Why Does Anglesey Feel So Haunted?
Anglesey’s haunted reputation is strongest where its landscape already feels charged: the unfinished walls of Beaumaris Castle, the cells of Beaumaris Gaol, the storm-beaten rock of South Stack Lighthouse, the lonely ruins around Lligwy, and the prehistoric tombs whose names still carry giant-lore.
Page outline Jump by section
Introduction
In historic-county terms, Anglesey is a distinct island county off the north-west coast of Wales, separated from the mainland by the Menai Strait; the Wikishire gazetteer describes it as an island shire, while the current council area is the Isle of Anglesey, including Holy Island and smaller islets.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk. The project’s historic-county frame therefore fits unusually neatly here: Anglesey’s legends are mostly island-centred, even when they look across the Strait towards Gwynedd, Caernarfon, the North Wales coast railway, and wider Welsh folklore.

Why Anglesey Feels Haunted
Anglesey has the ingredients that make ghost stories endure. It has prehistoric tombs, medieval chapels, Edwardian conquest architecture, shipwreck coastlines, old gaols, estate houses, and a tourist culture that encourages eerie retellings. The island’s haunted places are rarely just “spooky buildings”. They are places where memory has a strong historical hook: imprisonment, execution, forced labour, military occupation, dangerous sea crossings, or ancient burial.
The island’s deeper folklore also matters. Anglesey has long been associated with early Welsh tradition and antiquarian interest; Henry Rowlands’s 1723 Mona Antiqua Restaurata helped fix the idea of the island as an ancient Druidic and archaeological landscape.[Wikipedia]WikipediaHenry RowlandsHenry Rowlands That does not mean every modern ghost story is ancient. Many are much newer. But it helps explain why a ruined chapel, a burial chamber, or a windswept lighthouse can feel like part of a much older supernatural geography.
There is also a useful caution. Online haunted-place lists often repeat claims without naming original witnesses, dates, or archival sources. The better-supported parts of Anglesey’s haunted history tend to be the historical setting — a gaol was built, a man was hanged, a lighthouse was automated, a tomb was excavated — while the apparition itself is usually preserved as local tradition, tourism copy, ghost-hunt testimony, or later folklore retelling. That makes the stories interesting, but not automatically evidential.
Beaumaris Gaol: The Clock Curse and the Prison Ghosts
Beaumaris Gaol is the island’s strongest haunted-place candidate because its ghost stories are attached to a clear historical event. The gaol was built in 1829 and later became a museum; its history includes harsh punishments, isolation cells, chains, whippings, and one of Britain’s last working penal treadmills.[Wikipedia]WikipediaBeaumaris GaolBeaumaris Gaol Modern visitors encounter the building as heritage, but the physical setting still carries the emotional weight of confinement.
The central legend concerns Richard Rowlands, executed in 1862 for the murder of his father-in-law. Visit Anglesey’s own tourism page says Rowlands protested his innocence and, according to local tradition, cursed the clock in the church tower opposite the scaffold; the story claims the clock has never kept the right time since.[Visit Anglesey]visitanglesey.co.ukbeaumaris gaolbeaumaris gaol Visit Wales repeats the same tradition in its Beaumaris Court entry, giving the tale official tourism visibility rather than leaving it as a fringe paranormal claim.[Visit Wales]visitwales.comllys biwmares beaumaris court 548191llys biwmares beaumaris court 548191
The curse matters because it gives the haunting a moral shape. This is not just “a ghost in a prison”. It is a story about disputed guilt, public execution, and a visible town landmark that appears to keep the memory active. Capital Punishment UK, a specialist death-penalty history site, records the two executions at Beaumaris and notes the tradition that Rowlands cursed the church clock from the gallows.[Capital Punishment UK]capitalpunishmentuk.organgleseys beaumaris gaolangleseys beaumaris gaol The Crime and Punishment Collections Network also identifies Beaumaris Gaol as a crime-history site and notes Rowlands’s execution and the clock tradition.[Crime & Punishment Network]capcollections.org.ukCrime & Punishment Network Beaumaris GaolCrime & Punishment Network Beaumaris Gaol
The specifically ghostly layer is less securely documented. Haunted-event companies and local Halloween pieces describe footsteps, keys, a jailer figure, unsettling presences, and Rowlands’s restless spirit in the cells.[Beaumaris Holiday Let]beaumarisholidaylet.co.ukBeaumaris Holiday Let A creepy tale about Beaumaris GaolBeaumaris Holiday Let A creepy tale about Beaumaris Gaol These claims are valuable as contemporary folklore and tourism practice, but they are not the same as independent historical evidence. The most credible reading is that Beaumaris Gaol is genuinely historic, genuinely associated with execution and punishment, and genuinely central to Anglesey’s haunted tourism; the reported phenomena remain claims and traditions.
