This time is the one time of year when the macabre is most appealing. We can watch our favorite killers in horror movies, or read about the most notorious from the non-fiction realm. We can probe into the paranormal, and hold our breath for what may, or may not, happen. Whether you believe in ghosts and ghouls, or wave them aside as the fictional fables of bygone centuries, some places on this planet still strike a spooky chord. They are the places that inspire nightmares, panic attacks and revisits. And, with any luck, you may just find something otherworldly. Enjoy the list!
The year is 1824, and a row of showers has been converted into a majestic hotel, known as the Shelbourne. The Shelbourne has featured prominently in Ireland’s history, in that the country’s constitution was drafted there in 1922, and, throughout the years, it was favorite of many celebrities passing through Dublin. Room 526 was where a medium supposedly made contact with the hotel’s permanent resident, Mary. Mary was a little girl who lived in the houses that were converted into the hotel, until her death in 1791 from cholera.
In Victorian times, this was the place to be when you bit the dust. This necropolis was highly fashionable in its time, but sadly, since then, it has crumbled and deteriorated since its neglect due to World War II. The cemetery became a creepy, desolate place, complete with dead trees and twisting ivy. Many stories cropped up during this creepy and dark time in the cemetery’s history. Perhaps this is due to the fact that unsavory and unnatural characters love places such as this. Many ghosts and apparitions call this burial ground home, along with a vampire, a man in a top hat, a cloaked figured and a gray, haggard old woman. Perhaps you will be lucky enough to hear the bells ringing in the disused chapel. Thankfully, an organization known as The Friends of Highgate Cemetery is making progress with repairs and restoration of the historic location.
This historic theater is located just blocks away from the White House, and was founded in 1835 by William Corcoran, and many other prominent city residents. It has had many famous performers, including Sir Ian McKellan, James Earl Jones, Kevin Spacey, Sting and Tim Curry. Winston Churchill had even spoken there once. However, Tim Curry and Winston Churchill aren’t what make this place terrifying. The actor John McCullough was very prominent and popular in the 1800s, and was touring with a troupe who stopped in at the National. Under the stage was a raceway through which the Tiber Creek flowed freely until the 1950s, when it was enclosed in a storm sewer. The actors found this running water beneath the stage to be a perfect place to wash their clothes. McCullough and another actor (of lesser stature) began arguing. Some say it was over a beauty of an actress the two both had a thing for, or perhaps it was over a role that both men desperately wanted. The reason is irrelevant, really. Shots were fired, and John McCullough lay dead beneath the stage of the National Theater. His remains were reportedly interred in the dirt floor beneath the stage where he died. As you undoubtedly expected to hear, his apparition has been seen numerous times since.
In 1854, the historic Princess Theatre was erected by George Coppin, an actor and manager who was busy running and renovating many nearby theaters in Melbourne. However, this particular theatre was center stage for a tragedy that occurred on March 3rd, 1888. Frederick Baker, known as Federici, was playing the part of Mephistopheles in the opera Faust. A powerful scene of the opera was when Mephistopheles was to dramatically descend into Hell – via the Princess’ trapdoor. Federici’s performance that night must have been extra taxing, because he suffered a heart attack and died by the time he had reached the theater’s basement. The company of actors was gathered afterwards so the bad news could be shared. When they asked when it had happened, confusion set in. The other performers explained that that was impossible, as he had just been seen onstage taking his final bows. To this day a mysterious figure is often sighted onstage, and it even made an appearance for a set photographer during the filming of a documentary there.
