Blog Archives
Paranormal magazine issue 4 out now!!!
Paranormal Magazine #4: The Ghost Hunting Magazine https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1502309025/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_OnUdub1TK4K0B
Enjoy and sorry for the delay. Me and Wayne have had personal problems which delayed the release.
Thank you for been patient and hope to see you on issue 5.
Oddity Files – Black Moon Manor E01 – Promo
This is the teaser for Darkrider Studios upcoming series ODDITY FILES.
A paranormal TV show that will follow investigators with various levels of experience, through a Journey of seeking out the Odd and the Paranormal.
We went in, planning to just investigate Black Moon Manor, before even filming an episode of Oddity Files, but Black Moon Manor is soooooo active, we got enough footage to film our pilot episode.
“Watch” The Angry Ghost – St Johns Museum – UK Ghost Hunts S01 E03
Episode 3, Season One, The Uk Ghost Hunts Team head to the creepy St Johns Museum, which was once an old hospital and school, the team go In search of paranormal activity.
Follow the story of real paranormal investigators, Just what will they encounter tonight?
The Angry Ghost??
Come to our next filming
http://www.ukghosthunts.com
Produced By
http://paranormal-magazine.com

Sheffield Ghost Hunt – Endcliffe Hall – 26th July Saturday.
Endcliffe Hall Ghost Hunt
Sheffield – Endcliffe Hall 2014
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Date: 26th July 2014
Address:
Endcliffe Hall
81 Endcliffe Vale Rd
Sheffield
S10 3EU
Day: Saturday
Price: £30
Deposit: £15 – £15 To be paid on the night of event
Never Investigated By Any Other Paranormal Team And Is Exclusive Only To The Uk Ghost Hunts Team.
Many Unexplained Figures And Noises Have Been Said To Roam The Hall Over The Years As Uk Ghost Hunts And Guests Will Now Investigate This Great Location
The Endcliffe estate can be traced back to 1333 when John de Elcliffe was awarded a financial grant, at that time the estate extended considerably and took in land between the Porter and Sheaf valleys. It is believed that the first Endcliffe Hall was built in the reign of George II (1727 – 1760) although Sheffield historian J. Edward Vickers says there may have been an earlier building on the site. The hall was owned from 1818 by the merchant William Hodgson and included 50 acres of land and cost £6,700. The hall later passed to Henry Wilkinson, a Sheffield silversmith before being bought by John Brown in August 1860.
Brown had previously lived at the large seven bedroomed house of Shirle Hill in Cherry Tree Road, Nether Edge and entertained the Prime Minister Lord Palmerston there in 1862. However Brown was looking for a more impressive structure to entertain his visitors and wanted a building that was “…. specially adapted for dispensing hospitalities on a scale worthy of such distinguished visitors”. Brown’s first action on acquiring the building was to pull the old hall down and replace it with the current building which cost £100,000 to build with a further £60,000 spent on the furnishings. Brown was determined to use Sheffield craftsmen during the work on the hall and in addition to the architects Flockton & Abbot he employed local firms such as John Jebson Smith (staircases), Longden & Co. (kitchen stoves), Messrs Craven (ornamental plasterwork), William Gibson (carpentry), Mr Pitt (plumbing and glazing) and John and Joseph Rogers (decorating).
Such was the rarity of such a fine building being erected in Sheffield at that time, that when the hall was finished it was opened to the public for three days attracting huge crowds and much praise with the Sheffield Telegraph calling it, “the public advantage of personal munificence” in its edition of 24 May 1865. After the death of his wife in 1881, Brown gradually withdrew from public life, his health deteriorated and he spent increasing amounts of time in southern England. John Brown left Endcliffe Hall for the last time in 1892 and sold Endcliffe Hall for £26,000 in 1895 (a year before his death) to Barber Brothers and Wortley for building development. The development never took place and various plans were proposed for the future of the hall, which in the interim hosted exhibitions and dances.


