Page outline Jump by section
Introduction
For this page, “Aberdeenshire” is best read through the historic county first, while recognising that modern tourism often uses “Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire” more broadly. That matters because modern Aberdeenshire Council includes areas historically belonging to Kincardineshire and Banffshire, while Aberdeen city is now administratively separate from Aberdeenshire despite its deep historic connection with the county.[wikishire.co.uk]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.

Where Aberdeenshire’s hauntings cluster
Aberdeenshire’s ghost stories are not scattered at random. They cluster around places where the landscape already carries a strong historical charge: tower houses in old family territories, roads through Deeside, prison buildings, kirkyards, and sites linked to the 1597 witch panic. The traditional divisions of the county — Buchan, Formartine, Garioch and Mar among them — help explain the spread: Buchan gives the coast and Peterhead; Mar and Deeside give castles, old roads and mountain estates; Aberdeen gives burgh courts, prisons and witch-trial records.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.
The modern visitor map can blur the edges. Crathes Castle and Dunnottar Castle are often promoted in “Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire” ghost round-ups, but historically they belong to Kincardineshire rather than Aberdeenshire. They are still useful comparisons because they sit on the same visitor routes and share the same north-east Scottish vocabulary of Green Ladies, ruined strongholds and family tragedy, but the core Aberdeenshire story is better anchored at Fyvie, Drum, Castle Fraser, Craigievar, Delgatie, Braemar, Peterhead and Aberdeen.[wikishire.co.uk]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.
Fyvie Castle and the county’s most famous ghosts
Fyvie Castle near Turriff is the obvious starting point for Aberdeenshire hauntings. The National Trust for Scotland describes ghosts, legends and folklore as woven into the castle’s 800-year history, while also grounding the site in documented royal and noble history: William the Lion was associated with Fyvie around 1214, and Robert the Bruce and Charles I were later among its royal guests.[National Trust for Scotland]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
The best-known Fyvie apparition is the Green Lady, usually identified in legend as Lilias Drummond. The story says she was starved by her husband, Alexander Seton, after failing to produce a male heir; on the night of his second marriage, ghostly lamenting was heard, and by morning her name was said to have appeared scratched into the castle wall. The National Trust for Scotland repeats the legend as a ghost story rather than as verified fact, and its cautious phrasing is important: this is a powerful tradition attached to a real place, not a confirmed historical event.[National Trust for Scotland]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Fyvie also has a more unusual spectral figure: the ghostly trumpeter linked to Andrew Lammie. Lammie belongs first to ballad tradition, especially “Andrew Lammie” or “Mill o’ Tifty’s Annie”, a traditional Scottish ballad set around Fyvie and catalogued as Child Ballad 233. The story tells of Andrew, Lord Fyvie’s trumpeter, and Annie or Agnes Smith, the miller’s daughter at Tifty, whose romance is blocked by status and family opposition. Some versions end with Annie’s death by heartbreak; others make the family violence more explicit.[wikisource.org]en.wikisource.orgOpen source on wikisource.org.
The haunting tradition seems to have grown from that ballad landscape. Later ghost retellings identify Fyvie’s phantom trumpeter with Andrew Lammie, returning after Annie’s death or doomed by the same social tragedy that made the song famous. This gives Fyvie a richer texture than a simple “haunted castle” label: its ghosts are tied to gender, inheritance, marriage, class and the way north-east communities preserved painful stories in song.[Mainly Norfolk]mainlynorfolk.infoOpen source on mainlynorfolk.info.
Castle ghosts: family memory in stone
Aberdeenshire’s castle hauntings often work like family legends. They turn dynastic pressure, forbidden love, childhood death or old violence into a figure who keeps appearing in one room, one stair, one window or one stretch of garden.
