50 Berkeley Square

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. 50 Berkeley Square is a reportedly haunted townhouse on Berkeley Square in Mayfair, in Central London. In the late 19th Century, it became known as "The Most Haunted House in London".[1] Modern interest in the site was spurred by its inclusion in Peter Underwood's 1975 book, Haunted London.[2]

History and occupants

The four-story brick town house was constructed in the late eighteenth/early nineteenth century.[3] Until 1827 it was the home of British Prime Minister George Canning, commemorated by a plaque on the house today. The house was then bought by the Viscount Bearsted, who rented the property to one Mr Myers.[4] It was later bought by BP.[4]

From 1937 to 2015,[5] the building was occupied by Maggs Bros, a firm of antiquarian book dealers.[1] In 1998 the building was thought to be the oldest unaltered building in London.[6]

Legend

Legend varies, but mostly states that the attic room of the house is haunted by a spirit of a young woman who committed suicide there.[7] She purportedly threw herself from the top floor windows after being abused by her uncle;[8] and is said to be capable of frightening people to death. The spirit is said to take the form of a brown mist; though sometimes it is reported as a white figure.[9] A rarer version of the tale is that a young man was locked in the attic room, fed only through a hole in the door, until he eventually went mad and died.[10] One story states that the attic room is haunted by the ghost of little girl that was killed by a sadistic servant in that room.

At least two deaths were attributed to the house in the Victorian Era after people spent the night in the room.[11] The first ghostly happenings were reported by George Canning, who claimed to have heard strange noises and have experienced psychic phenomena whilst living there.[7]

After George Canning's residency in 1885, the house was bought by a Mr. Myers, who had recently been jilted by his fiancee.[7] It was said that he would lock himself in the attic room and slowly went mad over the rest of his life.[8] During his stay at the house, it fell into gross disrepair and it is during this time that its reputation began to build.[7][8]

As a bet, in 1872, Lord Lyttleton stayed a night in the building's attic.[9] He brought his shotgun with him, and during the night fired at an apparition. In the morning, he attempted to find the apparition, but could only find shotgun cartridges.[9] The next year the local council brought a summons to the house's owners for failure to pay taxes, but due to the house's reputation as haunted they were not prosecuted.[12]

In 1879, The Mayfair Magazine reported that a maid who had stayed in the attic room had been found mad.[8] It was later reported that she died in an asylum the day after.[7] On the day she was found, a nobleman purportedly took up the challenge to spend a night in the room, and his was the first death recorded in the house. The coroner pronounced him dead of fright.[7]

It is said that after one nobleman had spent the night in the attic room, he was so paralysed with fear that he couldn't speak.[13]

In 1887, sailors from HMS Penelope stayed a night in the house.[7] By morning one was found dead, having tripped as he ran from the house.[7] The other reported having seen the ghost of Mr. Myers, approaching them aggressively.[7]

No phenomena have been reported since the house was bought by the Maggs Brothers in the late-1930s[7] and though many contemporary media outlets reported happenings at the house, more recent investigators claim nothing unusual has ever taken place there.[14] They remark that Lord Lytton's story "The Haunted and the Haunters" bears a remarkable resemblance to the supposed hauntings at 50 Berkeley Square.[15]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Richard Jones, Walking Haunted London", New Holland Publishers Ltd; 4th edition (28 September 2007), p.69
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  5. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/9f677a3a-9e69-11e5-8ce1-f6219b685d74.html#slide0
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Further reading

  • Charles George Harper, Haunted houses: tales of the supernatural, with some account of hereditary, London, Chapman & Hall, ltd., 1907.

External links

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