Jump to content

Abbey House, Cambridge: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Undid revision 679330230 by Mutt (talk)
Line 13: Line 13:
In the 1920s, reports of Mrs Ascham, wife of the owner, repeatedly seeing a disembodied female head at the foot of her bed reached Prof. [[F.J.M. Stratton]] of [[Gonville and Caius College]], later President of the Society for Psychical Research, who rented the house for a month and reported muttering and singing coming from an empty room.<ref name="THI01" />
In the 1920s, reports of Mrs Ascham, wife of the owner, repeatedly seeing a disembodied female head at the foot of her bed reached Prof. [[F.J.M. Stratton]] of [[Gonville and Caius College]], later President of the Society for Psychical Research, who rented the house for a month and reported muttering and singing coming from an empty room.<ref name="THI01" />


[[Urban Huttleston Broughton, 1st Baron Fairhaven|Lord Fairhaven]] of [[Anglesey Abbey]] gifted the house to the people of Cambridge at end of [[World War II]] in celebration of the cessation of hostilities.<ref name="CN01" /> The house was subesquently rented by the [[Museum of Cambridge|Cambridge & County Folk Museum]] until 1973 and a series of private tenants, including Prof. [[Peter Danckwerts]] of Pembroke College, until 2001.<ref name="CN02" /> Mr. Young and his daughter, who were resident in the early 1960s, reported strange noises which caused their dog to cower in the corner of the room, there were also further reported sightings of the ''Grey Lady'' up until 1986, around which time the house was exorcised by three clergymen.<ref name="THI01" />
[[Urban Huttleston Broughton, 1st Baron Fairhaven|Lord Fairhaven]] of [[Anglesey Abbey]] gifted the house to the people of Cambridge at end of [[World War II]] in celebration of the cessation of hostilities.<ref name="CN01" /> The house was subesquently rented by the [[Museum of Cambridge|Cambridge & County Folk Museum]] until 1973 and a series of private tenants, including Prof. [[Peter Danckwerts]] of Pembroke College, who researched the history of the house.<ref name="CN02" /> Mr. Young and his daughter, who were resident in the early 1960s, reported strange noises which caused their dog to cower in the corner of the room, there were also further reported sightings of the ''Grey Lady'' up until 1986, around which time the house was exorcised by three clergymen.<ref name="THI01" />


In 2002, the house was put on the market for £700,000 and sold to the [[Friends of the Western Buddhist Order]], who as part of the contract agreed to open the house to the public.<ref name="CN01" />
In 2002, following the death of the last leaseholder the previous year, the council put the house on the market for £700,000 and sold it to the [[Friends of the Western Buddhist Order]], who as part of the contract agreed to open the house to the public.<ref name="CN01" />


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 22:15, 3 September 2015

Abbey House or Old Abbey is a 16th Century house on the corner of Beche Road and Abbey Road in Petersfield, Cambridge, which has been described as both the oldest inhabited house[1] and the most haunted house in the city.[2]

History

Abbey House was built by Alexander Butler on the site of Barnwell Priory (dissolved 1539) and parts of the old ecclesiastical buildings can be found in the walls, cellar and gardens of the house.[3] Local barrister Jacob Butler inherited the house and much of the surrounding land, which played host to the annual Stourbridge Fair, in 1714, but lost it in a legal dispute prior to his death in 1765,[2] although his unmistakable 6'4" fierce-looking ghost and that of his dog Wolfie have been sighted in his old home.[4]

The house's reputation for being haunted came to local prominence during the occupancy of Prof. J.C. Lawson of Pembroke College from 1904 to 1910, on the family's first night in residence members of the household were reportedly woken at midnight by an unexplained crashing sound, and from 1907 onward, Lawson and others reported seeing the ghost of a nun wrapped in a dark robe, who failed to respond to questioning but stood at the foot of Mrs Lawson's bed sighing during a protracted illness, while children of another family resident in the house at that time reportedly received regular visitations from this nun, who they did not like very much.[3]

A local woman, who lived in the northern end of the house from 1904 to 1911, later reported that she had heard stories of the Grey Lady prior to her residency. According to these local legends the house was haunted by the spirit of a nun from nearby St. Radegund's Priory who used an underground passage, marked by a bricked up archway in the house's cellar, to meet with a cannon at Barnwell Priory who was secret lover.[3] According to some versions of the legend, the nun was walled up by her fellow nun's as punishment for her indiscretion.[5]

The Lawson's and others also reported seeing ghostly animals in the house's gardens, including, a well-fed Red Squirrel, which vanished when approached, and a large hare, which sat watching witnesses before disappearing.[6]

In the 1920s, reports of Mrs Ascham, wife of the owner, repeatedly seeing a disembodied female head at the foot of her bed reached Prof. F.J.M. Stratton of Gonville and Caius College, later President of the Society for Psychical Research, who rented the house for a month and reported muttering and singing coming from an empty room.[5]

Lord Fairhaven of Anglesey Abbey gifted the house to the people of Cambridge at end of World War II in celebration of the cessation of hostilities.[1] The house was subesquently rented by the Cambridge & County Folk Museum until 1973 and a series of private tenants, including Prof. Peter Danckwerts of Pembroke College, who researched the history of the house.[2] Mr. Young and his daughter, who were resident in the early 1960s, reported strange noises which caused their dog to cower in the corner of the room, there were also further reported sightings of the Grey Lady up until 1986, around which time the house was exorcised by three clergymen.[5]

In 2002, following the death of the last leaseholder the previous year, the council put the house on the market for £700,000 and sold it to the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order, who as part of the contract agreed to open the house to the public.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Shelton, Nik (2002-08-21). "'Haunted house' to be opened". Cambridge News. Retrieved 2015-09-03. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Petty, Mike (2012-12-03). "A House with a history". Cambridge News.
  3. ^ a b c Westwood, Jennifer; Simpson, Jacqueline (2010), "Cambridgeshire: Cambridge, Abbey House", The Penguin Book of Ghosts: Haunted England, Penguin, ISBN 9780141039749
  4. ^ Codd, Daniel (2010), "Modern Ghostly Encounters: Introduction", Mysterious Cambridgeshire, JMD Media, ISBN 9781859838082
  5. ^ a b c Underwood, Peter (1984), "Abbey House, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire", This Haunted Isle, Harrap, ISBN 9780245542329
  6. ^ Underwood, Peter (2009), "Old Abbey House: Barnwell, Cambridge", Haunted Gardens, JMD Media, ISBN 9781848682610