They began seeing a flurry of Welsh words carved into walls, including “tangneffedd” (religious peace), and “hir am aros” (long-suffering). Reports of muffled voices, children singing and stains appearing on walls were brought to national attention by an English family who had moved to North Wales. We’ve listed a few below.īack in the news recently was this 17th century Flintshire farmhouse where more than 300 paranormal events were documented in video footage, audio interviews, photos, and eyewitness accounts. In old, musty buildings with creaking timbers, or in places associated with violence and suffering, such as Victorian jails and asylums. Yet, generally, most hauntings are where you would imagine them to be. Even walkers can be plagued: on the Llŷn Peninsula, a holidaymaker was reportedly freaked out by the apparition of a woman wearing a “traditional, yet out-of-date” Welsh dress”. According to legend, ghost ship still sails along the coastline off Pensarn, Conwy. ![]() And according to another ghostbuster, retired Bala publisher Elwyn Edwards, spooks are not just found in spooky old houses, graveyards and castle dungeons – you are as likely to encounter one in a chip shop or council house. In almost every corner of the region, it seems there are spectres, phantoms and wraiths waiting to stalk corridors and disturb families. In reality, his work took him across North Wales. The Rev Jason Bray is a “deliverance minister” who, for the past two decades, has been exorcising the haunted homes of people plagued by ghosts, spirits and poltergeists. One man who might take issue with Wrexham’s apparent lack of paranormality is the vicar of St Giles Church. READ MORE: I tried Halloween cakes from Asda, Tesco and M&S - one gave me a real fright at the tills ![]() READ MORE: Halloween 2023 events in North Wales - from scare attractions to ghost hunts It was on these sorts of metrics that Wrexham was once labelled one of the worst places to survive a zombie apocalypse: should the worst happen, there could be nearly 50,000 dead ambling past the STōK Cae Ras. Only Swansea was able to match up: despite fewer cemeteries and memorials, the South Wales city has more empty properties, presumably the kind of places where spooks like to hang out. ![]() Nevertheless a survey by BonusFinder placed Wrexham ahead of Cardiff and Newport in terms of urban spookiness. Despite this, just one case of paranormal activity was recorded in a study of “Britain’s most haunted cities” – perhaps referring to the city’s infamous “possessed” nightclub bar stool. Wrexham has 15 cemeteries, 42,443 memorials and 230 houses built before 1918.
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