This fortification in Scotland has existed, in one incarnation or another, since the 12th century. The castle saw many battles, and, in 1337, it was destroyed by the Scots to prevent its use by the English. By the end of the 14th century, however, Bishop Walter Trail ordered the castle rebuilt. The castle has had a long history, and many historic figures have been in and out for many reasons. But this isn’t a list for them. This castle is home to several apparitions: The White Lady, who walks the castle perimeter or the nearby shoreline. The spirit of Patrick Hamilton haunts one of the towers, where he has a good view of the spot on which he was burned alive. You can also see the ghost of Cardinal Beaton, who was murdered and hung naked from the castle battlements, or you can just look for the woman in the grey veil, who carries a prayer book and vanishes into thin air. Your best bet to witness these supernatural residents is to visit during the twilight hours of October and November.
This lighthouse in St. Augustine, Florida, was built in the 1600s by Spanish settlers. By 1824, it was an official US lighthouse, and was later replaced by the current lighthouse, located about a quarter mile away. The original suffered a tragedy when Mr. Andreu, the lighthouse keeper, fell to his death while painting the tower. When the lighthouse was being built there was a dispute over property and one of the parties involved, Dr. Ballard, is now rumored to haunt the place, along with the ghost of poor Mr. Andreu. Three girls are said to have drowned when the handcart they were playing in fell off the tramway, and now their spirits roam the grounds. The parade of lost souls doesn’t end there, however. When the Keeper’s House was being rented out for apartments, many tenants reported strange noises and seeing a young girl walking around. A keeper in the 1950’s even refused to live in the house, trading his living quarters to a Coast Guardsman stationed on-site. There is the mysterious Man In Blue who haunts the basement, and employees of a gift shop located in the house attributed objects being moved and noises being made to local poltergeist, Andrew. And the tower, itself, is rife with footsteps and disembodied voices. Be wary when you visit this lighthouse. Perhaps you will be its next tragedy!
Some people would gladly tell you that New Zealand’s capital hosts one of the most haunted theaters in the world. The current building was erected in 1912, and if you are given the opportunity to see a performance there, you might meet Yuri. Legend holds that Yuri was a Russian performer who was unfortunate enough to fall to his death from above the stage. Or perhaps he was murdered? Some believe that a fellow Russian performer pushed him. Regardless of the identity of the ghost or its reason for sticking around, plenty of people will attest to its existence. Yuri loves to mess around with the lights, his favorite thing to do being turning all of the lights back on after the theater has been locked up for the night. But Yuri is among friends at the theater. The aptly named Wailing Woman also calls St. James her stomping ground, and cries and moans and, you guessed it, wails throughout the theater. In life, she was poorly received during a performance, which she took to heart, and proceeded to off herself in the dressing room. A boys choir is also at home in the theater – they played their last show at the St. James Theater before setting sail for a tour before the Second World War. Their ship was never seen again. With all the tragic events that have allegedly plagued the theater, it isn’t much of stretch to see why stories of haunting persist to this day.
Sometimes, the legends of the ghosts and spirits haunting a location must take a backseat to the horrifying facts. At 8:50 a.m., February 1st, 1974, an air conditioning unit overheated, and started a fire in the high rise. The building was one giant fire hazard, from the desks, to the chairs, to the curtains, even the ceiling. All made from flammable materials. There was only one stairwell and the building lacked fire alarms, emergency lights and exits and a sprinkler system. There were 756 people inside.
The fire made the stairwell impassable above the 11th floor, and despite typical fire protocol, firefighters began evacuating the occupants using the elevators. About 170 people made their way to the roof, in hopes of being picked up by helicopter, but there was no place to land, and the smoke was keeping aerial rescues out of the picture anyway. Of the 170 on the roof, 80 hid under the floor tiles. Only these people were found alive on the roof after the fire was put out. Another 40 people jumped, or fell, to their deaths. The fire burned itself out by 10:30 a.m., allowing police and firefighters to tally the death toll: 179 souls perished in the fire. The building underwent four years of rebuilding, and was renamed Praca de Bandeira after the square it faces. The current building is rumored to be heavily haunted by those consumed by the flames.
