Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 6 de dic. de 2023 · The Brown Lady of Raynham Hall. It’s probably the most famous ghost photograph in the world: The Brown Lady of Raynham. Hall in Norfolk, captured for Country Life in 1936. In September of that year, Captain Hubert Provand, a London-based photographer, and his assistant Indre Shira were taking photographs of the West Norfolk hall for an article.

  2. 23 de abr. de 2023 · What I *forgot* to tell Curtis was that this is one of the top haunted locations in the state, and especially haunted, happens to be the Blue Lady Room. I had first heard of the Story Inn and the Blue Lady from a podcast that I like, Lore with Aaron Mahnke , which is available on all podcast platforms and covers all kinds of ghost stories, legends and odd things.

  3. A certain Colonel Loftus, going up to his bedroom in the company of a friend, saw the “Brown Lady” on two successive nights, and remarked on her empty eye sockets (a few of the servants immediately gave their notice). The novelist Frederick Mar­ryat, a friend of Dickens, saw the ghost in 1836. Apparently believing the ghost sightings were ...

  4. 12 de ago. de 2019 · According to legend, the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall is the lost ghost of Dorothy Walpole. She was born in 1686 and according to gossip, the prettiest sister of Robert Walpole, seen as the first prime minister of Great Britain. Walpole was neighbour with Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townsend in Norfolk. And it just so happened that his sister ...

  5. Considered one of the most famous ghost photographs in history, the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall evokes a sense of eerie elegance. Captured in Norfolk, England, by photographers Captain Hubert C. Provand and Indre Shira, the photograph depicts a ghostly figure descending a staircase. Many believe this spectral apparition to be Lady Dorothy ...

  6. The famous photograph of the Brown Lady has been frequently reproduced in books about ghosts and hauntings. It happened in the 30s that two photographers from Country Life magazine were taking a series of photographs of Raynham Hall. Captain Provand was photographing the staircase when his assistant, Indra Shira, suddenly noticed a misty figure ...

  7. The Brown Lady of Raynham Hall In 1936 Country Life magazine photographer Captain Hubert C. Provand and his assistant Indre Shira were taking photographs of Raynham Hall, Norfolk for a Country Life article when Indre Shira noticed "a vapoury form gradually assuming the appearance of a woman" moving down the stairs towards them.