True Crime Museum Halloween Ghost Hunt 2023
Sat, 28 Oct
|Hastings
Join Barri Ghai at the True Crime Museum in Hastings for yet another Halloween Ghost Hunt. The True Crime Museum is a paranormal hotspot and previous investigations have provided some of the best EVP's and personal experiences.
Time & Location
28 Oct 2023, 20:00 – 29 Oct 2023, 01:00
Hastings, White Rock, Hastings TN34 1JP, UK
Guests
About the Event
PLEASE ARRIVE AT 7:45pm OUTSIDE THE MAIN GATED ENTRANCE.
Join Barri Ghai at the infamous True Crime Museum in Hastings for another Halloween Ghost Hunt. Spend the evening with him and members of The Ghostfinder Paranormal Society investigating this sinister and foreboding place. Investigate the most haunted areas of this museum and attempt to contact the many spirits attached to this dark location. If you love true crime, then this event is perfect for you. There are real exhibits from some of the world's most shocking crimes, including a genuine lethal injection death bed and the actual bath used by the notorious acid bath murderer.
Multiple spirits have been seen and heard here by staff and visitors including a male entity that left his voice on Barri's recorder. In one of the rooms a dark shadow lurks and often growls at visitors. A female energy has been seen here wandering through rooms and childlike whispers are frequently heard. Many people are commonly affected emotionally and physically by some of the most prominent exhibits.
This paranormal event will begin at 8pm and end at 1am. There will be 3 small teams investigating throughout the night and lead investigators from The Ghostfinder Paranormal Society will be carrying out experiments and different activities using the latest paranormal investigation equipment.
Don't forget the clocks go back 1 hour at 2am!
A maximum of 21 guests will be allowed to attend this event so please book early to avoid disappointment. Barri will work with everyone throughout the evening.
As this is Halloween, fancy dress is optional.
Refreshments
There will be hot and cold drinks available plus some spooky treats and prizes.
Location Address
The True Crime Museum, Palace Court, White Rock, Hastings TN34 1JP
Please ensure you read the terms and conditions prior to booking.
Ghost club members will automatically receive their discounts at checkout.
There will be signed photographs and merchandise available at this event. Card and cash payments accepted.
About The True Crime Museum
The True CRIME Museum is housed in a series of caves accessed via Palace Avenue Arcade at White Rock on the Hastings Seafront. The Arcade and caves formed part of the Palace Court Hotel, built in 1885 by architect Arthur Wells on the site of a former brewery. The caves were created by extending existing fissures in the sandstone cliff face. Miners from Cornwall who were working on local railway tunnels at the time were drafted in to do the work.
Built to profit from the popularity of the new Hastings Pier close by, the sky-scraping Hotel boasted superb views, luxury accommodation, drinking and dining provided by “Chefs from London’s top Piccadilly restaurants.”
It was one of the first buildings on the south coast to be lit by electricity.
The huge, loud generators providing this power were hidden away in the caves behind the hotel and their fixing points can still be seen in the caves. These generators also powered the fabulous, central lift system which can also be seen through the main entrance doors.
The Hastings Chronicle of July 1905 reported that “Inquest into the death of James Orger, twenty-two years of age, a Porter at The Palace Court Hotel who plunged into the shaft of the lift could reach no verdict as to whether he was pushed, jumped or fell.”
In August of the same year, the Chronicle also reported that 20 year old American Ms Chrissell Swann attempted suicide by smothering herself in Belladonna Liniment in Palace Avenue Arcade which is now the entrance to the Museum. She survived and was remanded in custody where she later hanged herself.
The Hotel proved too expensive for most early 20th Century holidaymakers and closed in 1917. Canadian soldiers and RAF personnel were billeted in the Hotel towards the end of World War 1.
In 1926 Captain Vincent Moss converted the Hotel into ‘Palace Chambers’, luxury seafront apartments. The bar and restaurant (Palace Bars) later became a meeting place for artists and bohemians including occultist and Hastings resident Aleister Crowley.
Druid ceremonies were already being conducted in the caves and it is likely that the raised platform in the Museum (now containing the original acid vats used by serial murderer John George Haigh), was built to hold the Druid altar. Fixing points for benches or pews can also still be seen there.
Debauched musical and theatrical performances are also reported in the caves around this time, and though electrical and ventilation works were carried out, the Application for Worship was refused by the local authority despite a petition of nearly 1100 applicants including Crowley.
More recently, visitors to the True CRIME Museum have reported events of possible paranormal significance. There is a Christian Spiritualist Church neighbouring the caves and photographs taken during the surveys for the Museum revealed extraordinary imagery of glowing orbs and shapes.
In November 2014, the Museum’s Curator, Joel Griggs was monitoring the CCTV cameras when he witnessed “a hunched, scurrying figure enter Cave 2 via Ripper Alley. I thought it must have been someone who had come down the fire escape steps from above, so I ran in after the person and there was no-one there.”
Later that same month, two nurses from The Conquest Hospital Hastings visited the Museum. They left rapidly after reporting that they had received a message whilst standing before the skull of rapist and murderer Louis Le Fevre in Cave 4. The message requested invitation to their home.
BE BOLD AND BRING ON THE GHOSTS #BOTG
Tickets
True Crime Museum Ghost Hunt
Admit 1 adult to True Crime Museum with Barri Ghai
£65.00+£1.63 service feeSold Out
This event is sold out