Beaumaris Castle: Soldiers, Footsteps and an Unfinished Fortress
Beaumaris Castle gives Anglesey its classic castle haunting. Cadw calls it the last of Edward I’s royal strongholds in Wales and “perhaps his masterpiece”, begun at Beaumaris beside the Menai Strait after the earlier castles at Conwy, Caernarfon and Harlech.[Cadw]cadw.gov.walesCadw Beaumaris Castle | CadwCadw Beaumaris Castle | Cadw Its unfinished state is part of its power. It is not a cosy ruin but a massive planned fortress that never fully became what it was meant to be.
The reported hauntings usually involve heavy footsteps, shadowy forms, cold spots, and sometimes chanting or prayer-like sounds in the chapel. These details appear in modern haunted-castle accounts, including Great Castles and Spooky Isles.[Great Castles]great-castles.comOpen source on great-castles.com. The stories are not as tightly anchored to a named historical death as the Beaumaris Gaol legends, but they fit the castle’s atmosphere: soldiers, labourers, religious spaces, and the memory of conquest.
A careful reader should separate three things. First, the castle’s history is well documented: it was part of Edward I’s military programme in north Wales and is a major heritage site.[Cadw]cadw.gov.walesCadw Beaumaris Castle | CadwCadw Beaumaris Castle | Cadw Second, the ghost stories are widely repeated in paranormal and tourism writing. Third, the link between any particular apparition and a verified medieval person is usually speculative. The most useful interpretation is that Beaumaris Castle works as a haunting because its architecture already suggests absence: a military machine left incomplete, echoing with imagined guards and builders.
The castle also links naturally to other haunted castle pages in a wider UK project. Beaumaris belongs beside Caernarfon, Conwy, Harlech and other Edwardian fortresses, but Anglesey’s version is distinct because the island setting gives it a threshold quality: the castle faces the Menai Strait, looking both outward to the sea and inward to the politics of medieval Wales.
South Stack Lighthouse: A Coastal Death-Omen Story
South Stack Lighthouse is the island’s most dramatic coastal haunting. Trinity House records that the lighthouse was built in 1809 on a tiny islet off Anglesey at the north-west tip of Wales; the rock is separated from Holyhead Island by turbulent sea, and the lighthouse was automated in the 1980s.[Trinity House]trinityhouse.co.uksouth stack lighthousesouth stack lighthouse The visitor-centre page adds the practical drama: visitors reach it by descending hundreds of steps down steep cliffs before crossing to the island.[Trinity House]trinityhouse.co.uksouth stack lighthouse visitor centresouth stack lighthouse visitor centre
The ghost story usually centres on a keeper or assistant keeper called Jack Jones. Recent local and regional retellings say he was struck by falling rock during a storm, could not make himself heard, and later died of his injuries; the haunting is then described as knocking, tapping, or banging at doors and windows.[Daily Post]dailypost.co.ukhaunted iconic anglesey lighthouse known 26502715haunted iconic anglesey lighthouse known 26502715 The details vary between accounts, including the exact date, which is a sign that the story should be treated as legend rather than settled record.
