en
The Churchyard Bride
Creepy Irish Castles and Houses
Creepy Irish Creatures
Irish Ghosts
Something Wicked this way comes - Irish Ghosts by Region
Protect your property and yourself - Make a Parshell Cross for Hallowe'en
The Dullahan
Samhain - The Irish New Year
The Day after Samhain - All Souls Day
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