It takes something special to be billed as Australia’s most haunted house, and boy, is this place special. The year 1885 saw the construction of the house by Mr. Christopher William Crawley. The house remained occupied by the family until 1948, and stood vacant until 1963. It is now a museum and tourist attraction where visitors can stop in to witness one of the mansion’s seven alleged spirits. Mrs. Crawley herself is said to roam the chapel where she spent many hours of her life after Mr. Crawley died. A woman in period clothes calls the verandah home. Perhaps she is the maid who was unfortunate enough to fall to her death from the balcony. If you look at the stairs below, you can see the discoloration from where her bloodstains were bleached off. At least three deaths are associated with the second story alone. Two of these deaths include Mr. Crawley’s fatal blood poisoning and a woman who died during childbirth. The place is lousy with disembodied footsteps stomping around on hardwood floors, which is made eerier by the fact that the entire house is now carpeted. Objects move by themselves, and faces are seen peering through second story windows, with no balcony or supports outside. A young stable boy was asleep in his quarters in the stable, and was too ill to get up for work one day. His boss didn’t believe him, and in an act of pure stupidity, set fire to the boy’s bed to rouse him from his ‘illness’. Turns out the boy was telling the truth, and was burnt to a crisp. A mentally challenged man was kept shackled for forty years, until he was found curled up near his mother’s dead body, and was sent away to an insane asylum. And since the Victorian era isn’t the only one ripe for creating ghosts, it would be best to mention that, in 1961, a young man, inspired by the recently released movie Psycho, murdered one of the caretakers (living on the grounds) and carved “DIE JACK HA HA” into the door. The inscription remains to this day.
We have all heard stories about ghostly hitchhikers. But have you heard of the most famous one? I’m speaking about Resurrection Mary. In 1934, sixteen-year-old Mary was a regular at the O’Henry Ballroom, which still stands today (although it is now the Willow-brook). She got into an argument with her boyfriend on the dance floor, and left the ballroom. She was walking home along Archer Avenue, and right about the time she was passing Resurrection Cemetery, a car swerved out of control, and struck and killed her. Her family was heartbroken and had her buried in the cemetery she lost her life in front of, still in her dancing gown and shoes. And that is how this story ends. Until five years later, at least….
It was now 1939, and Jerry Palus was yet another regular at the O’Henry. He spotted a beautiful blonde girl across the room, and asked her to dance. They danced the entire night, with the young lady barely uttering a word. He offered her a ride home when the night was through, and she accepted. When they were passing Resurrection Cemetery, she quickly told him to stop and let her out there, instead of taking her to the address she had given him. She disappeared at the gates. The next night, Jerry went to the address that was supposed to be her final destination. The woman said there was no girl that lived there, and he was mistaken. He spotted a picture on the mantlepiece of the young lady he had danced with the entire night. The woman explained that she was her daughter, and that she had been dead for five years. To this day, people see the girl walking along the road. They give her rides, only for her to disappear from the vehicle. Some say they have danced with her, others claim to have even kissed her. On one memorable event, in 1977, somebody even claims to have seen a girl behind the cemetery gate, grasping the bars in what can only be described as a death grip, and screaming in pure terror. The man who witnessed this traveled to a police station. When the authorities arrived, there was no sign of anybody. But the two metal bars she had appeared to be gripping were bent and twisted, with what seemed to be finger marks embedded in them. The bars were removed, and it was determined that such distortion could only be achieved through extreme heat and pressure. They eventually reformed and replaced the bars, but they consistently revert back to the charred and mangled state.






























Great list! Very fitting for Halloween!
Australia has lots of ghosts since it was a colony of criminals
Nice list.
Hmm. I don't think these qualify as "terrifying." Spooky, maybe, but previous lists on terrifying places have chilled me more. Also, this list was too theater-centric. 9,3,2, and 1 were the only ones I thought were actually terrifying. I'll have to see those gates at Resurrection Cemetery for myself soon.