Drum Castle, near Drumoak, is one of the clearest examples because the National Trust for Scotland names the alleged apparition: young Alexander Irvine, son of the 20th Laird of Drum, who died aged six in 1865. The Trust also connects Drum’s ghost stories to Anna Forbes Irvine, who died in 1900, and to reports of moving heirlooms, footsteps and laughter. The history behind the estate is older still: Drum and its Old Wood are associated with Robert the Bruce’s 1323 grant to the Irvine family.[National Trust for Scotland]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Craigievar Castle, south of Alford, has a different atmosphere. Its pink tower-house exterior, completed by William Forbes around 1626, is presented by the National Trust for Scotland as one of the best-preserved Scottish Baronial castles, virtually unchanged outside since the early 17th century. Its ghost lore is less securely documented by official sources, but modern accounts repeatedly mention a drowned fiddler in the kitchen well and a Gordon man killed or thrown from the Blue Room after being discovered in a compromising situation with a Forbes daughter.[nts.org.uk]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Delgatie Castle near Turriff adds a more martial ghost. The castle’s own visitor information presents it as a long-lived Aberdeenshire attraction associated with the Hay family, painted ceilings dating from 1575, and a deep medieval origin tradition. Its haunting centres on Rohaise, a red-haired woman said to have defended the castle and to appear especially to men staying in the room now associated with her. Here again, the story is best read as castle folklore: memorable, place-specific and repeatedly retold, but not a documented apparition in the historical sense.[delgatiecastle.com]delgatiecastle.comOpen source on delgatiecastle.com.
Braemar Castle, in the Cairngorms and historic Aberdeenshire’s Deeside country, carries one of the county’s most recognisable bridal ghost motifs. The common version says a newly married woman woke to find her husband absent, wrongly believed herself rejected, and threw herself from the castle; her figure is then said to haunt the castle or grounds. The castle itself is a real 17th-century stronghold associated with the Earls of Mar and later Farquharson history, so the ghost story sits within a landscape already shaped by clan politics, hunting lodges, military occupation and romanticised Highland memory.[braemarcastle.co.uk]braemarcastle.co.ukOpen source on braemarcastle.co.uk.
Peterhead Prison and the modern haunted attraction
Not all Aberdeenshire hauntings belong to castles. Peterhead Prison Museum shows how a much more recent institution can become part of the county’s haunted map. The prison operated from 1888 to 2013 and is now a museum using audio tours and former staff testimony to interpret prison life, including the 1987 siege that ended with the only domestic deployment of the SAS in Britain.[VisitAberdeenshire]visitabdn.competerhead prison museumpeterhead prison museum
Its paranormal offer is also explicit. The museum advertises “Ghost Hunting Behind Bars” as an after-dark participatory investigation inside a real prison, using specialist equipment and access to prison spaces associated with reported activity. It also promotes overnight-style events under the language of “Scotland’s Most Haunted Prison”, though those claims are part of visitor experience marketing rather than historical proof.[Peterhead Prison]peterheadprison.comOpen source on peterheadprison.com.
Peterhead matters because it shows a shift in haunted Aberdeenshire from inherited folklore to managed experience. A castle ghost may be preserved in a guidebook, ballad or family legend; a prison ghost hunt is packaged as an event where visitors actively test the atmosphere for themselves. The result is still folklore, but folklore in a modern form: ticketed, participatory and shaped by the expectations of paranormal tourism.
Aberdeen, the Tolbooth and witch-trial memory
Although Aberdeen is now a separate council area, it belongs naturally in a historic Aberdeenshire haunted-history page because the old county, city and north-east legal culture are tightly connected. Aberdeen’s Tolbooth is especially important. The 17th-century former jail, now a museum, was built between 1616 and 1629 and has long been associated with imprisonment, punishment and ghostlore. Modern accounts note its appearance in paranormal television and its reputation as one of Aberdeen’s haunted buildings.[Wikipedia]WikipediaThe Tolbooth, AberdeenThe Tolbooth, Aberdeen
The darker and better-documented story is the Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire witch panic of 1597. The University of Aberdeen has described the episode as part of a wider Scottish witch-hunting crisis shaped by James VI’s fear of witchcraft, and Professor Bill Naphy notes that 24 people labelled as “witches” were executed in Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire during the panic. The accusations spread through family and community networks, including from Aberdeen towards places such as Lumphanan.[The University of Aberdeen]abdn.ac.ukOpen source on abdn.ac.uk.
The Survey of Scottish Witchcraft, a University of Edinburgh resource covering known Scottish witchcraft accusations from 1563 to 1736, gives the broader context: early modern witch-hunting was a legal and social phenomenon, not evidence that the accused had supernatural powers. Historic Environment Scotland similarly stresses that many accused people were strangled and then burned, and that the experience of interrogation, imprisonment and execution was brutal even when later ghost stories soften it into “witch” atmosphere.[witches.hca.ed.ac.uk]witches.hca.ed.ac.ukOpen source on ed.ac.uk.
For haunted-history readers, this distinction matters. Witch-trial sites can feel eerie, but the most responsible interpretation is memorial rather than sensational. Aberdeen’s witch panic belongs to the history of fear, coercion, misogyny, local grudges and state power; any ghostly retellings should begin from the fact that real people were accused, imprisoned and killed.