What makes South Stack so effective is that the haunting matches the place. A lighthouse exists because the sea is dangerous. Its sounds — wind, waves, gulls, doors, metalwork, and weather — already invite interpretation, especially at night or in storm conditions. The Jack Jones story turns those noises into a human drama: someone outside in danger, still trying to be let in.
South Stack also connects Anglesey to a broader British tradition of haunted lighthouses and maritime death omens. The story is not merely about a building; it is about isolation, duty, bad weather, and the fear of hearing a cry too late. That gives it more emotional force than many generic “haunted hotspot” claims.
Plas Newydd: Estate Memory, Waterloo and the Problem of Repeated Claims
Plas Newydd is often named in Anglesey haunted-place lists, but it needs careful handling because there are two famous Welsh places called Plas Newydd. The Anglesey house is the National Trust property on the Menai Strait, a Grade I-listed house and garden associated with the Paget family, the Marquesses of Anglesey.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukplas newydd house and gardenplas newydd house and garden The better-known “Ladies of Llangollen” ghost stories belong to Plas Newydd in Llangollen, not to Anglesey. Confusing the two can easily create false geography.
The Anglesey Plas Newydd has plenty of historical atmosphere without needing borrowed legends. The National Trust traces the Paget family story back to William Paget, a Tudor statesman, and highlights the house’s links with the Battle of Waterloo.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukhistory of plas newyddhistory of plas newydd The Dictionary of Welsh Biography records that Henry William Paget, later the 1st Marquess of Anglesey, was created marquess in 1815 after Waterloo, where he lost a leg.[Dictionary of Welsh Biography]biography.waless PAGE PLA 1737s PAGE PLA 1737
Modern haunted-place writing sometimes claims that the 1st Marquess haunts Plas Newydd, especially around Waterloo-associated rooms, with footsteps or shadowy figures.[Tyddyn Isaf Caravan Park]tyddynisaf.co.ukhaunted places to visit on angleseyhaunted places to visit on anglesey The difficulty is that these claims are usually thinly sourced compared with the house’s documented family history. They may still be part of contemporary local ghost tourism, but they should not be presented as old, independently verified tradition unless stronger archival evidence is found.
The more interesting ghostly reading of Plas Newydd may be symbolic rather than evidential. The house contains military memory, aristocratic decline, theatre, family reinvention, and the flamboyant life of Henry Cyril Paget, the 5th Marquess of Anglesey, who created the Gaiety Theatre and later became the subject of renewed cultural interest.[National Trust]nationaltrust.org.ukOpen source on nationaltrust.org.uk. In that sense, Plas Newydd is haunted by history even where the apparition stories remain uncertain.
Ancient Places: Lligwy, Burial Chambers and Giant-Lore
Anglesey’s prehistoric and early medieval sites are not always “haunted” in the modern ghost-hunt sense, but they are essential to the island’s eerie landscape. Around Lligwy, Cadw identifies three powerful anchors: Capel Llugwy, a ruined 12th-century chapel in a lonely spot overlooking Lligwy Bay; Din Llugwy, a Romano-British settlement with stone huts and a thick enclosure wall; and Llugwy Chambered Tomb, where excavations found bones of men, women and children, along with animal bones, shells, flints, pottery and a bone pin.[Cadw]cadw.gov.walesCadw Capel Llugwy | CadwCadw Capel Llugwy | Cadw
This cluster matters because it compresses several kinds of “haunted” feeling into one landscape. There is a prehistoric tomb, a later settlement, and a Christian ruin, all close enough for visitors to move between them on foot. Even without a named apparition, such places generate folklore because they are visibly old, partly unexplained, and associated with the dead.
Barclodiad y Gawres adds another layer. Cadw describes it as an atmospheric Neolithic tomb with rare prehistoric art, perched in a cliffside position, with a reconstructed mound over a passage and chamber.[Cadw]cadw.gov.walesCadw Barclodiad y Gawres Chambered Tomb | CadwCadw Barclodiad y Gawres Chambered Tomb | Cadw Its name is commonly translated as “The Giantess’s Apronful”, and Anglesey History explains the legend as a giant woman dropping stones from her apron.[Anglesey History]anglesey-history.co.ukOpen source on anglesey-history.co.uk. This is not a ghost story in the narrow sense, but it belongs to the same imaginative world: ancient stones made memorable through supernatural explanation.
