Manor Road Ghost
Manor Road was formerly
known as Manners Lane following the acquisition of the land by the Manners family but before that
time and certainly well before the nearby colliery was opened there existed in
the vicinity mineral springs fairly rich in Iron and SulphurIt has been suggested in
the past that this ghost is that of a woman who was murdered whilst attending
the spring and that her body was discovered
one morning lying at the bottom of a well which had been dug to facilitate
extraction of the waters.
It would be interesting to hear whether or not there has been any
recent manifestation of this phantom, although on the evidence of past
sightings, January seems to be the most appropriate month.
It is well known that wherever mineral springs are freely available to
large communities, particularly during the eighteenth century, they were
constantly attended by substantial numbers of people, by night and day, in all
weathers and seasons in the hope of a cure for their physical ills. I think
that the committal of any serious felony, particularly murder at such a place,
in these circumstances can be, substantially discounted, especially as there
is no mention of such a crime in existing records and further, the apparition
is not that of a woman but of a man.
This is the ghost of a man wearing robes and a tall head dress of a
nature associated with necromancy. If such manifestations have a purpose, then that of this one is not clear. There
were several sightings on the night of Saturday, January 6th, 1923, when the
local Theatre Royal on Lord Haddon Road was presenting ‘Gilbert and Sullivan's The Gondoliers’ but I am not
suggesting any connection.
During the late '20s and early '30s, several ghost-hunting parties were raised to locate the phantom
but none were successful, possibly because they seemed to concentrate their
activities towards the top of Manor Road which is not the appropriate area.
Maurice S