Boundary ghosts: Crathes and Dunnottar on the modern route
Two of the north-east’s most popular ghost stories often appear under “Aberdeenshire” because modern visitor geography uses the wider Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire region. Strictly by historic county, however, both Crathes Castle near Banchory and Dunnottar Castle near Stonehaven belong with Kincardineshire. They still deserve a short boundary note because readers planning haunted trips from Aberdeen will meet them almost immediately.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.
Crathes Castle is famous for its Green Lady. The National Trust for Scotland says the Green Lady’s Room is named after a young woman reportedly seen by the fireplace in a green dress, cradling an infant; when the castle was renovated in the 1800s, the bones of a child were found beneath the hearthstone. The Trust also states that the Burnett family held the castle for more than 350 years and that Alexander Burnett built the 16th-century tower house, which helps explain why the ghost is usually framed as a house legend rather than a free-floating apparition.[National Trust for Scotland]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Dunnottar Castle’s haunting is usually attached to a Green Lady seen in the brewery or bakery area, sometimes said to be searching for lost children. The site’s historical weight comes from firmer ground: Dunnottar was a major fortified headland, associated with the hiding of the Honours of Scotland from Cromwell’s forces, and with the Whigs’ Vault, where 167 Covenanters were confined in 1685 and a number died in terrible conditions. The ghost story is folkloric; the imprisonment is documented history.[aberdeenshire.gov.uk]her.aberdeenshire.gov.ukOpen source on aberdeenshire.gov.uk.
How credible are the stories?
The most credible thing about Aberdeenshire’s hauntings is not that they prove ghosts exist. It is that they preserve what communities found emotionally important: unjust marriages, lost children, inheritance pressure, religious violence, imprisonment, executions and the uneasy glamour of castles.
A useful way to read the county’s haunted places is to separate three kinds of evidence:
- Documented history behind the setting. Fyvie’s medieval and early modern ownership, Drum’s Irvine family history, Craigievar’s Forbes occupation, Peterhead Prison’s modern penal history and Aberdeen’s witch-trial records all have independent historical support.[nts.org.uk]nts.org.ukmasterplan for new chapter in fyvies 800 year storymasterplan for new chapter in fyvies 800 year story
- Folklore attached to a named site. Green Ladies, ghostly trumpeters, haunted rooms, spectral children and bridal apparitions are traditions linked to particular buildings or landscapes, but they usually depend on retelling rather than verifiable witness chains.[nts.org.uk]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
- Modern paranormal tourism. Ghost hunts at Peterhead Prison and seasonal castle events invite visitors to experience places after dark, but the equipment and format belong to entertainment and participatory folklore more than to settled evidence.[Peterhead Prison]peterheadprison.comOpen source on peterheadprison.com.
That does not make the stories worthless. It makes them cultural evidence. A cold room, a smell of roses, a staircase panelled over after a murder tale, a child heard laughing in a tower house, or a trumpeter remembered through a ballad: these are ways of turning uncomfortable history into stories that can be visited, repeated and argued over.
Why Aberdeenshire became such a strong haunted landscape
Aberdeenshire’s haunted reputation comes from the meeting of three forces. First, the county has an unusually dense castle landscape, and castles invite ghost stories because they concentrate family history, hierarchy, violence and secrecy inside memorable architecture. Fyvie, Drum, Craigievar, Castle Fraser, Delgatie and Braemar all work as story-machines: rooms, stairs, towers and portraits give folklore somewhere to stand.[nts.org.uk]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Second, the north-east has strong oral and song traditions. The Andrew Lammie and Mill o’ Tifty’s Annie material shows how a local tragedy, whether fully historical or partly reshaped, could survive through ballad performance and later become ghostlore. In that sense, Aberdeenshire’s hauntings are not only seen; they are sung, remembered and localised.[Wikipedia]WikipediaAndrew LammieAndrew Lammie
Third, the county’s real history contains enough fear without invention. The 1597 witch panic, the imprisonment culture of Aberdeen’s Tolbooth and Peterhead Prison, and the religious trauma echoed by nearby Dunnottar all show how places become haunted in public memory when official records meet unresolved feeling. The best Aberdeenshire ghost stories therefore work on two levels: they give readers the shiver of an apparition, and they point back towards the human history that made the apparition plausible to imagine.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Where Aberdeenshire's Ghost Stories Still Gather. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Mammoth Book of Haunted House Stories
First published 2000. Subjects: ghost stories, haunted house stories, ghost story anthology, Ghost stories.