Good list. Misnamed, but good. Appropriate for Halloween, definitely.
i have been to 3 of these, the ones in england and ireland. but the spookiest place i been to is my grandma's ancestral home in southern india. the house and the woods behind it. great location for a horror film.
Bro, India is chock-full of such places..just that people are not aware of. If such a list has to be made concerning India, I guess there'll be at least 3-4 of them!
I love it, I love it, I love it! If at all possible Listers, go see Highgate Cemetery – very spooky, eerie place and so very easy to believe the haunting legends that surround it.
I was born and raised in Highgate. Me and friends would always go to the cemetery and I agree, it is easily the creepiest place I have ever been in my life. Just standing in from of the main gates it can make the hair on the back of your neck stand on end.
My family and I now live in B.C. Canada and I still sometimes have flash backs of being in the Highgate Cemetery and it gives me goosebumps all over again.
All I can say Jessey is that you're braver than me. As a kid, there is no way in the world I would have set foot in that place. I saw it as an adult and it spooked me.
Also, I really like that this list is under "Leisure and Travel."
For your next trip, book a soothing vacation to the most haunted places in the world!
Happy Halloween Errbody
Yea some scary stuff, DIE JACK HA HA!..wow..great list ianz09!
Ummm..#3 is quite sad…BTW which kind of ghost would seem to be the most scariest if ever encountered? Someone who had drowned or someone who burnt to death? Or some other? If they say that a ghost has a similar appearance as per the accident/murder then I'd say an incinerated ghost would be way more scarier than anything else…if you've seen pics of people in fire accidents.
Yea Mars is quite scary I heard…and Neptune also.
Ummm – you missed the scariest of all. Uranus.
LMAO! Yeaah Ur-ANUS..how did I miss out on that one…and cool pic maan!
BTW, M'ars(e) is more scary or Ur-Anus? Hmmm..that needs a serious thinkover.
Nice list for a lazy Sunday – enjoyed thanks Ian.
Look at the link at the bottom of the list – it encompasses all our spooky lists!
Missed that, thanks, wouldn't mind another new one today though.
That is an awesome feature. Great for procrastination.
Good idea!
Noooo…that would be full of spoilers, I'm sure… and I never read those *spoiler* kind of lists.
Thanks troll, I'm mighty elated that I make you livid.
i walk through the resurrection cemetery every morning
That's what makes it so terrifying.
LMAO!
You're from Chicago? So am I. I've never been to that cemetery. What's it like?
It's funny that you're ragging on Jamie for everything that he is doing or has done (becoming classically educated/opera singing). You don't have a very good starting point considering you are the one trolling his widely popular website. And your threat about him needing a lot of moderators to deal with you just sort of emphasizes that. He has people working for him to deal with people like you. He doesn't even have to read your comments if he doesn't want to. You're like an outraged young teen who writes hate mail to the President (not saying that Jamie is comparable to the President. I mean Listverse is great, but let's keep perspective); you're just annoying, and when you take a step back to actually think about what you're doing (being annoying on the internet for fun), just kind of pathetic.
Look, kubrick. 99% of your posts are either trolling, insulting or flaming, and the remaining 1% is random spam. You're a blight on listverse society and, to be honest, I think you should be banned. You, and your entire office are making poor old Stanley turn over in his grave. I don't care who you are, or why you post here, but please, either post constructively or stop posting.
You dislike this site yeah so why the hell are you asking for an update on cogitz and all…
IF you don't STFU then I'll unleash Brock upon you..then you'll be sorry
A fitting list for today. I’ll have to delve into more of these, as there are quite a few I’ve never even heard of. Glamis Castle in Scotland and Clapham Wood rate a mention as both are eerie and reputedly haunted. I wonder if that old hollow oak still stands as a silent sentry to the entrance of Clapham Village?
Happy Halloween.
