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Introduction
Cumberland’s haunted reputation is strongest where its older history is most visible: Carlisle’s border fortress, Muncaster’s rooms and parkland at Ravenglass, and Croglin’s strange vampire tale on the eastern fellside. These are not proven supernatural events, but layered local traditions: castle ghosts attached to war and imprisonment, a White Lady story tied to a reported murder, and a Victorian revenant narrative that has been repeatedly questioned as folklore. The historic county matters because many sources now say “Cumbria”, yet the older stories belong to places that lay within Cumberland before the 1974 local-government changes. Cumbria Archives notes that Cumbria County Council succeeded Westmorland and Cumberland on 1 April 1974, and that it was replaced in 2023 by Cumberland Council and Westmorland & Furness Council; those modern authorities do not erase the older county setting of the legends.[cumbriaarchives.org.uk]cumbriaarchives.org.ukCounty CouncilsCounty Councils

Where haunted Cumberland sits on the map
Historic Cumberland covered England’s far north-west: Carlisle and the Solway, the western Lake District coast, parts of the high fells, and the Pennine edge towards places such as Croglin. The Wikishire county entry places Cumberland between the Irish Sea and Solway to the west and north, the Pennines and Lakeland fells to the east and south, with borders touching Westmorland, Lancashire, Northumberland, County Durham, Dumfriesshire and Roxburghshire.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk.
That matters for haunted-history readers because “Cumberland” and “Cumbria” are often used interchangeably in modern articles, hotel pages and ghost-tour publicity. A Muncaster Castle story may be labelled “Cumbria” today, but Ravenglass and Muncaster sit within the historic Cumberland frame used for this project. Carlisle Castle is now managed and described through present-day visitor bodies, but its ghost stories are rooted in Cumberland’s old role as a military borderland.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukcarlisle castlecarlisle castle
The project’s map frame also fits the wider historic-counties approach. Wikimedia Commons hosts a British Isles historic-counties SVG set that includes an “England Historic Counties Cumberland” map among the linked county locator files, while Wikishire’s own map service says its maps conform to the Historic Counties Standard.[Wikimedia Commons]commons.wikimedia.orgOpen source on wikimedia.org.
Carlisle Castle: why a border fortress gathers ghost stories
Carlisle Castle is the obvious centrepiece of haunted Cumberland. English Heritage describes it as the principal fortress on England’s north-western border with Scotland for 500 years, until the crowns were united in 1603, and says it has endured more sieges than any other castle in England. Its official visitor page also notes seven Scottish sieges between 1174 and 1461, later artillery adaptation, and the imprisonment of Mary Queen of Scots in 1568.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
The best-known ghostly material around Carlisle Castle tends to cluster around three themes: soldiers, imprisoned women, and the anxiety of a garrisoned place. English Heritage’s own ghost-story feature treats Carlisle as a place where ghost sightings are “unsurprisingly commonplace” in popular tradition, and singles out a supposed apparition of King Stephen, reportedly seen by a soldier in the 1840s and blamed in the story for missing military kit and a mood of dread among troops.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
Carlisle’s haunted reputation is also helped by the castle’s real historical texture. Mary Queen of Scots was escorted there in May 1568 after fleeing Scotland, beginning what English Heritage describes as almost 19 years of captivity before her execution in 1587. The castle also sits in a city associated with Border Reivers, sieges, Jacobite conflict and military occupation, giving later ghost tales a ready-made emotional landscape of confinement, fear and watchfulness.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
The “Scottish Lady” or “Lady in White” tradition is more folkloric. Local ghost-writing commonly tells of a woman walled up or discovered as a skeleton in the castle, but versions vary, and they are not as strongly anchored in official historical records as the castle’s documented military and royal history. The more cautious reading is that the White Lady motif gives a human face to the castle’s long association with imprisonment, rather than providing a reliable account of a named event.[Cumbria Guide]cumbriaguide.co.ukCumbria Guide Bricked up Alive: The Ghost of Carlisle CastleCumbria Guide Bricked up Alive: The Ghost of Carlisle Castle
Muncaster Castle: Tom Fool, the Tapestry Room and the White Lady
Muncaster Castle, near Ravenglass, is Cumberland’s most marketable haunted house. The castle itself promotes late-evening “ghost sit” experiences in the Tapestry Room and introduces visitors to named figures including Tom Fool, the White Lady, Maggie the Crying Child and a woman dressed in black. It presents the experience as an encounter with “tales and legends”, which is the right frame: the castle trades on atmosphere while still leaving belief to the visitor.[Muncaster Castle]muncaster.co.ukOpen source on muncaster.co.uk.