The Penguin Book of Ghost Stories
First published 2010. Subjects: Fiction, Literature, Ghost stories, English Ghost stories, English fiction.
Scottish Ghost Stories
First published 1911. Subjects: Folklore, Ghosts, Scottish Ghost stories.
Endnotes
1.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Aberdeenshire (historic)
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeenshire_%28historic%29
2.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeenshire
3.
Source: en.wikisource.org
Link:https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Old_Scottish_ballad_of_Andrew_Lammie%2C_or%2C_Mill_of_Tifty%27s_Annie
4.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Andrew Lammie
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Lammie
5.
Source: goblinshead.co.uk
Link:https://www.goblinshead.co.uk/bogles/fyvie/
6.
Source: great-castles.com
Link:https://great-castles.com/craigievarghost.html
7.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Braemar Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braemar_Castle
8.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: The Tolbooth, Aberdeen
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tolbooth%2C_Aberdeen
9.
Source: witches.hca.ed.ac.uk
Link:https://witches.hca.ed.ac.uk/
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banchory
11.
Source: her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk
Link:https://her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/Monument/MAB42414/
12.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Fyvie Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fyvie_Castle
13.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Dunnottar Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunnottar_Castle
14.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Craigievar Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craigievar_Castle
15.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Aberdeen witch trials of 1596–1597
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberdeen_witch_trials_of_1596%E2%80%931597
16.
Source: her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk
Link:https://her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/Monument/MAB19195
17.
Source: her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk
Link:https://her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/Event/EAB8745
18.
Source: her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk
Link:https://her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/Monument/MAB41489/
19.
Source: aberdeenshire.gov.uk
Title: historical maps of aberdeenshire
Link:https://www.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/leisure-sport-and-culture/archaeology/historical-maps/historical-maps-of-aberdeenshire/
20.
Source: great-castles.com
Link:https://great-castles.com/fyvieghost.html
21.
Source: great-castles.com
Link:https://great-castles.com/drumghost.html
22.
Source: witches.hca.ed.ac.uk
Link:https://witches.hca.ed.ac.uk/about/
23.
Source: scotlandspeople.gov.uk
Link:https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/content/banff-county
24.
Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
Link:https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/explore-the-collection/explore-by-time-period/early-modern/witchcraft/
25.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Aberdeenshire
26.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Kincardineshire
27.
Source: visitabdn.com
Link:https://visitabdn.com/blog/ghost-stories-19-haunted-places-in-aberdeen-and-aberdeenshire
28.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/fyvie-castle
29.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: masterplan for new chapter in fyvies 800 year story
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/masterplan-for-new-chapter-in-fyvies-800-year-story
30.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/things-to-do/north-east-castle-trail
31.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/ghosts-of-the-trust
32.
Source: mainlynorfolk.info
Link:https://mainlynorfolk.info/folk/songs/andrewlammie.html
33.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/scottish-ghost-stories-witches-murder-and-folklore-part-2
34.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/drum-castle
35.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/craigievar
36.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: history of the castle
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/craigievar/history-of-the-castle
37.
Source: delgatiecastle.com
Link:https://delgatiecastle.com/
38.
Source: undiscoveredscotland.co.uk
Link:https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/turriff/delgatiecastle/index.html
39.
Source: braemarcastle.co.uk
Link:https://braemarcastle.co.uk/
40.
Source: hiddenscotland.com
Link:https://hiddenscotland.com/articles/aberdeenshire%27s-most-haunted
41.
Source: visitabdn.com
Title: peterhead prison museum
Link:https://visitabdn.com/businesses/peterhead-prison-museum
42.
Source: peterheadprison.com
Link:https://www.peterheadprison.com/events/ghost-hunting-behind-bars/
43.
Source: peterheadprison.com
Link:https://www.peterheadprison.com/2025/05/08/ghost-hunts-near-me-experience-real-paranormal-activity-at-peterhead-prison-museum/
44.
Source: peterheadprison.com
Link:https://www.peterheadprison.com/whats-on/events/
45.
Source: abdn.ac.uk
Link:https://www.abdn.ac.uk/news/23717/
46.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/crathes-castle
47.
Source: abdn.ac.uk
Link:https://www.abdn.ac.uk/elphinstone/resources/bbaf/category/3/419/
48.
