10 Vicious And Violent Hauntings Throughout History
Photo: Hereward Carrington / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

10 Vicious And Violent Hauntings Throughout History

Robert F Mason
Updated July 30, 2021 238.2K views

Most ghosts are seemingly passive or even benevolent, appearing to scare people only by accident, never by intent. Ghosts that are violent (also known as poltergeists), however, are in a class by themselves. Stories suggest that some of these malevolent spirits have actually killed people. The most famous cases of violent hauntings have inspired multiple books and movie adaptations. This list looks at some of the most vicious "true" hauntings around the world and throughout history.

  • The Nameless Horror Of Berkeley Square

    Most people think of hauntings as something ghosts do, but the entity haunting 50 Berkeley Square in London, England, has paranormal enthusiasts and experts a bit baffled. By all accounts, it seems to be something other-worldly, but precisely what is still up for debate. 

    The earliest verified account of the horror dates from the 1840s, when 20-year-old Sir Robert Warboys took a dare to spend the night in the supposedly haunted upstairs bedroom of a house surrounded by scary rumors for years. He went in with a gun and a candle, and a bell system for alerting the landlord, just in case. He never came out alive. Just an hour after he entered the bedroom, the landlord heard the bell ringing frantically, followed by a gunshot. When he got to Warboys' room on the second floor, he found the young man dead, with a look of horror on his face and a bullet hole in the wall opposite the body. It seemed he had perished because of fright, but due to what, no one could ever figure out.

    After a series of residents, many with stories of hauntings, the home was left to sit vacant. A second, better-documented incident occurred a few decades later in 1887. This time, two sailors - Edward Blunden and Robert Martin - found themselves without a place to stay on Christmas Eve and decided to stay in the empty house on Berkeley Street. Martin fell asleep but was awakened in the night by the sound of Blunden fighting something. Martin awoke to a scene that caused him to flee the building in terror: Blunden was being strangled by a brown, formless shape that had tendrils, one of which it was using to strangle Blunden. (These tentacle-like appendages have led some to suspect the entity is not a ghost, but a "semi-aquatic, predatory, cryptid phenomenon" that surfaces from the London sewer system.)

    Martin ran from the house and returned with a police officer, only to find that Blunden had been thrown from the second story of the house and crushed on the street below. (In another version of the story, Blunden's mangled body was found in the basement, at the foot of the stairs.)

    The house is still there today, complete with an antiquarian bookshop on the first floor. By police order, no employee or customer of the store is allowed to explore the building's upper floors, though they do report strange noises from that part of the house.

    It's probably for the best, since the creature - or whatever it is - that lives upstairs has reportedly claimed at least two lives so far.

  • The Enfield Poltergeist

    The Enfield Poltergeist
    Photo: The Conjuring 2 / Warner Bros. Pictures

    If you've seen The Conjuring 2, this story may sound familiar.  Loosely based upon the Enfield haunting, the movie embellished some of the details for dramatic effect. Nonetheless, the Enfield haunting remains one of the most widely debated and, if true, most violent episodes of ghost activity in the 20th century.

    The trouble started on the night of August 30, 1977, when two of the Hodgson children witnessed a wardrobe inexplicably sliding across the floor and loud banging noises. After alerting their mother, Peggy, she called the police. Once there the police reportedly witnessed a chair sliding across the room by itself. All were left to conclude that some invisible force was at work in the house.

    Before long, the Hodgson family's youngest daughter, Janet, became the focus of paranormal activity in the house. It seems she became possessed by the ghost of the house's previous resident, Bill Wilkins, who died of a brain hemorrhage in the home before the Hodgsons moved in.

    Janet was levitated by the alleged spirit, and she also spoke through her in a creepy male voice, sharing details of his passing. Objects flew through the air, family members and visitors were physically assaulted, and matches were spontaneously lit by the restless spirit.

    Some people dismissed the case as an elaborate hoax, but several eyewitnesses came forward with stories to corroborate their claims. One of them was a policewoman who signed an affidavit attesting that she had seen a chair levitate and move on its own in the house.

    The alarming activities eventually subsided.  Family members said they continued to feel a presence, but active haunting stopped. A subsequent family to live in the house reported hearing voices and feeling a presence, but nothing as extreme as those reported by the Hodgson family. The public and countless experts continue to debate whether the haunting the Hodgson family reported was a hoax or real. The surviving Hodgson children continue to maintain that the events truly happened. 

  • The Haunting Of Maria Jose Ferreira

    The Haunting Of Maria Jose Ferreira
    Photo: Joseph E. Baker / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

    Maria Jose Ferreira was just 11 years old when she became the target of a malicious poltergeist - and she did not survive the ordeal.

    It happened in Jaboticabal, Brazil, in 1965. The angry spirit manifested stones and bricks out of nowhere and targeted little Maria with various physical assaults, including scratches, slaps, and bites, leaving her constantly battered and bruised. A visit by an exorcist did little to help; in fact, it seems to have provoked the spirit even further, to the point where it was setting Maria on fire in public places, in full view of many witnesses unconnected to the case.