For readers of haunted history, these sites are best understood as “folklore places” rather than proven apparition sites. Their value is in showing how Anglesey’s dead are remembered across time: Neolithic communal burial, medieval Christian ruin, antiquarian interpretation, and modern atmospheric tourism.
Welsh Death Omens and Anglesey’s Wider Folklore Atmosphere
Not every Anglesey haunting is tied to a single named building. Some belong to wider Welsh supernatural patterns, especially death omens and warning sounds. The cyhyraeth, often described as a disembodied wailing spirit or death omen, is one of the best-known Welsh motifs. Modern summaries compare it loosely with the Irish banshee, while older folklore collections preserve descriptions of mournful sounds heard before death or disaster.[Medium]jamesysooz.medium.comThe Cyhyraeth: The Wailing Spirit of Wales | by Susan JamesThe Cyhyraeth: The Wailing Spirit of Wales | by Susan James
It would be misleading to claim the cyhyraeth is specifically an Anglesey-only spirit. Many accounts associate it with other parts of Wales, especially coastal or river landscapes. But the motif helps explain why Anglesey’s lighthouse, shore, and lonely-road stories make cultural sense. A strange cry in bad weather, a knock at a lighthouse door, or a warning sound before death is not just a random fright; it belongs to a Welsh tradition in which sound can carry supernatural meaning.
Anglesey’s folklore also includes witches, saints, giants, ancient stones, and Druidic associations. Recent folklore writing on the island often treats ghosts as one strand in a much larger supernatural fabric rather than the whole story.[Icy Sedgwick]icysedgwick.comIcy Sedgwick Anglesey Folklore: Witches, Ghosts, and Ancient DruidsIcy Sedgwick Anglesey Folklore: Witches, Ghosts, and Ancient Druids That is important for public-facing haunted history: Anglesey is not simply a list of “haunted places”. It is an island where ghost stories overlap with archaeology, coastal danger, Christian ruins, and older mythic explanations of the landscape.
How Credible Are Anglesey’s Haunted Stories?
The evidence is mixed, and that is part of the subject’s appeal. Some stories rest on strong historical foundations but weak paranormal evidence. Others are clearly folklore, valuable because they show what people have found memorable or frightening, not because they can be tested.
The strongest historically grounded case is Beaumaris Gaol. The building, prison regime, executions, and Richard Rowlands tradition are supported by heritage and specialist crime-history sources.[visitanglesey.co.uk]visitanglesey.co.ukbeaumaris gaolbeaumaris gaol The ghostly extension — footsteps, jailers, apparitions, oppressive feelings — is mostly preserved in ghost-hunt and tourism accounts, so it should be presented as reported experience or local legend rather than fact.[Beaumaris Holiday Let]beaumarisholidaylet.co.ukBeaumaris Holiday Let A creepy tale about Beaumaris GaolBeaumaris Holiday Let A creepy tale about Beaumaris Gaol
Beaumaris Castle is historically robust but paranormally looser. Cadw’s account firmly establishes the castle’s importance; modern haunted-castle sources supply the footsteps and shadow forms.[Cadw]cadw.gov.walesCadw Beaumaris Castle | CadwCadw Beaumaris Castle | Cadw South Stack is similar: Trinity House gives the lighthouse history, while the Jack Jones haunting is largely a repeated legend in local and paranormal retellings, with some variation in detail.[trinityhouse.co.uk]trinityhouse.co.uksouth stack lighthousesouth stack lighthouse
Plas Newydd requires the most caution because of name confusion and thin sourcing for its Anglesey ghost claims. Its documented history is rich, but not every ghost story attached to a “Plas Newydd” belongs on Anglesey. The Lligwy and Barclodiad y Gawres material is strongest when treated as folklore landscape rather than apparition evidence.
Visiting Anglesey Through Its Ghost Stories
A reader planning an eerie Anglesey route would do well to think in themes rather than chase guaranteed scares. Beaumaris offers the clearest pairing of castle and gaol: one site speaks to medieval conquest and military ambition, the other to punishment, execution and local moral memory. South Stack turns the route towards sea-danger and lighthouse loneliness. Lligwy and Barclodiad y Gawres draw the mood further back into burial, ruins and giant-lore.
This approach also avoids the common trap of flattening every place into the same ghost-hunt formula. A prison haunting is different from a lighthouse haunting. A castle apparition is different from a prehistoric giant legend. A haunted estate rumour is different again, especially where the documentary history is more compelling than the ghost claim.
Anglesey’s haunted history is most convincing when read as a conversation between place and memory. The island’s stories do not prove that the dead return, but they do show how strongly certain places invite return in the imagination: the condemned man at the gaol, the unseen walker in the castle, the keeper at the lighthouse door, the giantess dropping stones above the sea, and the old chapel standing roofless among older graves.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Why Does Anglesey Feel So Haunted?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Welsh fairy book
First published 1907. Subjects: Welsh Mythology, Tales, Fairies, Mythology, Welsh, Fairy tales.
The Mammoth Book of Haunted House Stories
First published 2000. Subjects: ghost stories, haunted house stories, ghost story anthology, Ghost stories.
The Lore of Wales
Explores the myths, legends and folklore that underpin Anglesey traditions.
Endnotes
1.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Henry Rowlands
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Rowlands
2.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Beaumaris Gaol
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaumaris_Gaol
3.
Source: capitalpunishmentuk.org
Title: angleseys beaumaris gaol
Link:https://capitalpunishmentuk.org/angleseys-beaumaris-gaol/
4.
Source: great-castles.com
Link:https://great-castles.com/beaumarisghost.html
5.
Source: biography.wales
Title: s PAGE PLA 1737
Link:https://biography.wales/article/s-PAGE-PLA-1737.html
6.
Source: jamesysooz.medium.com
Title: The Cyhyraeth: The Wailing Spirit of Wales | by Susan James
Link:https://jamesysooz.medium.com/the-cyhyraeth-the-wailing-spirit-of-wales-2b20a029b43e
7.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Plas Newydd, Llangollen
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plas_Newydd%2C_Llangollen
8.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyhyraeth
9.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Plas Newydd (Anglesey)
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plas_Newydd_%28Anglesey%29
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Henry Paget, 5th Marquess of Anglesey
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Paget%2C_5th_Marquess_of_Anglesey
11.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File%3ABritish_Isles_map_showing_UK%2C_Republic_of_Ireland%2C_and_historic_counties.svg
12.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglesey
13.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Lligwy Burial Chamber
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lligwy_Burial_Chamber
14.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Capel Lligwy
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capel_Lligwy
15.
Source: medium.com
Link:https://medium.com/my-fair-lighthouse/the-haunting-of-lighthouse-keeper-jack-jones-ce8c4c4da8ef
16.
Source: biography.wales
Title: s RHYS JOH 1840
Link:https://biography.wales/article/s-RHYS-JOH-1840.html
17.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Witches of Llanddona
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znKx1h2o-tA
Source snippet
Beaumaris Gaol | A traditional Victorian prison that is eerie & left untouched...
18.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Beaumaris Gaol | A traditional Victorian prison that is eerie & left untouched
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2M1fkhTN8yc
Source snippet
Paranormal Eye Uk...
19.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Anglesey
20.
Source: visitanglesey.co.uk
Title: beaumaris gaol
Link:https://www.visitanglesey.co.uk/en-gb/explore/beaumaris-gaol
21.
Source: visitwales.com
Title: llys biwmares beaumaris court 548191
Link:https://www.visitwales.com/attraction/museum/llys-biwmares-beaumaris-court-548191
22.
Source: capcollections.org.uk
Title: Crime & Punishment Network Beaumaris Gaol
Link:https://www.capcollections.org.uk/business-directory/beaumaris-gaol/
23.
