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What counts as “Surrey” in haunted history?
For this project, Surrey is best understood as the historic county, not only the present administrative county. That matters because Surrey’s old northern edge once reached the Thames and included areas now absorbed into London. Surrey History Centre notes that until 1889 the ancient county extended north to the Thames and east to Rotherhithe; Lambeth, Southwark and Wandsworth were removed when the County of London was created in 1889, and further places including Kingston, Merton, Richmond, Sutton and an expanded Croydon moved into Greater London in 1965.[Surrey County Council]surreycc.gov.ukadministrative boundariesadministrative boundaries

This creates a practical rule for haunted Surrey: some stories now marketed as “London” are still relevant to Surrey’s older folklore map, while some nearby royal stories are better treated as neighbouring context. Ham House at Petersham, for example, sits in today’s London Borough of Richmond upon Thames but belongs naturally to historic Surrey’s Thames-side haunted landscape. Hampton Court Palace, by contrast, is frequently bundled into Surrey-area ghost itineraries because of its proximity to East Molesey and the Surrey bank of the Thames, but the palace itself stands on the north bank at Hampton, historically Middlesex.[Surrey County Council]surreycc.gov.ukadministrative boundariesadministrative boundaries
The old county is also physically well suited to eerie storytelling. Surrey is cut by the North Downs, crossed by ancient routes such as the Pilgrims’ Way and the Hog’s Back, and edged by river corridors along the Thames, Wey and Mole. Wikishire’s county summary describes Surrey’s northern border as the Thames, its southern border as Sussex in the hills, and the North Downs as an east-west chalk ridge dividing the county.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk. Those ridges, waters and roads help explain why so many local stories are not simply “haunted buildings”, but landscape legends.
Which Surrey hauntings are most famous?
The most memorable Surrey ghost stories fall into a few recognisable types. Some are attached to documented historic buildings; others survive because they are good stories told repeatedly in local press, ghost walks and folklore collections. The Paranormal Database, a long-running archive of UK Fortean and ghost reports, lists dozens of Surrey entries, ranging from castle apparitions and haunted roads to railway figures and religious ruins.[Paranormal Database]paranormaldatabase.comOpen source on paranormaldatabase.com. The History Press’s Haunted Surrey also signals the county’s breadth, mentioning ghostly monks at Newark Priory, spirit riders at the Hog’s Back, the Silent Pool woman, Kenley railway apparitions and Field Marshal Ligonier at Cobham.[The History Press]thehistorypress.co.ukOpen source on thehistorypress.co.uk.
The strongest public-facing examples are not necessarily the “most believable”. They are the ones where the place, story and historical setting reinforce each other:
Silent Pool, near Shere: a spring-fed lake with a 19th-century literary legend that later hardened into local folklore.
A3 Burpham ghost crash: a modern roadside mystery in which reports of a crash led police to an older, hidden fatal wreck.
Guildford Castle: a Norman royal site whose ruins and town-centre setting make it a natural focus for ghost walks.
Newark Priory: a ruined Augustinian priory by the River Wey, associated in ghost literature with monk apparitions.
The Hog’s Back: a high chalk road where phantom-carriage and roadside-figure stories fit a long tradition of haunted routes.
Ham House: a historic Surrey house now in London, widely promoted for its atmosphere and ghost-tour reputation.
Silent Pool: why did a spring become Surrey’s signature water ghost?
Silent Pool lies near Albury and Shere at the foot of the North Downs, around four miles east of Guildford. It is a spring-fed lake whose clear, blue-green water and enclosed trees give it the kind of stillness that invites legend. Geological accounts describe it as a chalk spring-fed pool connected with Sherbourne Pond; the pool’s appearance is partly natural, and its water colour is characteristic of chalk springs.[Wikipedia]WikipediaSilent PoolSilent Pool
The famous haunting is the story of a young woman, often called Emma, who is said to have drowned after being frightened into deep water by King John or another nobleman while bathing. Later versions say her ghost may be seen at midnight, sometimes as a pale or naked figure over the water. The Paranormal Database records the Shere Silent Pool haunting as “Emma”, while local and popular accounts repeat the woodcutter’s daughter motif.[Paranormal Database]paranormaldatabase.comParanormal Database Surrey Ghosts, Folklore and Forteana Emma. Location: ShereParanormal Database Surrey Ghosts, Folklore and Forteana Emma. Location: Shere
The important point is that this is not a medieval incident securely preserved from King John’s reign. A strong explanation is literary. The Guildford Dragon traces the popular form of the story to Martin Farquhar Tupper’s 1858 romance Stephan Langton; or, The Days of King John, arguing that Tupper’s fanciful drowning tale gradually escaped its bookish origin and began to be repeated as if it were local fact.[Guildford Dragon]guildford-dragon.comtuppers tale wove magna carta fact with the myth of the silent pooltuppers tale wove magna carta fact with the myth of the silent pool That makes Silent Pool especially valuable as folklore: it shows how a Victorian literary tale, a beautiful landscape and a villainous royal memory could combine into a “traditional” ghost story.
