The Hauntings of Hinton House
In the village of Hinton St George stands the historic Hinton House, a medieval hall house—sometimes referred to as the Grange—rebuilt around the year 1500. Over the centuries the building has worn many identities. During the Second World War it was used as a school for evacuated girls, and later served as a nursing home before the estate was divided into private apartments in 1968.
Yet the house is remembered as much for its ghosts as for its history.
The Grey Lady of the Staircase -
One of the best-known spirits said to wander the house is a cloaked Grey Lady, believed to have been a member of the historic Poulett family.
According to local tradition, she once fell in love with a man considered beneath her social standing.
The two attempted to elope.
Her father discovered their plans and intervened violently, reportedly running the young man through with his sword.
The tragedy ended the lovers’ hopes forever.
The young woman is said to have died soon afterward—some say of grief—and her sorrowful figure is believed to linger still, haunting the old oak staircase where she is occasionally glimpsed moving silently through the shadows.
The Spirit of the Young Heir
Another presence associated with the house is that of a child: young Frederic Charles Poulett (1798–1808).
The boy died after a brief illness at only ten years old.
Stories claim that his spirit remains tied to one of the rooms in the house, where unexplained disturbances have long been whispered about.
The Ghost of Samuel Day
Perhaps the strangest tale connected to the house concerns Samuel Day (1756–1806).
Day was injured in a tragic accident when scaffolding collapsed during a parliamentary election in nearby Bridgwater.
Though he was taken to a local inn, he died several days later.
His body was returned to Hinton House in a lead coffin—so heavy that carrying it up the narrow staircase proved nearly impossible. Instead, the coffin was hoisted by rope through a bedroom window.
But disaster struck, the rope snapped.
The coffin fell, killing one of the men attempting to guide it inside.
After this grim event, reports began to circulate that Samuel Day’s restless spirit appeared near the bedroom window where the accident occurred.
According to legend, the haunting grew so troubling that seven priests were summoned to perform an exorcism. They were said to have banished his spirit all the way to the Red Sea—a place from which, the tale insists, no ghost could ever return.
© Somerset Paranormal
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