Source: scottishtours.co.uk
Link:https://www.scottishtours.co.uk/blog/most-haunted-castles-in-scotland/
49.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: the great eight at craigievar castle
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/the-great-eight-at-craigievar-castle
50.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/crathes-castle/events/1421341323159
51.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/castle-fraser
52.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/scottish-ghost-stories-witches-murder-and-folklore
53.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/fyvie-castle/planning-your-visit
54.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/crathes-castle/highlights/castle
55.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/scary-tales-from-our-properties
56.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: autumn highlights in scotland
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/autumn-highlights-in-scotland
57.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/love-scotland-podcast-season-4
58.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/love-scotland-podcast-season-5
59.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: conservation of crathes castles armorial panels
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/conservation-of-crathes-castles-armorial-panels
60.
Source: nts.org.uk
Title: craigievar castle
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/venue-hire/craigievar-castle
61.
Source: trove.scot
Link:https://www.trove.scot/place/19091
62.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/PeterheadPrisonMuseum/posts/-when-the-lights-go-out-peterhead-prison-isnt-the-sameby-day-its-a-museum-full-o/824014146817983/
63.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/RealCounties/photos/the-county-of-aberdeen-is-a-shire-in-the-highlands-of-scotlandit-borders-five-ot/614063817543856/
64.
Source: doriccolumns.wordpress.com
Link:https://doriccolumns.wordpress.com/city-streets/1841-street-directory/hangmans-brae/witches/
65.
Source: wildernessscotland.com
Title: Dunnottar Castle
Link:https://www.wildernessscotland.com/blog/dunnottar-castle/
66.
Source: heritagexplore.com
Title: Dunnottar Castle
Link:https://www.heritagexplore.com/houses/dunnottar-castle/
67.
Source: thecastlesofscotland.co.uk
Link:https://www.thecastlesofscotland.co.uk/the-best-castles/grand-castles/craigievar-castle/
68.
Source: hiddenscotland.com
Link:https://hiddenscotland.com/journal/the-two-lady-ghosts-of-crathes-castle
69.
Source: hiddenscotland.com
Link:https://hiddenscotland.com/journal/craigievar-castles-naked-ghost
70.
Source: visionofbritain.org.uk
Link:https://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/17192
71.
Source: scottish-paranormal.co.uk
Link:https://www.scottish-paranormal.co.uk/event-info/peterhead-prison-paranormal-investigation
72.
Source: mudcat.org
Title: Andrew Lammie
Link:https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=2140
73.
Source: icysedgwick.com
Title: green lady
Link:https://www.icysedgwick.com/green-lady/
Additional References
74.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Ghosts of Fyvie Castle: Haunted History and Mysterious Phenomena
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beytI9BB7As
Source snippet
most haunted experence (peterhead prison)...
75.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Ghosts of The Tolbooth
Link:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTy34i9asis
Source snippet
Haunted places aberdeenshire ghosts castles M.H - Craigievar Castle Part 1 MostHauntedVideos...
76.
Source: visitscotland.com
Link:https://www.visitscotland.com/things-to-do/attractions/castles/haunted
77.
Source: reddit.com
Link:https://www.reddit.com/r/Ghosts/comments/18drv7a/a_closer_look_at_the_green_of_crathes_castle/
78.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/NationalTrustforScotland/posts/a-new-chapter-starts-in-the-story-of-fyvie-castle-garden-estate-nts-in-aberdeens/1155924749896606/
79.
Source: scotsmagazine.com
Link:https://www.scotsmagazine.com/articles/secret-aberdeen-w/
80.
Source: oursocalledlife.co.uk
Link:https://www.oursocalledlife.co.uk/travel/scotland/aberdeen-tolbooth-museum/
81.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/NationalTrustforScotland/posts/are-these-the-most-haunted-places-in-our-care-crathes-castle-the-green-lady-is-o/1246451790843901/
82.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/BraemarMedia/posts/beautiful-braemar-castle-in-the-cairngorms-national-park-scotland-lit-up-in-gree/1403669964450964/
83.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/andythehighlander/posts/behind-the-pink-walls-of-craigievar-castle-a-lone-fiddler-played-his-last-tune-a/1316346346529001/
Topic Tree
Follow this branch
Related pages 91
- Haunted Clackmannanshire
- Haunted Antrim
- Haunted Armagh
- Haunted Durham
- Haunted Londonderry
- +86 more in sidebar



