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Houses built on ancient burial sights, locations of bloody battles, or just a place where someone snapped and offed their entire family. There are numerous examples of ways a place can become haunted. Welcome fellow travelers to the gayest Sanctorum, this is the order of the midnight roller podcast. We are your guides Jamison, and Scully. Join us today as we probe the phantasmal palisades of the World's Most Haunted Haunts.
Aradale Mental Hospital: Ararat, Victoria, Australia Known as the two sister asylums built in 1864 and opened in 1867 the Aradale Asylum was a huge complex having over 500 staff and made up of 63 buildings. Over 13,000 people were estimated to have passed away there, many of the death may have not been due to natural causes. Some visitors mention that a ghost of a nurse Kerry who is supposed to haunt the women’s wing. Visitors have told of unexpected sensations, feeling cold, or being touched. Some feel drafts running through the building for no apparent reason, and some even mention loud bangs from parts of the building that are unoccupied. In 2001 the hospital was revamped and reopened into the Melbourne Polytechnic's Ararat Training Centre on the site of the hospital and with wine vineyard and olive gove in 2005.
Healy Hall, Georgetown University: Named after Patrick Francis Healy (Considered the University’s second founder) the building was constructed between 1877-1879 to increase the number of classrooms and also give space for dormitories. The beautiful High Victorian Aracatectrue had 5 stories and became the flagship building of the university. Most notably the 5th floor is completely blocked off. It is rumored that someone had gone upstairs to perform a ritual and accidentally opened a gateway to the underworld. Another rumor is that the 5th floor is haunted by the ghost of a man who died working on the clocktower, while other legends claim that spirits wander up from the tunnels underneath the campus.
Ancient Ram Inn: Wotton-under-Edge Glocestshire: England Boasted as the oldest still running inns in England. This famously haunted was first built in 1145 AD sat on top of an ancient pagan burial ground stretching back to 3000 BC. Several original pieces of the building going all the way back to 7000 BC where it was said human sacrifices had taken place. The entire town had burnt down in a fire during the reign of King John except for the Inn. The Inn lay on marchy land and had several small ponds that had to be diverted to make way for the new church. Many theorize that the rerouting of the water may have lead to a portal of dark energy to be opened. Sometime later the building was converted into an inn and was in use until 1965 when it started to lose customers and crumble the build has been under several owners since. Many have said they have witnessed ghosts including a Roman Centurion seen by a plumber, a young girl who was murdered here by one of the inn’s more sinister former residents. The little girl was supposedly the innkeeper’s daughter and she was found hanging in the attic. The scariest thing that has been witnessed is of a woman in the night standing at the foot of a visitor’s bed in religious robes chanting in a strange language. But this does not include a monk walking around, an old man and his dog standing guard, another woman hanging from the ceiling, and other ghastly sights too numerous to list.
A retired Rev John Yates, the former Bishop of Gloucester, said the Ancient Ram, “the evilest place I have ever had the misfortune to visit”.
By Order of the Midnight Roller5
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Houses built on ancient burial sights, locations of bloody battles, or just a place where someone snapped and offed their entire family. There are numerous examples of ways a place can become haunted. Welcome fellow travelers to the gayest Sanctorum, this is the order of the midnight roller podcast. We are your guides Jamison, and Scully. Join us today as we probe the phantasmal palisades of the World's Most Haunted Haunts.
Aradale Mental Hospital: Ararat, Victoria, Australia Known as the two sister asylums built in 1864 and opened in 1867 the Aradale Asylum was a huge complex having over 500 staff and made up of 63 buildings. Over 13,000 people were estimated to have passed away there, many of the death may have not been due to natural causes. Some visitors mention that a ghost of a nurse Kerry who is supposed to haunt the women’s wing. Visitors have told of unexpected sensations, feeling cold, or being touched. Some feel drafts running through the building for no apparent reason, and some even mention loud bangs from parts of the building that are unoccupied. In 2001 the hospital was revamped and reopened into the Melbourne Polytechnic's Ararat Training Centre on the site of the hospital and with wine vineyard and olive gove in 2005.
Healy Hall, Georgetown University: Named after Patrick Francis Healy (Considered the University’s second founder) the building was constructed between 1877-1879 to increase the number of classrooms and also give space for dormitories. The beautiful High Victorian Aracatectrue had 5 stories and became the flagship building of the university. Most notably the 5th floor is completely blocked off. It is rumored that someone had gone upstairs to perform a ritual and accidentally opened a gateway to the underworld. Another rumor is that the 5th floor is haunted by the ghost of a man who died working on the clocktower, while other legends claim that spirits wander up from the tunnels underneath the campus.
Ancient Ram Inn: Wotton-under-Edge Glocestshire: England Boasted as the oldest still running inns in England. This famously haunted was first built in 1145 AD sat on top of an ancient pagan burial ground stretching back to 3000 BC. Several original pieces of the building going all the way back to 7000 BC where it was said human sacrifices had taken place. The entire town had burnt down in a fire during the reign of King John except for the Inn. The Inn lay on marchy land and had several small ponds that had to be diverted to make way for the new church. Many theorize that the rerouting of the water may have lead to a portal of dark energy to be opened. Sometime later the building was converted into an inn and was in use until 1965 when it started to lose customers and crumble the build has been under several owners since. Many have said they have witnessed ghosts including a Roman Centurion seen by a plumber, a young girl who was murdered here by one of the inn’s more sinister former residents. The little girl was supposedly the innkeeper’s daughter and she was found hanging in the attic. The scariest thing that has been witnessed is of a woman in the night standing at the foot of a visitor’s bed in religious robes chanting in a strange language. But this does not include a monk walking around, an old man and his dog standing guard, another woman hanging from the ceiling, and other ghastly sights too numerous to list.
A retired Rev John Yates, the former Bishop of Gloucester, said the Ancient Ram, “the evilest place I have ever had the misfortune to visit”.