The ghost of Sir Winston Churchill is haunting the women’s loos of the historic Queen Mary, a ghoul hunter claims.
The spirit of the wartime Prime Minister has been spotted lurking in the ladies lavs of the ship, which is now docked in California.
That’s the claim of singer and ghost expert Brocarde, who says she saw the cigar loving statesman stalking the vessel’s hallways.
READ MORE: Brit influencer, 26, fell to death on 630ft Spanish bridge – despite family pleas not to climb
Click for more of the latest news from across the world from the Daily Star.
Brocarde, who was on board for a party, said: “ “I always experience paranormal activity when I least expect it.
“I was making my way down the long narrow corridor towards the restrooms, with each step the air felt thinner, and I was overcome by an intense sensation of fear.
“I opened the bathroom door, and it was filled with a thick mist, I felt like someone was following me, as when the door slammed behind me, it slammed twice, like someone followed me in.
She added: “Then I saw the full apparition of a heavy set man, with a cigar, he looked exactly like Winston Churchill. I darted out the bathroom door like a flash of lighting, it was the quickest bathroom visit I’ve ever made.”
Churchill is said to have loved sailing on the Queen Mary, a boat he used often to travel to the US and Canada.
Author Alan Packwood, said: “It is the vehicle on which the early plans for Operation Overlord and D-Day are going to have been discussed.
“As someone who liked living well, was easily satisfied with the best, he really relished and enjoyed the top-level service on board the Queen Mary.”
The Queen Mary is now a hotel, permanently docked in California, with some saying that the spirits of the dead still haunt the ship today is said to be one of the most haunted locations in the USA.
It’s not the first time Churchill’s spirit has been felt on board, with some reporting a strong smell of cigar smoke in the Winston Churchill Stateroom.
For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.