The pool gained a second layer of mystery in 1926, when Agatha Christie’s abandoned car was found near Newlands Corner during her famous disappearance. That episode is not a ghost story in itself, but it strengthened the area’s association with disappearance, water, fear and public speculation.[a3traveller.com]a3traveller.comAgatha Christie & the Mystery of Surrey's Silent Pool!Agatha Christie & the Mystery of Surrey's Silent Pool! Silent Pool is therefore less a simple haunting than a case study in how place-atmosphere works: a real spring, a literary legend, a royal villain, tourist postcards, and a modern mystery all feeding the same eerie reputation.
The A3 ghost crash: modern folklore on a busy road
Surrey’s most striking modern ghost-road story is the A3 Burpham “ghost crash”. In December 2002, motorists reported seeing a car leave the A3 near Burpham. Police found no fresh crash at first, but a wider search discovered a Vauxhall Astra hidden in undergrowth near the reported location, with human remains inside or nearby. Later accounts state that the crash had happened months earlier, in July 2002, and that the car had lain undiscovered.[haunted-britain.com]haunted-britain.comHaunted SurreyHaunted Surrey
This story became famous because it has the structure of a supernatural replay: witnesses apparently saw a crash, but the physical crash was old. Paranormal retellings interpret the report as a ghostly echo of the fatal accident. A more cautious reading is that the witness report, the search area, darkness, road conditions and the presence of an already hidden wreck combined into a powerful coincidence. Even sceptical explanations do not make the story unimportant; they explain why it became memorable. It is a ghost story born from modern infrastructure, police procedure and the anxiety of fast roads.
The A3 case also shows the difference between a ghost legend and a documented haunting. The discovery of an old wreck is a reported event; the idea that witnesses saw a supernatural replay is an interpretation. The legend persists because it joins a real death, a precise place and an unresolved perceptual question: what did the motorists actually see?
Guildford: castle ruins, town ghosts and the theatre of local memory
Guildford is one of Surrey’s natural ghost-story centres because it combines medieval remains, old streets, a county-town identity and an established ghost-walk culture. Guildford Castle is thought to have been built shortly after the Norman invasion of 1066; Historic England describes the scheduled monument as including a motte, bailey, remains of keep buildings, curtain wall, gateway and ruined residence.[Historic England]historicengland.org.ukHistoric England Guildford Castle, Non Civil ParishHistoric England Guildford Castle, Non Civil Parish Guildford Borough Council adds that the castle was used as a royal palace, prison and private residence before the grounds opened as public gardens in 1888.[Guildford Borough Council]guildford.gov.ukOpen source on guildford.gov.uk.
That mixture — royal residence, prison, ruin and public garden — is ideal ghost-walk material. Local ghost-tour retellings commonly move between Guildford Castle, old streets and nearby road legends such as the A3 crash. The stories are often less well evidenced than the buildings themselves, but they help visitors read the town as layered: Norman conquest below the surface, Tudor and Stuart history in the streets, Victorian civic improvement in the gardens, and modern folklore on the roads.[Burpham Pages]burpham-pages.co.ukBurpham Pages Guildford ghosts & their storiesBurpham Pages Guildford ghosts & their stories
Guildford’s haunted value is therefore not one single apparition with a clean paper trail. It is the way a historic town becomes a stage. The castle gives the tour a visible anchor; the stories supply emotion, fear and memory. That is a common pattern in English urban haunting traditions, where the best-known ghost is not always the oldest claim but the one that makes a walkable route feel charged.
