Georgian Glory Turns Dark
Wellington Rooms stands empty on Mount Pleasant. Built in 1815, this grand assembly hall once hosted Liverpool’s elite. John F. Kennedy visited during its Irish Centre days from 1965 to 1997.
Ceilis filled the dance floor. Music echoed through ornate plasterwork. Cultural events drew thousands. Then closure came in 1997. Decay followed. Now urban explorers risk entry.
The building hit the National Heritage at Risk Register in 1999. Restoration occurred in 2018. Still, darkness lingers in its abandoned halls.
Poltergeist Violence Emerges
Slamming doors shake empty corridors. Explorers report sudden bangs. Furniture shifts without touch. Tools vanish then reappear across rooms.
Domonic Jackson entered recently. Overwhelmed by atmosphere, he captured slamming sounds. Shadows darted in peripheral vision. Cold spots hit without warning.
Paranormal teams target the main hall. K2 meters spike wildly. Spirit boxes spit garbled Irish phrases. One investigator felt pushed down stairs.
Masonic Shadows Lurk
Whispers link the site to Masonic rituals. Dark figures in aprons appear in old photos. Ghost hunters claim EMF surges near the stage.
A female apparition glides through the balcony. Dressed in 19th-century gown, she vanishes into walls. Security guards fled after repeated sightings.
Cold winds rush through sealed rooms. Disembodied laughter echoes at 3 AM. RemPods trigger without cause. The energy feels malevolent.
Irish Spirits Unrest
The Irish Centre era fuels hauntings. Spirits of emigrants linger. One voice captured pleads “help me home.” Children’s cries pierce the silence.
Vortexes appear in thermal imaging. Full-spectrum cameras catch orbs dancing. SLS figures mimic dancers from lost ceilis.
Recent explorers hear Gaelic singing. Footsteps pound above empty floors. Doors lock investigators inside alone.
We would love to investigate this location, but right now we are running events at Lark Lane Liverpool, Mayer Hall Wirral, Vernon Institute Chester, Penrhyn Old Hall, Coffee House Wavertree, Transport Museum Manchester.
DeadLive, taking you where the haunting is happening.