Re #7: The Princess Theatre in Melbourne, Australia: I have worked there many a time and have often found myself on a lonely catwalk above the stage late at night. I definitely do not believe in ghosts, but every now and then the hairs on the back of my neck would stand up for no reason. I never actually saw anything, just felt like somebody was watching me… spooky? you betcha.
The legend of Federici still burns strong. In fact, until recently, theatre management always left a solitary seat in the dress circle unsold on opening nights. This seat was for Federici to sit and enjoy the show without causing disruption backstage. Strange but true.
ian—— very cool write up, but i do have one question (or, cambro, you might know about this):
—-i've heard of the legend of federici several times. a consistent part of the story is that he foretold his death.
—-if i remember correctly, the call wasnt specific, but he had been heard to say that night's performance would be one of his best performances ever, although it would kill him.
—-literal or figurative notwithstanding, it's still an interesting thing to have said aloud just hours before a bizarre death.
any truth to that?
I wish I knew more about that, never came up in my research. Definitely would've increased the spook factor significantly!
Sorry Oli — I've not heard the story about Federici predicting his own death.
i'm not sure "predicting" is quite the right word……
see my reply to ianz above.
Oh please Jamie…..can you really mean that trolls are gonna keep me from a valid comment?
Okay, I'm gonna let the fact that the "SUBMIT" doesn't show on my page go and try to re-formulate my original comment……
My son has worked all week on the community haunted house in our old courthouse. It has been documented as haunted for many generations….and the tales he has brought home each night leave no doubt (to us) as to the legends.
Tonight, speaking with other adults associated with the event, I have heard tales of clankings, footsteps and whisperings that have happened all week long. From what I have been told, paranormal investigators were brought in this week and their findings lean towards a true haunting.
I DO know that janitorial services, for decades, have not been performed after nightfall, WILL NOT be performed after nightfall, and our courthouse is the only building in the county to have such consessions, due to questionable occurrences.
Personally, I like to believe.
Too American BIATCHES
Hey, an interesting and a very apt list for all hallows eve. Enjoyed all the items, esp. #1. Top job. Like Timothy I'd suggest the list title could have been a bit more specific. E.g '10 more ghostly apparitions/ haunted buildings' or something. I'm not affraid of ghosts and would not find these places 'terrifying', or indeed all that scary. Guess it's just horses for courses.
Thank you! I agree about the homestead in Australia, that would be an awesome place to live, minus any potential hauntings, of course. I might get over the creakiness and noisiness of the lighthouse if there was a beach very nearby. I love the ocean
Big thanks to Jamie for publishing, especially since I submitted this on such short notice, and he gave it a chance anyway! I had been working on and off the whole week researching and compiling it, but I managed to keep so busy it was hard to find the time to sit down and write it. And I'm not sure if it is some kind of honor to get picked for Halloween on Listverse, but I feel accomplished. Thanks Jamie, and thanks to those who liked it. Happy Halloween!
Consider yourself lucky to be published here, but the reason it got picked was probably because Jamie spends so little time working on upkeep for his super-special site that he just picked yours at the last minute and tossed it up on the page. That's how things have worked around here for the past several months, so there's no reason to suspect anything has changed. No matter how hard you work on a list, it all comes down to the 5 minutes a day that Jamie feels like working.
*sniff* *sniff* I smell a troll nearby… Now where can it be???
Oh I wasn't blasting you at all. I was just congratulating you on catching JF's eye for the brief time that he spends vetting lists on his site. We know that he rarely, if ever, proofreads them, as many lists have shown up on the main page that he ended up having to take down to fix. But that's professional, right?
Again, not taking digs at you. Just saying that you should enjoy it, like one would enjoy winning the lottery. You got lucky. (Oh, and would a troll have a 59p score? Nope.)
HAHAHAHA you jealous !!! thats it!! it so obvious , thats funny.
I love you dude haha
"You got lucky."
Tell that to my ten other lists that slipped into Jamie's 5 minute window.