    A visit to a spirit medium revealed the source of the poltergeist's animosity: Maria had apparently been a witch in a previous life and was now being tormented by the spirits of people her previous incarnation had sent to their deaths with black magic.

    The medium beseeched the spirits to leave the innocent girl alone, but to no avail. Maria returned home and continued to be tormented until she took her own life with pesticides. After her passing, the manifestations stopped in the Ferreira home.

  • The Bell Witch

    The Bell Witch
    Photo: M. V. Ingram / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

    The legend of the Bell Witch has been described as America's greatest ghost story, and some versions of the tale even involved a future US president. That last bit is likely an embellishment, but some claims about the story have been documented.

    In the early 1800s, the Bell family settled in what would one day be Adams, TN, near the Red River. John Bell and his wife, Lucy, had three children: Elizabeth (Betsy) was born in 1806, Richard in 1811, and Joel in 1813. 

    Beginning in 1817, John and daughter Betsy became the targets of violent attacks by an invisible entity that eventually spoke to them. "Kate," as the spirit came to be called, would slap, bite, scratch, and otherwise assault everyone in the family from time to time, but seemed to hold special animus towards Betsy and John. 

    Before long, the spirit's manifestations became accompanied by curses, one of which supposedly slayed John Bell in 1820.

    The Bell Witch legend was so famous in its own time that the family's quest for help is said to have reached the ears of future president Andrew Jackson, who came to visit the home with his men, armed with silver bullets to protect themselves. But like all others who tried to help the Bells, they were driven away by the vengeful spirit.

    Eventually, "Kate" gave up her vendetta against the Bells and is said to have retreated to a cave on their old property, where hauntings and bizarre occurrences continue to be reported to this day.

  • Elisa Lam And The Cecil Hotel

    It's one of the creepiest unsolved mysteries in Los Angeles history, but the death of Elisa Lam at the Cecil Hotel wasn't the first time this building had been associated with strange passings. Indeed, the hotel has a long history of murder and the macabre, which is one reason it became the inspiration for American Horror Story: Hotel.

    Elisa Lam's case is exceedingly hair-raising, even to skeptics. Security camera footage shows she spent almost four minutes in an elevator, alternately talking to and trying to hide from someone who isn't visible.  All the while, the elevator doors don't close, staying open much longer than they're designed to. She then leaves the elevator, never to be seen alive again. She was reported missing, and eventually her body was discovered in the hotel's rooftop water tanks after hotel residents complained about the water's taste and color.  There's no plausible way Elisa could have gained easy access to the water tanks, and despite the fact that the coroner ruled her death an accident, it sparked numerous conspiracy theories, one of them being that she was either possessed by or trying to evade one of the spirits who haunts the Cecil.

    Elisa's passing is only the latest in a long series of strange deaths and macabre incidents at the Cecil. Almost from the beginning of the building's history, it has attracted violence and tragedy.

    In recent times, the Cecil Hotel was the home of two serial killers, Richard Ramirez ("The Night Stalker"), and later, his admirer and copycat, Jack Unterweger. It's also said that the Cecil Hotel is the last place Elizabeth Short ("The Black Dahlia") was seen alive.

  • The South Shields Poltergeist

    The South Shields poltergeist is a recent case of spiritual harassment and assault where the entity seemed to have a fetish for toys. Specifically, the toys belonging to a 3-year-old boy, which the spirit used to terrorize the boy's parents.

    In December 2005, "Marc and Marianne," a couple living with their young son Robert in South Shields, England, began to notice strange things happening in their house. Furniture moved by itself.  Doors opened and closed of their own accord. Chairs would be found stacked in bizarre configurations.

    Then, the entity reportedly became violent. One evening while Marianne and Marc were in bed together, Marianne got hit in the back of the head with one of her son's toys. Marc was beside her, and it appeared as if no one else was in the room. The couple was then pummeled with toys being thrown at them seemingly out of nowhere. As they tried to shield themselves with their covers, they found themselves in a tug-of-war with an invisible entity that tried to steal their blanket. The encounter ended when Marc felt a searing pain on his back, and 13 red scratches appeared on his skin.

    That's when the poltergeist's toy fetish fully manifested. It left a rocking horse dangling from a ceiling fan. Marc and Marianne found a stuffed rabbit sitting in a toy chair at the top of their stairs, with a box cutter in its lap. Malicious messages began to appear on their son's doodle board and even their cell phones (always from untraceable sources), saying things like "go die" or "you're dead."

    Sometimes, young Robert would go missing for long periods of time, only to be discovered hiding in strange parts of the house, like closets and cupboards.

    Paranormal investigators were called in, who claimed to witness several incidents themselves, and even to have seen the entity manifest. They described it as a midnight black, three-dimensional silhouette that "radiated sheer evil."

    And then, as abruptly as it had begun, the haunting stopped. Though Marianne says she will never be the same and remains traumatized, reportedly no additional paranormal activity has occurred at their home.

  • The Black Monk Of Pontefract

    The Black Monk Of Pontefract
    Photo: F. A. Gasquet / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

    Yorkshire, England, 1966: the Pritchard family wasn't expecting trouble. And at first, the haunting seemed fairly innocuous: strange noises now and then, the occasional chair moved around, etc.