Newark Priory and Surrey’s ruined religious ghosts
Newark Priory, near Ripley and Pyrford on the River Wey, is one of Surrey’s strongest ruined-monastery settings. Historic England lists it as an Augustinian priory north of the River Wey, and the ruins are also Grade I listed.[Historic England]historicengland.org.ukOpen source on historicengland.org.uk. Exploring Surrey’s Past notes that excavation in 1928 greatly expanded understanding of the priory’s plan, including the nave and other parts of the monastic complex.[Exploring Surrey's Past]exploringsurreyspast.org.ukSHHER 462SHHER 462
Ghost literature associates Newark with spectral monks, a very common motif at ruined abbeys and priories. The History Press’s Haunted Surrey explicitly includes “ghostly monks at Newark Priory”, and the Paranormal Database records a “Monk” entry for Newark Vicarage and priory.[The History Press]thehistorypress.co.ukOpen source on thehistorypress.co.uk. These accounts should be treated as folklore rather than proof. Their power lies in the fit between story and setting: broken arches, river meadows, religious dissolution, private land glimpsed from public paths, and the sense of a community vanished but not quite gone.
The sceptical reading is straightforward. Ruins invite human shapes in poor light; monastic sites already carry expectations of cowled figures; and a remote riverside view encourages imaginative reconstruction. Yet that does not empty the story of meaning. The “ghostly monk” is a way of making the Dissolution and the loss of medieval religious life visible to ordinary visitors. Surrey’s priory ghosts are less about named individuals than about institutional memory: the dead house, the broken community, the rhythm of prayer imagined continuing after the building has failed.
Haunted roads: the Hog’s Back, Cobham and apparitions in transit
Surrey’s road ghosts are among its most distinctive traditions. The Hog’s Back, the chalk ridge carrying the A31 between Farnham and Guildford, is already dramatic without a ghost: high, narrow, exposed and historically important as a route across the county. Geographic summaries describe it as part of the North Downs, a long ridge with the A31 running along its spine.[Wikipedia]WikipediaHog's BackHog's Back
The best-known Hog’s Back story is a phantom horse-drawn box carriage. The Paranormal Database records a 2007 report in which a driver saw a carriage cross the road ahead in heavy rain, only to find no side road where it could have gone; the same entry also records a 1960s roadside figure in a white dress.[Paranormal Database]paranormaldatabase.comOpen source on paranormaldatabase.com. Local press retellings have kept the carriage story alive, usually emphasising the weather, the lantern and the impossibility of the crossing.[Alton Herald]altonherald.comAlton Herald Peeps into the Past: Lifting the casket on local ghostlyAlton Herald Peeps into the Past: Lifting the casket on local ghostly
Cobham offers a different kind of road apparition. One tradition links an A3 sighting in 1965 to Field Marshal Lord Ligonier, a major 18th-century soldier associated with Cobham. The Royal Dragoon Guards Museum describes Ligonier as a highly significant military commander of the Seven Years War period, while paranormal listings preserve the ghostly version as a glowing military figure seen near the town.[rdgmuseum.org.uk]rdgmuseum.org.ukOpen source on rdgmuseum.org.uk.
These road stories are hard to verify, but they are easy to understand. Roads are liminal places: people pass through them quickly, often at night, in rain or mist, with only a few seconds to interpret what they see. Surrey’s road ghosts turn that uncertainty into folklore. They are stories about perception under pressure, but also about older modes of travel — coaches, riders, military men — appearing for a moment inside the modern traffic system.
Country houses: where family history becomes ghost story
Surrey’s country-house hauntings tend to draw on the emotional weight of aristocratic rooms: portraits, staircases, closed chambers, servants’ passages, political intrigue and long family occupation. Loseley House near Guildford is a good example of the historic texture behind such tales. Historic England dates Loseley House to 1562–1569, built by Sir William More, with sandstone brought from Waverley Abbey.[Historic England]historicengland.org.ukHistoric England Loseley House, ArtingtonHistoric England Loseley House, Artington The house’s own material culture — royal visits, family archives, old rooms and inherited objects — gives it the atmosphere in which ghost stories easily grow.[Loseley Park]loseleypark.co.ukOpen source on loseleypark.co.uk.
