Thursday, May 1, 2008

Come On Baby, Light My Fire Ghost Picture

Do You Know About This Ghost Picture? This is the best ghost picture on the net. i do not know is it true or false, but i think it is so scary.
on November 19th, 1995, Wem Town Hall in Shropshire, England was engulfed in flames and burned to the ground. As firefighters tried to stave off the inferno a town resident, Tony O'Rahilly, took pictures from across the street using a telephoto lens on his camera.

Read more...

James Courtney and Michael Meehan Ghost Picture

In 1924 James Courtney and Michael Meehan, two crewmen of the tanker S.S. Watertown, were accidentally killed by gas fumes while cleaning a cargo tank. The crew of the Watertown - on its way to the Panama Canal from New York City – buried the two sailors at sea off the Mexican coast. That was on December 4th.

Read more...

Tombstone Ghost Picture

Do you know about this ghost picture? Back in 1996 Ike Clanton took this photo of a friend wearing western duds, in the middle of Tombstone's Boothill Graveyard. They swear that nobody else was in sight when they made this picture. Furthermore, some time later they tried to restage this picture with someone standing at the spot where the "mystery man" appears in the background. Ike Clanton says that it was impossible to take such a picture and not show the rear person's legs. Clanton said he wasn't so sure about Tombstone being haunted, but this photo made a believer out of him.

Read more...

Darn Backseat Drivers!

The film was developed and this came out: somebody sitting in the backseat wearing glasses, clear as day.In 1959 Mable Chinnery went to the cemetery to visit the grave of her mother, as any devoted daughter is apt to do. Mrs. Chinnery swore that the "backseat driver" was none other than her own mother...She took some photos of the gravesite and then turned and took this picture of her husband sitting alone in the car's passenger seat.

Read more...

Lord Combermere's Ghost Picture

After being ran over by a horse-drawn carriage he died in 1891. A photographer set up a camera with its shutter open for one hour in the manor's library while the entire staff was off at Lord Combermere's funeral, some four miles away. Remember how Archie Bunker liked his recliner so much that he never let anyone else sit in it? Well, ol' Archie doesn't have anything on Lord Combermere.

Read more...

Freddy Jackson's Ghost Picture

Freddy Jackson was killed in 1919 when an airplane propeller hit him. Freddy Jackson was a mechanic in the Royal Air Force in World War I. Freddy Jackson's squadron served onboard the H.M.S. Daedalus. Two days later when the squadron assembled for a group photo, Freddy Jackson faithfully showed up, grinning behind the ear of a fellow comrade.

Read more...

The Bed-Ridden Boy

The photo was taken in 1999 at the Historic Worley B&B Inn in Dahlone. It wasn't until four years later that this photo – which seems to show a figure resting on a bed – was really given notice. It's thought that this might be the ghost of a young man who died in the house in the 1800s after being struck by a train, and if you go to L.E.M.U.R.'s page you can find a picture of the lad (when he was still alive) to compare this photo with.

Read more...

The Newby Church Monk Ghost Picture

Have you ever watch this ghost picture on the net? This ghost picture is very famous and being as one of the best ghost picture ever taken in the world. The picture and the negative are said to have been thoroughly examined by photographic experts and they can't find any evidence that this was either a double exposure, or artificially altered. Reverend K.F. Lord took a picture of the altar at his church in North Yorkshire, England (why are the GOOD ghosts always found in England?) and this is what came out.

Read more...

The Hampton Court Ghost Picture

Hampton Court, near London, was one of Henry VIII's favorite hangouts (it's because of him that Anne Boleyn is now a headless ghost roaming the Tower of London). This one became fairly well known after it was released in December of 2003. Guards checked the security cameras' videotape... and spotted this figure in period costume walking through the door. A fire door inside the castle kept being opened when no one was supposed to be around.

Read more...

The Brown Lady" of Raynham Hall Ghost Picture


This ghost picture is very famous, Raynham Hall was long reputed to be haunted by the ghost of Lady Dorothy Townshend, who died in 1726. This photo was taken in 1936 at Raynham Hall in Norfolk, England, by two photographers of Country Life magazine. The ghost had been seen on many occasions throughout the years when it was spotted descending these stairs by the Country Life photographers, who quickly took a snapshot. This is considered by many to be the most highly regarded and reputable photograph by a ghost yet made.

Read more...

  © Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP