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10 Most Haunted Pubs in London: Where Spirits Meet Spirits

The Ten Bells (Spitalfields)Tied to Jack the Ripper, this 18th-century pub hosted victim Annie Chapman before her 1888 murder. Her ghost drifts upstairs, joined by a Victorian landlord’s spirit—staff hear wails and see shadows crawl into beds. The Spaniards Inn (Hampstead)Built in 1585, this inn hides highwayman Dick Turpin’s ghost in its rooms, banging doors. […]

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Trencherfield Mill

Trencherfield Mill Wigan’s Cotton Titan of Phantoms

Trencherfield Mill, looming near Wigan Pier, fired up in 1907 as a cotton-spinning giant, its red-brick bulk powered by a massive steam engine—the world’s largest still in situ. Built by the Wigan Coal and Iron Company, it churned thread through the town’s industrial peak, employing hundreds until the textile trade faded in the 1960s. Repurposed

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Avenham Park Preston

Avenham Park Preston’s Green Haven of Phantoms

Avenham Park, nestled along the River Ribble in Preston, opened in 1867 as a Victorian pleasure ground, its 13 acres landscaped by Edward Milner with paths, fountains, and a Japanese garden. A gift to the city’s mill workers, it bloomed during Preston’s cotton heyday, its lawns a respite from factory smoke. Still a public haven

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North Pier Blackpool

North Pier Blackpool Seaside Haunt of Shadows

North Pier BlackpooL   North Pier, jutting into the Irish Sea from Blackpool’s promenade, opened in 1863 as the town’s first pier, a Victorian marvel by Eugenius Birch. Stretching 1,318 feet, its iron legs and wooden deck hosted strollers, dancers, and theatergoers during Blackpool’s holiday peak. Battered by storms and fires, it’s now a Grade

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Deane Church Bolton

Deane Church Bolton’s Ancient Spire of Spirits

Deane Church, perched on Junction Road in Bolton, traces its roots to the 12th century as St. Mary’s, a Norman chapel reborn in 1450 with a Gothic tower. A Grade II* listed relic, it served Bolton’s faithful through plagues, wars, and the cotton boom, its graveyard sprawling with weathered stones. Restored in the 19th century,

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The Lyceum Club Liverpool

The Lyceum Club Liverpool’s Grand Hall of Phantoms

The Lyceum Club, standing proud on Bold Street in Liverpool, opened in 1802 as a gentlemen’s club and library, its neoclassical facade a Georgian gem. Built by architect William Everard for the city’s merchant elite, its grand rooms buzzed with debate and cigar smoke during Liverpool’s port heyday. Later a post office and now a

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Stockport Air Raid Shelters

Stockport Air Raid Shelters: Stockport’s Wartime Vault of Echoes

Stockport Air Raid Shelters, carved beneath the town’s sandstone cliffs, opened in 1939 as a sprawling network to shield 6,500 civilians from WWII bombs. Dug into Chestergate’s red rock, these damp tunnels—over a mile long—housed families during the Blitz, their echoes bouncing off concrete walls. Closed post-war, they reopened as a museum in 1996, preserving

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