"(Oh, and would a troll have a 59p score? Nope.)"
He would if he was good at what he does. Can't spend ALL your time masturbating.
You sound like a 19-year-old douchebag. Oh look, you ARE a 19-year-old douchebag. Serves me right for trying to be nice. Your list sucked. Hate to break it to you. Now go back to watching Cartoon Network in your mom's basement and imagine what it's like to have a girlfriend.
Did… Did I just get to you? Oh my God, I…. I DID! I said things…. That were taken personal. This is the best day ever. I'm gonna tell everybody! By the way, I'm 20, get it right. You weren't trying to be nice, you insulted me from the gitgo (or did you forget your first comment where you referred to my list as a bunk list?), and Cartoon Network is AWESOME. Also, I'll go ahead and quit trolling you long enough to be nice, and offer some advice: CHange your profile before you ever call somebody else a douchebag. If I saw you walking down the street, I'd instantly react to your smug grin and awful facial hair by backhanding you. I'd feel bad, because technically you are a person, but then again hipsters are the current bane to my existence. I see the Stick Removal Procedure didn't go over very well, I hope next week's Sandy Vagina Reversal Surgery goes over much better. By the way, you are like my new best friend on here, wanna go get mochas? If you can see past that nose you have stuck into the sky long enough to take a sip, anyway. I gotta tell ya, your free entertainment is keeping me occupied on my day off, thank you!
I would really love to read more of these types of lists. This one was very interesting and I was severely disappointed to find that there was no Halloween list for 2011. Hopefully there will be one for 2012? Hopefully?
I love spooky tales like these! I have seen the lighthouse one. You don't even have to be inside (which I wasn't) to get the creeps coming from that place!
Great choice for today.
Nice job, Ian.
Resurrection Cementary!! On the outside, not really a creepy place since it is surrounded by busy streets on all sides. But the gates are what makes it creepy b/c you can see from where it has been removed and replaced.
michigan central station, detroit, michigan
it is the scariest place i have ever seen.
#2 was really creepy. Good list, very appropriate for Halloween. Spooky!
pah….! A not-at-all scary list….!
not upto the halloween mark…..!!
Wikipedia tells me the following:
“An apocrophal version of his death which arose as theatre lore is reported by the National Theatre in Washington, DC where he appeared a number of times in various roles between 1875 and 1889. According to this version of events, McCullough was murdered backstage by a fellow actor, was buried by members of the acting company in a cellar beneath the stage, and is a resident ghost.”
and also…
” The audience, thinking he was drunk, hissed and booed. In fact, McCullough was suffering from the early stages of general paresis. He was later committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum but continued to decline and finally died in an asylum in Philadelphia. His “insane ravings” became popular and were imitated in one of the first audio recordings.[1]“
Hi Mom – off record Im flying to Vancouver in 3 weeks time ( business trip ) it looks like a beautiful city – I still dont know which hotel I will be staying in – I just hope there are not to many ghosts, and Canada gets so bloody cold.
You'll be fine – it never gets very cold in Vancouver. Temperate coastal climate. Now the other side of the Rockies – they have real winter. Enjoy your visit!
you going from African summer to Canadian winter . you gonna freeze your vrikadell off .
Yea I know, sitting having lunch at the small craft harbour yesterday in the hot sun overlooking the yachts in Richards Bay thinking the same thing.
That was definitely a tongue in cheek comment from Mom !
No Edinburgh?
Great list, loved the New Zealand & Australian entries!
An IanZ list with no SoaD on it? Now that’s scary!
Lol
It's about time, huh? haha
Exellent list. As a Canadian, I know a lot of the American and Canadian haunts, but don't have good access to Australia/New Zealand, and would love to more from these places….