Ham House is the most famous Surrey-linked country-house haunting, though it now sits within Greater London. The National Trust describes Ham House as a rare 17th-century house on the Thames at Richmond, created by the Duchess and Duke of Lauderdale and still internationally important for its paintings, furniture and textiles.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukOpen source on nationaltrust.org.uk. Its ghost reputation is widespread: popular accounts describe cold spots, footsteps, rose scents, figures, the Duchess on the stairs and even a ghostly dog, while the Ghost Club has recorded an investigation there.[TripSavvy]tripsavvy.comTrip Savvy England's Haunted Ham House: The Complete GuideTrip Savvy England's Haunted Ham House: The Complete Guide
Ham House demonstrates how a haunting can become part of a heritage property’s public identity without needing to be presented as fact. Visitors come for architecture and history; the ghost stories add mood and human drama. The best reading is not “is the Duchess really there?” but “why does this house invite that question?” Its preserved interiors, Restoration politics and Thames-side seclusion give the stories a setting that feels plausible in the imagination, even when the evidence remains anecdotal.
Hampton Court: famous, nearby, but not quite Surrey
Hampton Court Palace deserves mention because many Surrey haunting round-ups include it, and because visitors approaching from East Molesey may naturally think of it as part of the Surrey edge. Historically, however, the palace stands at Hampton on the north bank of the Thames, so it belongs more properly to Middlesex and Greater London than to Surrey’s historic county core.[Map of Early Modern London]mapoflondon.uvic.caMap of Early Modern London Hampton CourtMap of Early Modern London Hampton Court
Its ghost stories are still useful as comparison. Historic Royal Palaces discusses the famous Catherine Howard tradition: after her arrest, the story says Henry VIII’s fifth wife broke free and ran along what is now called the Haunted Gallery, crying for mercy before later being executed at the Tower of London in 1542.[Historic Royal Palaces]hrp.org.ukHistoric Royal Palaces Historic hauntings at Hampton Court PalaceHistoric Royal Palaces Historic hauntings at Hampton Court Palace This is one of England’s most recognisable royal hauntings because the architecture, Tudor crisis and named historical person align so neatly.
For a Surrey page, Hampton Court is best treated as a neighbouring royal ghost tradition rather than a central Surrey haunting. It shows what Surrey’s own stories often do on a smaller scale: attach a reported apparition to a place where history already feels unresolved.
How credible are Surrey’s ghost stories?
Surrey’s haunted traditions range from historically grounded folklore to very thin anecdote. A useful way to read them is to separate the layers:
The place is often solid. Guildford Castle, Newark Priory, Loseley House, Ham House and the Hog’s Back are real, documented sites with strong historical or geographical significance. Their heritage records are much stronger than the ghost claims attached to them.[historicengland.org.uk]historicengland.org.ukHistoric England Guildford Castle, Non Civil ParishHistoric England Guildford Castle, Non Civil Parish
The story may be much younger than it sounds. Silent Pool feels medieval because it invokes King John, but the popular narrative appears to owe much to a Victorian literary source and later tourist retelling.[Guildford Dragon]guildford-dragon.comtuppers tale wove magna carta fact with the myth of the silent pooltuppers tale wove magna carta fact with the myth of the silent pool
Modern cases can be documented without proving the supernatural interpretation. The A3 Burpham wreck is a reported police-related discovery; the “ghost crash” explanation is folklore built around what witnesses believed they saw.[haunted-britain.com]haunted-britain.comHaunted SurreyHaunted Surrey
Archives of ghost reports are valuable but uneven. Databases, ghost books and local articles preserve stories that might otherwise disappear, but they often depend on witness memory, older retellings or unattributed local tradition. They are best used as evidence that a story exists and has circulated, not as proof that an apparition occurred.[Paranormal Database]paranormaldatabase.comOpen source on paranormaldatabase.com.
This does not make the stories worthless. Folklore is not failed history; it is a record of what people have found frightening, meaningful or memorable. Surrey’s ghost stories preserve anxieties about dangerous travel, drowning, vanished religious communities, aristocratic power, Tudor violence and the uncanny feeling of old buildings still being occupied by the past.
Why Surrey’s haunted map works so well
Surrey’s haunted history works because it is geographically varied but emotionally coherent. The county has no single Dracula-like centre. Instead, its stories follow routes and thresholds: the A3, the A31, the Thames, the River Wey, the North Downs, the edge between London and countryside, the edge between public path and private ruin, the edge between documented history and remembered tale.
