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Britain’s spookiest postcodes revealed with each haunted web site close to you mapped

Britain’s most haunted postcodes have been revealed. As Halloween looms, we’ve charted thousands of UK hauntings including the tragic love story haunting the nation’s eeriest postcode.

More than 5,500 haunted locations are included in our map, all meticulously documented by author Dr Paul Lee over 10 years of rigorous research. Paranormal encounters vary from mischievous poltergeists tossing glasses and plates to unexplained footsteps echoing in the dead of night.

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Out of more than 1,000 different postcode areas with at least one recorded haunting, the spookiest postal address in the UK is the ME1 postcode area, encompassing Rochester town and the villages of Burham and Wouldham in Kent. No less than 56 separate locations, mainly in Rochester, have reported paranormal experiences. According to Dr Lee’s research, the ME1 postcode is followed by YO1, York City Centre (44 haunted locations), and then the SG14 postcode in Hereford (43 reports).

One of the most chilling hauntings in the ME1 postcode area is the sorrowful tale of the White Lady of Rochester Castle.

In 1264, England was embroiled in a bloody civil war between rebel barons led by the Earl of Leicester, Simon de Montford, and King Henry III. The Royalist noble Sir Ralph de Capo battled to defend Rochester Castle from the rebels and safeguard his beautiful fiancée Lady Blanche de Warenne.

After a dramatic week-long siege, the castle got wind that the King’s forces were closing in, causing the rebels to leg it. Sir Ralph, feeling gutsy, chased after them – but little did he know, Sir Gilbert de Clare, a knight from de Montford’s crew and a snubbed admirer of Lady Blanche, was lying in wait.

He slipped into a surcoat just like Sir Ralf’s and waltzed right into the castle where he found Lady Blanche on a balcony, gazing out over the battlefield. Sir Ralf rocked up just in time to catch his betrothed tussling with the sneaky de Clare and let loose an arrow at the intruder.



York is haunted
York is haunted

But in a heartbreaking twist, the arrow ricocheted off de Clare’s armour and struck Lady Blanche dead. That very night, her ghostly figure was spotted pacing the battlements, arrow still lodged in her.

Ever since, every Good Friday, her mournful phantom is said to make an appearance, haunting the ramparts to relive her sorrowful demise. Yet, the White Lady isn’t the only ghoul in the ME1 postcode haunt.

The spook of none other than Charles Dickens, who used to kick about Rochester, has been clocked roaming Rochester Castle, Rochester Cathedral, and popping up at Rochester Corn Exchange, usually by a moon-faced clock when Yuletide rolls around.

Other eerie entities include a sheep rustler who gives the chills along the A466, a creepy “old lady with an evil grin”, a bunch of grey ladies, and even the headless ghost of the Duke of Monmouth, old King Charles II’s illegitimate offspring, who lost more than just his crown. All these spooky sightings are mapped out for those brave enough to explore.

Starting his research in 2015, Dr Lee is the author of The Ghosts of King’s Lynn and West Norfolk, as well as two volumes in a series exploring UK Haunted Hospitality – Volume 1: Pubs and Clubs, and Volume 2: Hotels and Other Accommodation.

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