The Tapestry Room is the heart of the modern haunting. Accounts associated with Muncaster describe crying children, a woman singing, footsteps, a shadowy or dark figure, and unnerving disturbances around the room. Muncaster’s own ghost-sit page says regular scientific research has taken place since 1992 and that some reported occurrences remain unexplained, though that claim should be read as part of the castle’s visitor offer rather than proof of ghosts.[Muncaster Castle]muncaster.co.ukOpen source on muncaster.co.uk.
Tom Fool gives the haunting a sharper local personality. Muncaster’s castle page says the house maintains the tradition of an official Fool and identifies Thomas Skelton, or Tom the Fool, as the best-known fool in Muncaster’s history, active in the mid-16th century. Later ghost lore turns him into a trickster presence, sometimes blamed for malicious jokes, unease or strange happenings around the castle.[Muncaster Castle]muncaster.co.ukOpen source on muncaster.co.uk.
The White Lady, also called the Muncaster Boggle, is usually linked to Mary Bragg. Muncaster’s own castle page says she was supposedly a young girl murdered in the early 1800s on the road near the Main Gate; secondary haunted-place accounts expand this into a love-rivalry murder story involving Ravenglass and a footman at the castle. The central caution is that the murder tradition is much more stable as local legend than as fully documented criminal history.[Muncaster Castle]muncaster.co.ukOpen source on muncaster.co.uk.
Muncaster’s setting strengthens the stories. Historic England’s park-and-garden listing describes the castle as surrounded by parkland, with Deer Park, Haggs Park and Hirst Park forming part of a long-managed landscape overlooking Ravenglass and the Esk. A ghost seen on a lonely road, a weeping child heard in an old room, or a jester lingering in a family seat all become more memorable because the place still has the physical depth to hold them.[Historic England]historicengland.org.uklist entrylist entry
Croglin: Cumberland’s vampire that may be more literature than local record
The Croglin Vampire is the strangest legend in Cumberland’s haunted catalogue. It is usually located around Croglin, on the eastern side of the historic county, and concerns a creature that allegedly entered a young woman’s bedroom at night, bit her throat, returned later, and was finally tracked to a vault and destroyed. The tale is famous because England has relatively few vampire traditions compared with its many ghosts, boggarts and white ladies.[Wikipedia]WikipediaCroglin GrangeCroglin Grange
Its source trail is also a warning sign. The best-known version first appeared in Augustus Hare’s multi-volume autobiography, The Story of My Life, published around the turn of the twentieth century, where Hare claimed to have heard the story from Captain Fisher. Later writers, including Montague Summers, folded it into vampire literature, while sceptical commentators pointed out similarities with Gothic fiction such as Varney the Vampire.[Wikipedia]WikipediaCroglin GrangeCroglin Grange
The geography has been challenged too. Accounts often refer to “Croglin Grange”, but later investigators found problems matching Hare’s description to an actual building and considered alternatives such as Croglin High Hall or Croglin Low Hall. The Cumbria County History Trust confirms Croglin as an ancient parish in Leath ward, Cumberland, and records Croglin’s small rural setting, landownership and population history, but that sort of parish evidence supports the location rather than the vampire event itself.[Cumbria County History Trust]cumbriacountyhistory.org.ukOpen source on cumbriacountyhistory.org.uk.
For readers, the most useful view is that the Croglin Vampire is a Cumberland legend with a strong literary afterlife, not a well-attested case. Its power comes from the collision of local place names, Victorian storytelling, Gothic vampire motifs and the eerie plausibility of a remote churchyard tale. It belongs on a haunted Cumberland page precisely because it shows how folklore can become famous even when the evidence beneath it is unstable.[David Castleton Blog - The Serpent's Pen]davidcastleton.netDavid Castleton BlogDavid Castleton Blog
Why Cumberland’s ghosts feel different from generic haunted-house lists
Cumberland’s haunted stories are shaped by borderland memory. Carlisle Castle’s apparitions are not just “a castle has ghosts”; they grow out of a fortress that really did hold prisoners, withstand sieges and manage a dangerous frontier. Muncaster’s tales do not float free of place either: they attach themselves to a family seat, named servants, roadways, a nursery-like room and a long tourist tradition. Croglin’s vampire, meanwhile, feels less like a modern paranormal case and more like a Victorian fireside story that borrowed the authority of a real parish.[english-heritage.org.uk]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
This is why Cumberland is best read as a haunted landscape rather than a list of isolated ghost spots. The county’s old roads, castles, estuaries, fell villages and fortified houses give the stories their structure. A White Lady on a road near Muncaster makes sense in a landscape of estate gates and wooded approaches; a nervous soldier at Carlisle belongs to a castle still remembered for garrisons and conflict; a vampire at Croglin depends on remoteness, churchyard imagery and the uncertainty of old family storytelling.[historicengland.org.uk]historicengland.org.uklist entrylist entry
There is also a useful contrast between official heritage and haunted tourism. English Heritage is strongest for the documented history of Carlisle Castle, while Muncaster’s own visitor material preserves and markets living ghost traditions. Local-history projects such as the Cumbria County History Trust help pin legends to real parish geography. Haunted-place websites can be useful for seeing how stories circulate, but they need to be read with more caution than official listings, archives or clearly sourced historical research.[english-heritage.org.uk]english-heritage.org.ukcarlisle castlecarlisle castle
How credible are the haunted accounts?