That is why the most effective Surrey ghost stories are usually place-led. Silent Pool begins with water. The Hog’s Back begins with a ridge road in bad weather. Newark Priory begins with ruins across the meadows. Ham House begins with a staircase and closed rooms. Guildford begins with a castle above the town. The haunting comes afterwards, as a way of explaining why these places feel charged.
Read carefully, Surrey’s ghost stories are not just spooky entertainment. They are a shadow map of the county: old Surrey before London took its northern parishes, rural Surrey crossed by dangerous roads, religious Surrey broken at the Reformation, aristocratic Surrey preserved in great houses, and modern Surrey where a motorway-speed glimpse can still become folklore.
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Endnotes
1.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Silent Pool
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Pool
2.
Source: guildford-dragon.com
Title: tuppers tale wove magna carta fact with the myth of the silent pool
Link:https://guildford-dragon.com/tuppers-tale-wove-magna-carta-fact-with-the-myth-of-the-silent-pool/
3.
Source: a3traveller.com
Title: Agatha Christie & the Mystery of Surrey’s Silent Pool!
Link:https://a3traveller.com/2014/07/11/agatha-christie-the-mystery-of-surreys-silent-pool/
4.
Source: haunted-britain.com
Title: Haunted Surrey
Link:https://www.haunted-britain.com/haunted-surrey.htm
5.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Burpham, Surrey
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burpham%2C_Surrey
6.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Hog’s Back
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hog%27s_Back
7.
Source: rdgmuseum.org.uk
Link:https://www.rdgmuseum.org.uk/history-and-research/famous-soldiers-of-the-royal-dragoon-guards/field-marshal-earl-ligonier/
8.
Source: tripsavvy.com
Title: Trip Savvy England’s Haunted Ham House: The Complete Guide
Link:https://www.tripsavvy.com/englands-haunted-ham-house-the-complete-guide-4150607
9.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Hampton Court Palace
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hampton_Court_Palace
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrey
11.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: List of Greater London boundary changes
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Greater_London_boundary_changes
12.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Newark Priory
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newark_Priory
13.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Loseley Park
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loseley_Park
14.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Guildford Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guildford_Castle
15.
Source: surreycc.gov.uk
Title: administrative boundaries
Link:https://www.surreycc.gov.uk/culture-and-leisure/history-centre/researchers/guides/administrative-boundaries
16.
Source: exploringsurreyspast.org.uk
Title: surrey boundaries
Link:https://www.exploringsurreyspast.org.uk/surrey-boundaries/
17.
Source: mapoflondon.uvic.ca
Title: Map of Early Modern London Hampton Court
Link:https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/HAMP1.htm
18.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Surrey
19.
Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/surrey/surrdata.php
20.
Source: thehistorypress.co.uk
Link:https://thehistorypress.co.uk/publication/haunted-surrey/
21.
Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Title: Paranormal Database Surrey Ghosts, Folklore and Forteana Emma. Location: Shere
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/surrey/surrdata.php?pageNum_paradata=5
22.
Source: historicengland.org.uk
Title: Historic England Guildford Castle, Non Civil Parish
Link:https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1012340
23.
Source: guildford.gov.uk
Link:https://www.guildford.gov.uk/article/25594/About-Guildford-Castle
24.
Source: burpham-pages.co.uk
Title: Burpham Pages Guildford ghosts & their stories
Link:https://burpham-pages.co.uk/guildford-ghosts-their-stories/
25.
Source: historicengland.org.uk
Link:https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1008303
26.
Source: historicengland.org.uk
Title: Historic England Ruins of Newark Priory, Ripley
Link:https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1377835
27.
Source: exploringsurreyspast.org.uk
Title: SHHER 462
Link:https://www.exploringsurreyspast.org.uk/collections/getrecord/SHHER_462
28.
Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Title: Paranormal Database The Paranormal Database
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/reports/horse.php
29.
Source: altonherald.com
Title: Alton Herald Peeps into the Past: Lifting the casket on local ghostly
Link:https://www.altonherald.com/news/nostalgia/peeps-into-the-past-lifting-the-casket-on-local-ghostly-encounters-733121
30.
Source: paranormaldatabase.com
Link:https://www.paranormaldatabase.com/surrey/surrdata.php?pageNum_paradata=1
31.
Source: historicengland.org.uk
Title: Historic England Loseley House, Artington
Link:https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1029573
32.
