Here’s is fascinating ghost story for Halloween, fascinating because of its colorful location, the history of the house, and the identity of the prominent ghost. Wait until you find out who haunts this house! The story comes from Jane Clifford of Wales, and from the heady history of that land.
Maude would later tell her that she had seen ghosts near the barn. “Inside the house, I picked up the medieval past. I sensed tremendous occult magical power there, it seems like some sort of portal, as if the veils between the worlds and time was extra thin. Being a sensitive, there was a terrific amount of information that came in all at once. I felt psychically shocked for over a week after one night there and so did my twenty-two year old son, who is well-grounded and doesn’t scare easily. It took me enormous courage to return there.”
“At that point, I think my own fear made me come back to the present.” The next day she asked Maude if she knew anything of the history of the house. She only knew that the military had used it until the 1950s, and it had been vacant after that until she’d bought it.
During the summer of 2010, Jane went to a party near her home, two hours from the haunted house, where she met two couples who lived one same side of Skerrid Mountain as the house in question. When Jane mentioned Maude’s house, one of the women said she knew it well and added that Rudolf Hess was held there by British forces, and he was often seen by locals walking about the property.
”You can imagine my shock that I had been communicating with the ghost of the third most powerful Nazi in Germany!”
In fact, Hesse had defected in the war, had dropped by parachute into Scotland and had tried to broker an end to the war. From 1942-45, he was held as a prisoner in Wales, part of the time in the Abergavenny Military Hospital, located near Maude’s house. The house isn’t mentioned in the history of Hesse in Wales, but secret service files won’t be released until 2017. Meanwhile, Jane is convinced that he stayed there, that top level secret meetings were held in the house, and information was given to the British that affected the outcome of the war. “I am certain of this from the information I received.”
Churchill didn’t want Hesse tried for war crimes, believing he had exonerated himself by defecting and proving valuable information. However, Stalin insisted Hesse stand trial. He was found guilty and imprisoned at Spandau, Berlin where he died at the age of 93.
“It’s hard to describe what occurs to me in that house,” Jane said. “It’s as if there were a tear in the fabric of space and time. I have stayed in many castles in Wales, but none has affected me this way.”
A friend of Jane’s, a man who has lived on his own in isolated locations, recently spent a night in the house and wanted to flee at 5 a.m., the same time the Jane had a similar urge while staying at the house. Another guest staying there heard a piano playing in the night, even though she and the owner had gone to bed.
Definitely sounds like a haunted abode.
Happy Halloween!



















