Chingle Hall

Chingle Hall
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Chingle Hall dates from around 1300. It is located in the parish of Whittingham near Preston, England. It was owned by the Singleton family till the line ran out in 1585. The second family to occupy the house were the Wall family. Anthony Wall, once mayor of Preston, died there in 1601. The Walls owned the Hall until the mid 1700′s.

Chillingham Castle

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Chillingham Castle is a medieval castle in the village of Chillingham in the northern part of Northumberland, England. It was the seat of the Grey family and their descendants the Earls of Tankerville from the 13th century until the 1980s. The Chillingham Wild Cattle, formerly associated with the Tankerville family, may be viewed from the castle grounds.

Chase Vault

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The Chase Vault is a burial vault in the cemetery of the Christ Church Parish Church in Oistins, Christ Church, Barbados. It is best known for a series of unexplained incidents in the early 19th century involving the coffins within the vault. Each time when the vault was opened to bury a family member, all coffins but one had changed position. When this had happened several times without explanation over a number of years, the vault was eventually abandoned.

Charles Island

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Charles Island is a 14 acre (57,000 m²) island located roughly 0.5 mile (1 km) off the coast of Milford, Connecticut, in Long Island Sound centered at 41°11’28.32?N 73°03’18?W? / ?41.1912°N 73.055°W? / 41.1912; -73.055? (Charles Island).

Charles Island is accessible from shore via a tombolo (locally referred to as a sandbar), which is exposed at low tide. According to early local histories, the Sachem Ansantawae resided there during the summer months. European discovery of the island occurred in 1614 when Adriaen Block sailed through and mapped Long Island Sound. The island appears on his hand-drawn map found in The Netherlands National Archives.

Boy Scout Lane

Boy Scout Lane
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Boy Scout Lane, sometimes written “Boyscout Lane”, is an isolated road located in Stevens Point, Wisconsin. The road, a dead-end with no outlet, was reportedly named because of a tragic incident that resulted in the deaths of a troop of Boy Scouts. There are a number of urban legends associated with the road, and many anomalous phenomena have been reported there. The area has been the subject of several paranormal investigations, and has been a ‘haunt’ for youths hoping to experience a paranormal event. The land surrounding Boy Scout Lane is now privately owned and is off limits to the general public.

Borley Rectory

Borley Rectory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Borley Rectory was a Victorian era mansion located in the village of Borley, Essex, England. It was constructed in 1863, on the site of a previous rectory, and destroyed by fire in 1939.

The house gained a reputation for being haunted after a series of residents reported unsettling phenomena. In 1929, the story of Borley was heavily covered by the Daily Mirror. Notably, it was investigated by paranormal investigator Harry Price in 1937, who described it as ‘The Most Haunted House in England’, a phrase which caught the imagination of the press. Price wrote two books on the subject, both of which sold well.

Bomere Pool

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Bomere Pool is a large mere lying between the villages of Bayston Hill and Condover in the county of Shropshire, England, 4.7 miles (7.5 kilometres) south of the county town of Shrewsbury.

Once open to the public, Bomere Pool and the surrounding woodlands are now privately owned and a centre of towed water sports throughout the year. There is a small resident population housed in a number of flats.

Bobby Mackey’s Music World

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Bobby Mackey’s Music World is a nightclub located in Wilder, Kentucky that is self-proclaimed as “the most haunted nightclub in the USA”.

Blue Bell Hill

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Blue Bell Hill (sometimes, incorrectly, Bluebell Hill) is a chalk hill between Maidstone and Rochester in the English county of Kent. It overlooks the River Medway and is part of the North Downs. Settlements on the hill include Walderslade; and Blue Bell Hill and Kit’s Coty villages. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries much of the hill was quarried for chalk.

Big Bay Point Light

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The Big Bay Point Light is a lighthouse which stands on a tall bluff over rocky point[4] halfway between Marquette and the Keweenaw Portage Entry in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Today it is the only operational lighthouse with a bed and breakfast. It is reputed to be haunted, and the novel and movie Anatomy of a Murder were inspired by a murder at the lighthouse.

Bermuda Triangle

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The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil’s Triangle, is a region in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean in which a number of aircraft and surface vessels are alleged to have mysteriously disappeared and cannot be explained as human error, piracy, equipment failure, or natural disasters. Popular culture has attributed some of these disappearances to the paranormal, a suspension of the laws of physics, or activity by extraterrestrial beings.

Ben Macdui

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Ben Macdui, also spelled Ben Macdhui and Ben MacDui (Gaelic: Beinn Mac Duibh) is the highest mountain in the Cairngorms of Scotland, and the second highest in the United Kingdom after Ben Nevis. It lies on the southern edge of the Cairn Gorm plateau, on the boundary between Aberdeenshire and Moray.