Source: loseleypark.co.uk
Link:https://loseleypark.co.uk/the-house/
33.
Source: surreycc.gov.uk
Title: loseley manuscripts
Link:https://www.surreycc.gov.uk/culture-and-leisure/history-centre/researchers/guides/loseley-manuscripts
34.
Source: nationaltrust.org.uk
Link:https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/london/ham-house-and-garden
35.
Source: hrp.org.uk
Title: Historic Royal Palaces Historic hauntings at Hampton Court Palace
Link:https://www.hrp.org.uk/hampton-court-palace/history-and-stories/historic-hauntings-at-hampton-court-palace/
36.
Source: hrp.org.uk
Link:https://www.hrp.org.uk/hampton-court-palace/whats-on/haunted-gallery-and-processional-route/
37.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Middlesex
38.
Source: facebook.com
Title: the a3 ghost crash
Link:https://www.facebook.com/zackdfilms/posts/the-a3-ghost-crash-/646866578296493/
39.
Source: legislation.gov.uk
Link:https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1993/1391/made
40.
Source: greyarro.ws
Title: Newark Priory
Link:https://greyarro.ws/t/newark-priory-added-to-historic-buildings-in-south-east/21838
41.
Source: libraries.havering.gov.uk
Link:https://libraries.havering.gov.uk/manifestations/69DC044957C3442E9D384C5DF4E074%3A902279
42.
Source: aubreyresearch.com
Title: Guildford Castle | Scheduled Monument
Link:https://www.aubreyresearch.com/monuments/guildford-castle-1012340
43.
Source: historyhit.com
Title: Loseley Park
Link:https://www.historyhit.com/locations/loseley-park/
44.
Source: guildfordsociety.org.uk
Title: HISTORIC ENGLAND Letter
Link:https://www.guildfordsociety.org.uk/HISTORIC_ENGLAND_Letter.pdf
45.
Source: libraries.hounslow.gov.uk
Link:https://libraries.hounslow.gov.uk/manifestations/69DC044957C3442E9D384C5DF4E074%3A2740494
46.
Source: historicengland.org.uk
Link:https://historicengland.org.uk/local/locations/guildford/
47.
Source: atlasobscura.com
Title: silent pool
Link:https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/silent-pool
48.
Source: surreycc.gov.uk
Title: Hidden Surrey
Link:https://www.surreycc.gov.uk/community/news/categories/hidden-surrey/hidden-surrey-cobham
49.
Source: walkswithrena.co.uk
Title: newark priory
Link:https://walkswithrena.co.uk/2022/04/04/newark-priory/
50.
Source: southwark.gov.uk
Title: historical maps
Link:https://www.southwark.gov.uk/culture-and-sport/maps-southwark/historical-maps
51.
Source: britainexpress.com
Link:https://www.britainexpress.com/counties/surrey/houses/loseley-park.htm
52.
Source: visitsoutheastengland.com
Title: Loseley Park
Link:https://www.visitsoutheastengland.com/things-to-do/loseley-park-p1250631
Additional References
53.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/260827821738102/posts/1470361317451407/
54.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/HRPalaces/posts/beware-the-ghosts-of-hampton-court-palace-have-returned-can-you-spot-them-glidin/1241183021371385/
55.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/p/C29WkzlsOJX/
56.
Source: ghostclub.org.uk
Link:https://www.ghostclub.org.uk/ham_house.html
57.
Source: reddit.com
Link:https://www.reddit.com/r/UnresolvedMysteries/comments/263ymk/ghostly_replay_of_a_car_crash_on_the_a3_surrey_uk/
58.
Source: hauntedhosts.com
Link:https://hauntedhosts.com/haunted-places/surrey/location/3635-ghostly-figure-on-a3
59.
Source: hauntedrooms.co.uk
Link:https://www.hauntedrooms.co.uk/ghosts-of-hampton-court-palace-london
60.
Source: mervynsmith.co.uk
Link:https://mervynsmith.co.uk/areas/ham-house/
61.
Source: historic-uk.com
Link:https://www.historic-uk.com/DestinationsUK/Ham-House-Richmond/
62.
Source: reddit.com
Link:https://www.reddit.com/r/Tudorhistory/comments/147j3b8/has_anyone_here_actually_saw_catherine_howards/
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