Within Haunted Yorkshire
Why Does York Feel So Haunted?
York's most famous ghost stories turn buried Roman streets and old prison cells into a haunted city map.
On this page
- The Roman soldiers beneath Treasurer's House
- York Castle Prison and haunted justice
- Ghost walks, tourism and sceptical readings
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Introduction
York feels haunted because its ghost stories are unusually well attached to real places: a Roman road under Treasurer’s House, prison cells in the former York Castle gaol, the old assize courts, and the streets where nightly ghost walks turn buried history into performance. The city’s best-known apparition is the marching column of Roman soldiers reportedly seen in the cellar of Treasurer’s House in the 1950s, a story made famous because later archaeology showed that the house stands over Roman Eboracum’s via Decumana. Its prison hauntings are different: less a single classic apparition than a dark atmosphere built from confinement, public execution, debt, poverty and the afterlife of criminals such as Dick Turpin. These are not proven hauntings, but they are some of Yorkshire’s most durable ghost traditions because they join eerie storytelling to verifiable layers of York’s past.[nationaltrust.org.uk]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…

Why York’s Ghost Map Starts Underground
York’s haunted reputation depends on depth. Modern visitors walk a compact medieval and Georgian city, but beneath the Minster precinct lies Roman Eboracum, the legionary fortress established in the first century. The City of York Historic Environment Record describes the fortress as established by the Ninth Legion between AD 71 and 74, later rebuilt in stone, and occupying about 20.25 hectares. That matters because York’s most famous ghost story is not vaguely “Roman” in mood: it is tied to a specific underground space near the heart of the old fortress.[York Historic Environment Record]her.york.gov.ukOpen source on york.gov.uk.
Treasurer’s House stands in Minster Yard, next to York Minster, and is now managed by the National Trust. The Trust presents the house as a place with more than 2,000 years of layered history and preserves several ghost traditions there, including a grey lady, animal apparitions, cigar smoke attributed to the former owner Frank Green, and, above all, the Roman soldiers in the cellar. The Roman story has become the house’s defining legend because it offers something ghost stories rarely provide: a dramatic witness account later placed against an archaeological setting.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukOpen source on nationaltrust.org.uk.
The archaeological setting is the crucial distinction. The National Trust says excavations uncovered the Roman headquarters building, the principia, in 1969, and that Treasurer’s House lies above the via Decumana, one of Eboracum’s main roads. York Minster also notes that work beneath the cathedral revealed Roman remains associated with the legions based in Eboracum. The ghost story does not prove itself through those finds, but the finds explain why the tale has endured: the apparition appears to move through the modern cellar as if following an older, buried city.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
The Roman Soldiers Beneath Treasurer’s House
The standard account centres on Harry Martindale, a young apprentice plumber working in the cellar in the 1950s. In the version preserved by the National Trust, Martindale kept quiet for years because he feared people would think he had been drunk or unstable. The story became more compelling after the later discovery of Roman remains nearby, because his account described soldiers seeming to pass through walls and to walk at a lower level than the modern cellar floor.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
What is said to have happened is simple and theatrical. Martindale reportedly heard a trumpet-like sound, then saw a soldier, horses and a column of Roman troops moving across the cellar. In many retellings, the figures were visible only from around the knees upwards, as though their lower legs were hidden by the higher modern floor. This detail is one reason the story is so often repeated: it gives the impression that the figures belonged not to the present room, but to the Roman street level beneath it.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
The National Trust treats the Roman soldiers as an “urban myth” preserved from the archives of Treasurer’s House, not as a verified paranormal event. It also notes that only a handful of people are said to have seen or heard the soldiers, mostly around the 1950s, and that the cellar area associated with the story is now inaccessible. That caution is important. The strongest thing that can be said is not “Roman ghosts are real”, but that York has a famous, unusually place-specific apparition tradition whose later archaeological context gave it staying power.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
The story also has a second witness tradition. The National Trust says Joan Mawson, then housekeeper, later described hearing horses’ hooves and seeing Roman soldiers and horses in the cellar in February 1957. It further records a family memory involving Caroline, her young ward, who recalled the sound of a trumpet. This does not turn the tale into proof, but it does shift it from a single dramatic anecdote into a small cluster of related accounts attached to the same underground space.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
Why This Roman Ghost Story Became So Famous
The Treasurer’s House soldiers are famous because they satisfy three things readers and ghost-tour audiences look for: a named witness, a precise location, and a historical “fit”. Many ghost stories drift from place to place; this one is anchored to a cellar beside York Minster and to the buried plan of Roman Eboracum. The City of York record confirms the presence and scale of the Roman fortress, while the National Trust supplies the later house tradition and its link to the via Decumana.[York Historic Environment Record]her.york.gov.ukOpen source on york.gov.uk.
The other reason is that the story expresses a powerful York idea: the past is not gone, only covered over. The Roman soldiers do not appear in a ruined amphitheatre or a museum display; they appear beneath a later house, under a city still in use. That makes the tale work even for sceptical readers. Whether interpreted as memory, misperception, local folklore or ghostly encounter, it turns urban archaeology into something felt rather than merely known.