#8 – John McCullough did not actually die in the theater. That story was apparently made up:
"On the night of September 29, 1884, he broke down on stage at McVicker's Theater in Chicago and was unable to recite his lines. The audience, thinking he was drunk, hissed and booed. In fact, McCullough was suffering from the early stages of general paresis. He was later committed to the Bloomingdale Asylum but continued to decline and finally died in an asylum in Philadelphia. His "insane ravings" became popular and were imitated in one of the first audio recordings."
And the Resurrection Cemetery gates were actually damaged by a truck. Perfect list for Halloween, though. Ian is the expert on creepy lists.
Thanks!
Good Halloween list. Sort of on topic has anyone seen Human Centipede? Watched it yesterday and it blew my mind.
Are you all right? Some things you just can't unsee. I have scars and I only watched the trailer.
I don't think you know what terrifying is until you've had to use a BART Station bathroom in Oakland. They really need to get someone to clean those mofo's!
Australia much?
i see people turn their heads and quickly turn away
Its clearly because Australia is awesome!
The only thing good about Australia is the fact that the population is kept to a minimum due to Dingo's taste for human babies!
dude if you saw our *****ty immigration policy you would retract that comment… haha
I am from the United States. We have the *****tiest immigration policy of any nation. We basically don't have one.
Was hoping for a good Halloween list. Thanks, Ian. Now I know your NAME!! Bwahahaha!!!
It was in my username all along haha, I'm not very creative with usernames
liked no.2 the best . Great list .
Halloween or no Halloween, I'm getting a little tired of so many bunk lists on Listverse. It irritates me when pseudoscience junk like ghosts is talked about as if it is proven common knowledge. No evidence for ghosts has ever arisen, nor will it ever be.
Simply put, junk list. Hope you didn't spend too much time on it. I suppose, though, that I could whip some nonsense together and you'd publish it, right JF???
Oh, crybaby. It's entertainment. If you want to hang on a moment, I'll call a whaambulance while you sit down and pee. What was I supposed to do, make half the words in the list supposedly, allegedly, "haunted", etc.? Have some fun. You're so stuck up. Hope the Stick Removal Procedure goes well, it is an incredible feeling not having anything firmly lodged in your rectum.
Damn!!
Holy hell, number 2 is super scary, especially…well, the whole damn thing!
If you look carefully at the photo in #9, you can see a ghostly white watermark….
How come most of the accidents that create ghost hauntings involve falling on a balcony or on the stairs?
What, hand rails weren't invented yet in Victorian era?
pic on item 5 seems to be a bird perched on top the rails.
The 'ghost' of the lighthouse looks like a black bird standing on something.
I think for video evidence of St. Augustine Lighthouse must see the episode of GHOST HUNTERS (TAPS)season 2 episode 19.
I liked this list, but now I think you need a list specifically about theater ghosts. Practically every theater has a ghost, it's part of what makes them such wonderful places.
Resurrection Cemetary is #1? It's just one of many places that claims to be the home of 'The Vanishing Hitchikier' – one of the most popular Urban Legends around. Seeing you use a famous Urban Legend like that as your "#1 spot" kind of sullies the rest of the list, in my opinion.
I used it because it is the original vanishing hitchhiker story, not a ripoff, and it also had the legend regarding the cemetery, so it wasn't just the hitchhiker
My family has many burial sites at Resurrection; it's very nice and very large. I frequently would visit the cemetary with my grandparents to "shape up" the headstones and surrounding grounds of our deceased. I always scored Dairy Queen ice cream (it was just down the road) after a day the cemetary. It's not scary during the day. The legend does seem to have some fact basis. The Justice police department also backs up many of the claims and feels that many of them are legit.
Awesome list! Numbers 1 and 2 are totally creepy! Thanks!
Another thing about St James is that the designer committed suicide after facing the private boxes towards the audience and not at the stage…
I think you should add Bhangarh, Rajasthan(India) in your next list of terrifying places. It is said that if you stay there at night, you will not see the morning alive due to a curse. You can check wikipedia for more information. I am sure once you’ll know about it you can’t ignore it then.