WITH Halloween just around the corner many will be looking for some ghostly activities to take part in to celebrate the spooky season.
From Victorian ladies, beer drinking poltergeists and a man in a flat cap there are plenty of places for those who fancy their very own ghost hunt.
A UK Haunted Location Database has round up a list of haunted spots in Wirral that you can visit for your own paranormal experience.
Riverview Pub, Birkenhead
This pub on Chester Road has reported cold spots and strange smells along with glasses falling off shelves, beer taps turning off and poltergeist-like phenomena.
Additionally, the pub’s resident cat is reported to react to an invisible presence.
Brimstage Hall
A “white lady” and a “black lady” are said to appear at this countryside location.
The latter of the spirits is said to limit herself to the Victorian wing and is only visible from the waist or knees upwards due to the floor being raised over the centuries.
Bidston Hill Windmill
A former miller, who was murdered in the 19th century, is said to have been seen walking around the windmill.
It is said the son of the original miller turned werewolf from neglect and still wanders the area.
Bidston Hill is also known for its UFO sightings, witchcraft and satanic worship with the ghost of Satanist and suspected murderer Richard Tilly, said to be protected against his detractors and ghost hunters by an unknown black dog.
Boat Museum at the National Waterways Museum
Cold spots, footsteps, doors slamming, and the smell of sulphur, soap and creosote have all been experienced in this Grade II listed building.
Legend says an “invisible force” threw a man 6ft while three misty silhouettes and a man in a flat cap and donkey jacket have been seen here.
Queensway Tunnel
In the 1960’s it was reported that a girl died in a motorbike accident and has since returned to the scene of her death as a phantom hitch-hiker.
She has been spotted by many drivers trying to hitch a lift.
There is also said to be an old fashioned police car driving in the early hours of the morning that vanishes into thin air.
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