There are also reasons to be cautious. The account is retrospective, widely retold, and often embellished in popular versions. Details such as exact date, number of soldiers and the interpretation of their clothing vary across secondary retellings. The National Trust’s own presentation is more careful than many paranormal websites: it acknowledges the story’s fame, preserves the reported experiences, and makes clear that access and formal paranormal investigation are not part of normal visiting.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
That careful framing makes the story more useful, not less. For Yorkshire’s haunted history, the Roman soldiers are best understood as folklore with archaeological resonance. The ghost story tells us how people imagine Roman York still marching beneath the modern city; the archaeology tells us why that imagination found such a convincing stage.
York Castle Prison and Haunted Justice
York’s prison hauntings gather around a different kind of memory: not ancient soldiers, but punishment. York Castle Museum occupies former prison buildings beside Clifford’s Tower. English Heritage describes the Eye of York as surrounded by the Debtors’ Prison of 1701–05, the Assize Courts of 1773–77 and the Female Prison of 1780–83; the Debtors’ Prison and Female Prison now form part of York Castle Museum.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukEnglish HeritageDescription of Clifford's TowerOne of the main surviving features of York Castle, Clifford's Tower is now a shell…. Th…
This was not merely a picturesque old gaol. York Castle had a long role in Yorkshire justice. The History of York states that from about 1300 the Yorkshire assize courts were held at the castle every spring and summer, with prisoners awaiting trial held in the dungeons. The museum’s prison exhibition now focuses on the lives of eight former inmates, including Dick Turpin, the last woman to be burnt at the stake in Yorkshire, a Luddite, and a prisoner who died after being badly beaten.[History of York]historyofyork.org.uk1000 years of justice at york castle1000 years of justice at york castle
This is why the prison side of Ghostly York feels heavier than the Roman-soldier story. Treasurer’s House offers a cinematic apparition; York Castle Prison offers rooms associated with fear, waiting, judgment and execution. Haunted reputation here grows from atmosphere and interpretation: narrow cells, former condemned spaces, stories of notorious inmates, and the knowledge that many people entered the castle complex with little control over what would happen next.[York Castle Museum]yorkcastlemuseum.org.ukYork Castle MuseumYork Castle PrisonYork Castle Prison focuses on the lives of eight former inmates, including Turpin. The others include…
York Castle Museum’s own educational material describes harsh prison conditions, including packed cells and bad conditions in the Debtors’ Prison, with the Female Prison built between 1780 and 1783 partly to ease overcrowding. Another museum trail notes stone floors, meagre bedding and the absence of fires in sleeping cells before 1780. These details matter because prison hauntings often attach themselves less to one named ghost than to a place where suffering feels historically legible.[yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk]yorkmuseumstrust.org.ukKS2 Prison History TrailKS2 Prison History Trail
Dick Turpin, Elizabeth Boardingham and the Afterlife of Crime
Dick Turpin is York Castle Prison’s most marketable name, but the real history is more complicated than the romantic highwayman legend. York Castle Museum says Turpin was imprisoned in the prison buildings before his execution, and the History of York explains that his famous ride from London to York was a later fictional association, borrowed from an earlier highwayman story and popularised in Harrison Ainsworth’s 1834 novel Rookwood.[yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk]yorkmuseumstrust.org.ukOpen source on yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk.
That distinction is useful for haunted-history readers. Turpin’s “ghost” is less important than Turpin’s transformation into legend. He was executed in York in 1739, but later print culture made him dashing, dramatic and almost theatrical. York Castle Prison can therefore feel haunted in two senses: by the real carceral past and by the fictional afterlife of criminals whose stories were reshaped for entertainment.[History of York]historyofyork.org.ukHistory of York Dick TurpinHistory of York Dick Turpin
Elizabeth Boardingham gives the prison story a darker and less romantic centre. The History of York records that she was burnt at the stake at Tyburn in York on 20 March 1776 and describes her as the last person executed in that way in Yorkshire. York Castle Museum includes her among the former inmates whose lives are interpreted in the prison exhibition. Her story anchors the prison not in swashbuckling myth, but in the gendered severity of eighteenth-century punishment.[History of York]historyofyork.org.ukHistory of York Elizabeth BoardinghamHistory of York Elizabeth Boardingham
The Luddite presence in the exhibition widens the meaning again. York Castle was not only a place for individually infamous criminals; it also held people entangled in political, economic and social crisis. That is one reason prison hauntings remain persuasive even when individual apparitions are weakly sourced. The buildings concentrate many forms of remembered anxiety: poverty, debt, labour unrest, gendered punishment, public spectacle and the machinery of law.
Are York Castle’s Prison Ghosts Well Evidenced?
