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House
On Haunted Hill is a grizzly tale of some bright young things
who meet a ghostly and gruesome death. Inspired by this
blood curdling tale and armed with the reassurance that
it's only fiction, right?, I decided to have my own spooky
experience and go ghost
hunting. Recruiting the help of ghost hunter and medium
of 10 years, Craig Hamilton-Parker, we paid a visit to the
magnificent, but haunted home of the 7th Marquees of Bath,
Longleat House, near Warminster, Wiltshire.
He's never been inside the house before and is hunting 'blind'.
As Craig, 46,who knows about these things, says: "It's such
a great place the spirits don't want to leave. "He looks like
a friendly headmaster in his blazer and chinos, but having a chat
isn't easy when there are ghosts around. He suddenly veers off down
dimly lit corridors in the private quarters of the huge, echoey
house, his imaginary antenna leading him to spooky quarter.
Standing
in a bland and empty corner of the corridor, with his head
bowed in concentration, Craig murmurs, "This used to
be the nursery and children would play here. But a little
girl who played here with blonde, ringletted hair died of
a breathing disease."
I stand there, not daring to breath, the hair on the back of my
neck slowly standing to attention. Craig continues: "There's
also a woman here too, but she's connected to a different time in
history. I saw her standing in the corridor. A lot of tragedy has
surrounded her life and she has a very ruthless husband. She's waiting
for him to return."
I dash through the haunted area and stumble down the servant's
steep spiralling staircase away from the former nursery. Down
in the boiler room when Craig senses that dead bodies have
been stored on the floor, I scarper to the near by cafe for
a strong brew.
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A chat with the house steward, Ken Windess who's worked at Longleat
for over 20 years, proves Craig was spot on with his ghostly sightings.
In fact, baby Alice who used to play in the nursery before it was
converted into a corridor, died of consumption in 1847.
She was exactly as Craig had described, right down to the blonde
ringlets.

As for the tragic woman, she turned out to be Louisa Carteret.
Married to one of the Marquess'sancestors, she had an affair with
one of the servants. Her ruthless husband found out and naturally
had him disposed of. The servant was booted down the namely 'breakneck'
stairs - the spiralling staircase next to the nursery - during the
1700s. His body was stored in the boiler room until it could be
fully disposed of.
Louisa was told he'd just 'gone away' and never knew he'd been
bunked off. She's waiting for him, rather than her husband, in the
servants quarters where they used to meet. Although having ghosts
around may send shivers down your spine, Craig maintains the spirits
will do you no harm.
"Theses are friendly ghosts," he's says with dad-like
smile as we stand in the sunshine in the vast grounds of the
house. "They're there because they like it, just like
us."
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