Source: beaumarisholidaylet.co.uk
Title: Beaumaris Holiday Let A creepy tale about Beaumaris Gaol
Link:https://beaumarisholidaylet.co.uk/2021/10/28/a-creepy-tale-about-beaumaris-gaol-2/
24.
Source: cadw.gov.wales
Title: Cadw Beaumaris Castle | Cadw
Link:https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/places-to-visit/beaumaris-castle
25.
Source: trinityhouse.co.uk
Title: south stack lighthouse
Link:https://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/lighthouses-and-lightvessels/south-stack-lighthouse
26.
Source: trinityhouse.co.uk
Title: south stack lighthouse visitor centre
Link:https://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/lighthouse-visitor-centres/south-stack-lighthouse-visitor-centre
27.
Source: dailypost.co.uk
Title: haunted iconic anglesey lighthouse known 26502715
Link:https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/haunted-iconic-anglesey-lighthouse-known-26502715
28.
Source: nationaltrust.org.uk
Title: plas newydd house and garden
Link:https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/wales/plas-newydd-house-and-garden
29.
Source: nationaltrust.org.uk
Title: history of plas newydd
Link:https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/wales/plas-newydd-house-and-garden/history-of-plas-newydd
30.
Source: tyddynisaf.co.uk
Title: haunted places to visit on anglesey
Link:https://tyddynisaf.co.uk/2024/10/29/haunted-places-to-visit-on-anglesey/
31.
Source: nationaltrust.org.uk
Link:https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/wales/plas-newydd-house-and-garden/people-and-history-at-plas-newydd
32.
Source: cadw.gov.wales
Title: Cadw Capel Llugwy | Cadw
Link:https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/places-to-visit/capel-llugwy
33.
Source: cadw.gov.wales
Title: Cadw Din Llugwy Romano-British Village | Cadw
Link:https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/places-to-visit/din-llugwy-romano-british-village
34.
Source: cadw.gov.wales
Title: Cadw Llugwy Chambered Tomb
Link:https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/places-to-visit/llugwy-chambered-tomb
35.
Source: cadw.gov.wales
Title: Cadw Barclodiad y Gawres Chambered Tomb | Cadw
Link:https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/places-to-visit/barclodiad-y-gawres-chambered-tomb
36.
Source: anglesey-history.co.uk
Link:https://www.anglesey-history.co.uk/places/prehistoric-monuments/barclodiad-y-gawres/
37.
Source: icysedgwick.com
Title: Icy Sedgwick Anglesey Folklore: Witches, Ghosts, and Ancient Druids
Link:https://www.icysedgwick.com/anglesey-folklore/
38.
Source: dailypost.co.uk
Title: haunted anglesey prison ghosts said 26062955
Link:https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/haunted-anglesey-prison-ghosts-said-26062955
39.
Source: dailypost.co.uk
Title: chilling cottage haunted ghosts ladies 25184379
Link:https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/nostalgia/chilling-cottage-haunted-ghosts-ladies-25184379
40.
Source: dailypost.co.uk
Title: strange sea ghosts pictured anglesey 21988402
Link:https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/strange-sea-ghosts-pictured-anglesey-21988402
41.
Source: dailypost.co.uk
Title: story farmer who last man 14958357
Link:https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/story-farmer-who-last-man-14958357
42.
Source: hauntedrooms.co.uk
Title: beaumaris gaol
Link:https://www.hauntedrooms.co.uk/ghost-hunts/beaumaris-gaol
43.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/RealCounties/photos/the-county-of-anglesey-ynys-m%C3%B4n-is-an-island-shire-off-the-north-west-coast-of-w/915576657392569/
44.
Source: facebook.com
Title: Anglesey History
Link:https://www.facebook.com/AngleseyHistory/posts/1436699181832018/
45.
Source: geomon.org.uk
Title: plas newydd
Link:https://www.geomon.org.uk/culture/plas-newydd/
46.
Source: anglesey-history.co.uk
Link:https://www.anglesey-history.co.uk/places/south-stack/
47.