    But sometime around August of that year, the entity at work in their home at 30 East Drive on the Chequerfields Estate decided to ramp up the horror.

    Like many poltergeists, the thing focused a great deal of attention on children - in this case, the Pritchard's daughter, Diane. She was thrown from her bed, and at one point dragged up the stairs by her neck, leaving welts and bruises in the form of a handprint.

    The entity began to manifest itself visually, in the form of a dark-robed figure that hovered at the feet of family member's beds.

    And then, like many poltergeist cases before it, the haunting stopped abruptly, never to resume.

    Years after the events, a paranormal investigator discovered the Pritchard's house stood near the former grounds of a medieval rectory, and across the street from an old gallows where many people had been sent to their demise over the centuries.

    Among those hanged there in the past was a Cluniac monk who'd been convicted of raping and murdering a young girl, not much older than Diane had been at the time of the haunting.

    Based on this information, and the entity's description, it was concluded that the haunting of the Pritchards was carried out by this monk's angry ghost, who lost interest in Diane after she became too old for his sick desires. "The Black Monk" now had a moniker, and went down in the record books as one of Europe's most violent hauntings.

  • The Great Amherst Mystery

    The Great Amherst Mystery
    Photo: Hereward Carrington / Wikimedia Commons / Public domain

    The haunting of Esther Cox is one of the most famous haunting accounts in all of ghost lore. It centered around Cox and her home in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada, beginning in 1878. It seems to have been triggered by Esther experiencing a violent attack and near sexual assault by a male friend. The attack understandably left Cox in great emotional distress, and there may have been a connection between that and the events that followed.

    There was knocking and banging throughout the night, and Esther's body began to swell as she alternated between high fevers and periods of very low body temperature. Then objects in the house began to fly around.

    The doctor who was called in to help Cox witnessed her bedclothes being moved, heard scratching noises from an undetermined source, and saw the words "Esther Cox, you are mine to kill" appear on the wall at the head of her bed.

    Esther tried moving to other houses, but whatever hurtful entities haunted her followed along. Among their tactics were the setting of small fires, one of which burned down Cox's host's farmhouse and resulted in her serving jail time for arson.

    It would have been easy to chalk this all up to mischief on her part; however, multiple credible witnesses saw several of the events happen while Esther was under close observation. Eventually, attempts to communicate with the spirit through seances and spirit rapping revealed that there were at least five different ghosts following Cox around for unknown reasons.

    The phenomena calmed down after Esther's jail sentence in 1879, and eventually ceased altogether. Esther Cox went on to marry twice and have sons from each marriage. Whatever plagued her seemed satisfied with the damage it had already done.

  • The Ghosts Of Greyfriars Cemetery

    Lord Advocate Sir George Mackenzie (known to his victims as "Bluidy Mackenzie") was a vicious war criminal and torturer in the service of King Charles II. He imprisoned and tormented thousands of dissident Presbyterians in Scotland during the King's attempts to unify the country under one state religion. He carried out his grisly work at Greyfriars Kirkyard, a small cemetery of the Greyfriars Kirk parish, owned by the Church of Scotland. Hundreds of his victims were buried there, and ironically, so was Mackenzie himself when he passed in 1691.

    There he remained interred until the 20th century. However, one night in 1998, a homeless man seeking shelter disturbed Mackenzie's mausoleum, and unleashed one of Great Britain's most well-known poltergeists. The homeless man himself fell through a hole in the floor of Mackenzie's tomb, into a forgotten chamber that housed the remains of plague victims. This sent him screaming into the night, never to be heard from again.

    The next day, a woman looking through the iron gates of the cemetery was "blasted back off its steps by a cold force." Shortly thereafter, another woman was found unconscious near the tomb, with bruising on her neck indicating someone or something had tried to strangle her.

    Since then, there have been nearly 500 reports of ghostly attacks near Mackenzie's tomb, including burns, scratches, unexplained bruises, broken fingers, punches, kicks, pulled hair, strange smells and sounds, and wall and floor knocks, many seen by multiple witnesses. Some people even claimed the ghost had followed them back home or to a hotel to continue its torments.

    The only person who ever tried to exorcise the restless spirit(s) from the cemetery failed and was reportedly found dead a few days later.

    To this day, the ghost, presumed to be that of Bluidy Mackenzie himself, reigns supreme in the area and shows no signs of leaving or refraining from hurting others.

  • The Coventry Dog-Killer

    The Coventry Dog-Killer
    Video: YouTube

    In 2001, a family in Coventry, England, uploaded a video that showed a closet door opening and a chair moving about the room with no (apparent) assistance from the living. The family's mother, Linda Manning, claimed the ghost responsible had also killed the family's dog by pushing it down the stairs.

    Desperate for help, the Mannings called in famed medium Derek Acorah, who claimed the poltergeist was an angry spirit named Jim. After conducting a spiritual cleansing of the home, Acorah and the Mannings were happy to report that all poltergeist activity ceased.