Cumberland’s ghost stories sit on a spectrum. At one end are well-documented historic places with later supernatural traditions attached: Carlisle Castle unquestionably has a long military and prison history, but that does not verify the apparitions. At the other end is Croglin, where the vampire tale’s literary route, shifting details and geographical problems make it much more obviously folkloric. Muncaster sits between the two: the building, family traditions and visitor reports are substantial, while the supernatural interpretation remains unproven.[english-heritage.org.uk]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
There are plausible non-supernatural reasons why these places generate experiences. Old buildings produce noises through draughts, timbers, plumbing, temperature shifts and expectation. Dark rooms, prior knowledge and suggestive settings can alter how people interpret ambiguous sights and sounds. A peer-reviewed psychology paper indexed by PubMed notes that alleged hauntings often involve reports such as apparitions, temperature changes and a sensed presence, and that researchers have investigated psychological mechanisms behind such experiences.[PubMed]pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.govPub Med An investigation into alleged 'hauntingsPub Med An investigation into alleged 'hauntings
Muncaster is especially interesting because it has attracted environmental explanations as well as ghost-hunt publicity. A published research note on a magnetic investigation of the Tapestry Room reported that the study took place at Muncaster Castle in West Cumbria in October 2004 and examined magnetic conditions around the room’s bed. Popular summaries of that work have suggested that unusual local magnetic fields may be relevant to some reported sensations, though such findings do not prove or disprove every individual story.[EJP Wyrdwise]ejp.wyrdwise.comOpen source on wyrdwise.com.
The fair conclusion is not that Cumberland is “proved haunted”, but that its haunted traditions are culturally strong. They preserve anxieties about imprisonment, lonely roads, family houses, servants, children, border violence and rural isolation. For a visitor or reader, the value lies in seeing how the stories cling to real places — and in knowing where the history ends and folklore begins.
Best places to start with haunted Cumberland
For a first haunted-history route through Cumberland, start with Carlisle Castle. It gives the clearest link between documented history and later ghost tradition: a medieval fortress, a royal prisoner, repeated sieges, soldiers, and a city shaped by the Anglo-Scottish border. The ghost stories are not the strongest evidence in themselves, but the setting explains why they took hold.[English Heritage]english-heritage.org.ukOpen source on english-heritage.org.uk.
Muncaster Castle is the strongest stop for atmosphere and named hauntings. The Tapestry Room, Tom Fool, Maggie the Crying Child and the White Lady give it a unusually rich cast of recurring figures, and the castle actively preserves those stories through tours and ghost sits. It is also the place where haunted tourism, family legend and attempts at environmental investigation most clearly overlap.[Muncaster Castle]muncaster.co.ukOpen source on muncaster.co.uk.
Croglin is the best stop for readers who enjoy doubtful, literary and folkloric cases. The vampire story is not as secure as the castle traditions, but it is one of Cumberland’s most distinctive supernatural legends. Its value is not that it proves a monster stalked the fellside, but that it shows how a rural Cumberland setting could be turned into one of England’s most memorable vampire tales.[Spooky Isles]spookyisles.comthe vampire of croglin grangethe vampire of croglin grange
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Where Cumberland Keeps Its Ghost Stories. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Penguin Guide to the Supernatural
Covers English ghost traditions including the kind of folklore found across Cumberland.
Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country
Explores haunted landscapes and folklore across England.
The Lore of the Land
Explains the legends and traditions that underpin Cumberland ghost stories.
Endnotes
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Additional References
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