Source: anglesey-history.co.uk
Link:https://www.anglesey-history.co.uk/places/lligwy/
48.
Source: datamap.gov.wales
Title: wales Historic County Boundaries of Wales
Link:https://datamap.gov.wales/layers/geonode%3Ahistoric_counties_bng_rcahmw_ply
49.
Source: datamap.gov.wales
Title: metadata detail
Link:https://datamap.gov.wales/layers/geonode%3Ahistoric_counties_bng_rcahmw_ply/metadata_detail
50.
Source: menaiholidays.co.uk
Title: south stack lighthouse
Link:https://www.menaiholidays.co.uk/blog/south-stack-lighthouse/
51.
Source: landofthefae.blogspot.com
Title: North Wales
Link:https://landofthefae.blogspot.com/2011/12/north-wales-holy-wells-and-holy.html
52.
Source: nationaltrust.org.uk
Link:https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/wales/plas-newydd-house-and-garden/visiting-the-house-at-plas-newydd
53.
Source: nationaltrustscones.com
Title: plas newydd
Link:https://www.nationaltrustscones.com/2016/07/plas-newydd.html
54.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Title: Great Britain and Ireland
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/map/
55.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Title: Historic Counties Standard
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Historic_Counties_Standard
56.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Beaumaris
57.
Source: visitwales.com
Title: ynys lawd south stack 573491
Link:https://www.visitwales.com/attraction/museum/ynys-lawd-south-stack-573491
58.
Source: visitwales.com
Link:https://www.visitwales.com/attraction/historic-site/din-llugwy-romano-british-village-cadw-537221
59.
Source: wildanglesey.com
Link:https://wildanglesey.com/listings/beaumaris-gaol/
60.
Source: bodysgallen.com
Link:https://www.bodysgallen.com/things-to-do-at-bodygallen-hall/plas-newydd/
61.
Source: firesidehorror.co.uk
Link:https://www.firesidehorror.co.uk/blog-2/folklore-cath-palug-the-monstrous-black-cat
62.
Source: becster.com
Title: plas newydd
Link:https://becster.com/plas-newydd/
63.
Source: visitanglesey.co.uk
Link:https://www.visitanglesey.co.uk/en-gb/explore/barclodiad-y-gawres
64.
Source: medievalheritage.eu
Title: Barclodiad y Gawres
Link:https://medievalheritage.eu/en/main-page/heritage/wales/barclodiad-y-gawres-burial-chamber/
65.
Source: megalithics.com
Title: Barclodiad y Gawres
Link:https://www.megalithics.com/wales/barclody/barcmain.htm
Additional References
66.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Ghost of St Cynfarwy Churchyard: my friend’s family saw it, now i’m here
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFo3lEUd_DA
Source snippet
Exploring the Forgotten "Mud Chapel" of north Wales...
67.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/826487264155224/posts/3755531177917470/
68.
Source: boltholesandhideaways.co.uk
Link:https://boltholesandhideaways.co.uk/a-walk-to-capel-lligwy/
69.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/1062698551479528/posts/1542465050169540/
70.
Source: abcounties.com
Link:https://abcounties.com/counties/county-profiles/anglesey/
71.
Source: tripadvisor.co.uk
Link:https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attraction_Review-g552028-d8009333-Reviews-Lligwy_Burial_Chamber-Moelfre_Anglesey_North_Wales_Wales.html
72.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/2003881253140331/posts/2794332514095197/
73.
Source: britainexpress.com
Link:https://www.britainexpress.com/wales/anglesey/barclodiad-y-gawres.htm
74.
Source: themodernantiquarian.com
Link:https://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/351/barclodiad-y-gawres
75.
Source: castlesandlegends.com
Link:https://castlesandlegends.com/castles/beaumaris-castle/
Topic Tree
Follow this branch
Related pages 91
- Haunted Clackmannanshire
- Haunted Antrim
- Haunted Armagh
- Haunted Durham
- Haunted Londonderry
- +86 more in sidebar