Compared with the Roman soldiers at Treasurer’s House, York Castle Prison’s ghost traditions are more atmospheric and less neatly evidenced. There are modern ghost-hunt companies and paranormal-tour listings that describe apparitions, slamming doors, footsteps and temperature drops, but these are promotional or experiential claims rather than strong historical evidence. They show how the site is marketed and experienced after dark, not that any particular haunting has been verified.[hauntedhappenings.co.uk]hauntedhappenings.co.ukOpen source on hauntedhappenings.co.uk.
The firmer evidence lies in the place history. The prison buildings survive; the museum interprets former inmates; English Heritage identifies the arrangement of the Debtors’ Prison, Female Prison and Assize Courts around the Eye of York; and museum resources describe the conditions and punishments attached to the site. Those sources do not prove ghosts, but they explain why visitors so readily imagine ghosts there.[english-heritage.org.uk]english-heritage.org.ukEnglish HeritageDescription of Clifford's TowerOne of the main surviving features of York Castle, Clifford's Tower is now a shell…. Th…
This difference matters when reading York’s haunted map. Treasurer’s House has a famous named apparition story with a limited witness cluster. York Castle Prison has a broader haunted atmosphere rooted in documented imprisonment and execution. One works like a case file; the other works like a memory field.
A fair sceptical reading would say that old prison buildings are ideal settings for suggestion. Low light, reconstructed cells, interpretive sound, knowledge of death and punishment, and the expectation of ghostliness can make ordinary noises feel meaningful. A fair folkloric reading would add that this is exactly how haunted places function: they give emotional form to histories that are otherwise hard to absorb.
Ghost Walks, Tourism and the Making of Ghostly York
York’s ghosts are not preserved only in archives and heritage displays. They are performed nightly. Visit York promotes ghost walks through “thousands of years of history, mystery, folklore and legends” and openly uses the phrase “the most haunted city in Europe”. The Original Ghost Walk of York says it was established in 1973 and is believed to be the first exclusive ghost walk in the world.[Visit York]visityork.orgOpen source on visityork.org.
That touring culture matters because it links sites into a walkable story. A visitor can begin near the Minster and Roman column, think of the soldiers beneath Treasurer’s House, pass medieval lanes and “snickleways”, and end the evening with tales of courts, prisons, executions and old inns. York’s haunted identity is therefore not just a list of ghosts; it is a route through the city’s layers.
The strongest ghost walks do something more interesting than simply frighten people. They turn historical fragments into a guided emotional geography. Roman York becomes something heard underfoot; Georgian punishment becomes something imagined behind cell doors; medieval streets become thresholds between ordinary tourism and local legend. This is why York’s haunted reputation has spread beyond Yorkshire while still remaining deeply Yorkshire in texture.
Tourism also creates a feedback loop. The more York is promoted as haunted, the more visitors arrive expecting ghost stories; the more visitors expect them, the more the city’s Roman, medieval and prison histories are encountered through an eerie lens. That does not make the stories false, but it does mean they should be read as both folklore and heritage economy.
How to Read the Evidence Without Spoiling the Story
The best way to approach York’s Roman ghosts and prison hauntings is neither blind belief nor flat dismissal. The Roman soldiers beneath Treasurer’s House are compelling because the story is specific, memorable and later attached to real Roman archaeology. York Castle Prison’s hauntings are compelling because the buildings genuinely belonged to a long system of confinement, trial and punishment. In both cases, the atmosphere is supported by history even when the supernatural claim remains unproven.
For a reader exploring haunted Yorkshire, York matters because it shows how ghost stories cluster where the past is physically layered. Roman roads, Minster precincts, prison cells, assize courts and execution memories all sit within a short walk. Few places in the county make the connection between archaeology, justice, tourism and folklore so visible.
The most credible reading is therefore a balanced one:
- As history, the Roman fortress, Treasurer’s House, York Castle Prison and the old court buildings are well documented parts of the city’s past.[York Historic Environment Record]her.york.gov.ukOpen source on york.gov.uk.
- As folklore, the Roman soldiers and prison hauntings show how York converts buried streets and carceral spaces into stories of return, repetition and unfinished business.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
- As evidence, the Roman-soldier account is stronger as a named tradition than most York ghost tales, while the prison hauntings are stronger as atmosphere and social memory than as documented apparition cases.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukNational Trust The ghost stories of Treasurer's HouseNational TrustThe ghost stories of Treasurer's House - YorkshireDiscover tales of ghost sightings around Treasurer's House in York, inclu…
- As tourism, ghost walks have helped make these stories part of York’s public identity, turning local legend into one of the city’s most recognisable visitor experiences.[Visit York]visityork.orgOpen source on visityork.org.
That is why York feels so haunted. Not because every tale can be proved, but because the city gives its ghost stories unusually solid ground: a Roman road below, a prison cell beside the castle, and centuries of Yorkshire memory pressed into a few narrow streets.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Why Does York Feel So Haunted?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories
First published 2010. Subjects: Fiction, Literature, Ghost stories, English Ghost stories, English fiction.
Endnotes
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Title: KS2 Prison History Trail
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Additional References
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