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The Story of the Green Lady Haunting Longleat House

Longleat House is a splendid stately home famous for its Renaissance architecture. It is also famous for being haunted by the Green Lady.

By Tim TrottReported Ghosts and Hauntings • November 5, 2011
The Story of the Green Lady Haunting Longleat House

The estate, named after the stream of Long Leat, was bought by Sir John Thynne in 1568. During the 18th century, the Thynnes acquired the title of Viscount Weymouth, which was their wealth and social standing.

Longleat House is widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain. Construction began in 1567.
Longleat House is widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain. Construction began in 1567. 

The 2nd Viscount Weymouth was Thomas Thynne, a temperamental young man who married the beautiful Lady Louisa Carteret in 1733. As part of the wedding arrangements, Lady Louisa brought her own servants to Longleat House.

One of those servants was a young footman who appeared devoted to Lady Louisa. His deep affection for Lady Louisa soon had tongues wagging and speculating. Lady Louisa's husband, Thomas, was led on to suspect his wife of having an affair with the young footman.

The Viscount ambushed the young footman one day in a passageway outside the old library. He made some angry accusations, which the footman hotly denied. The jealous Viscount could not contain his temper and shoved the young footman, causing him to tumble down the spiral staircase that descends from the passageway outside the library.

The fall broke the young footman's neck as he landed, killing him instantly. Viscount Weymouth, fearing a charge of murder, quickly had the young man buried in the cellar of the house. He then informed his wife that the footman had left hurriedly to attend to some personal family business.

Lady Louisa did not believe this unlikely story, but, having no idea of the truth about that terrible day, she believed that her husband had imprisoned the young footman in one of the many rooms in Longleat House.

Night after night, Lady Louisa would walk the corridors of Longleat House searching for her lost footman. Endlessly knocking on doors and tapping at panels in search of secret hiding places.

Such was Lady Louisa's persistence in taking no notice of the weather or temperatures in the old house. On one of the many occasions when she was out searching for the young servant, Lady Louisa caught a chill which developed into pneumonia. Much weakened by her illness and continuing worry, the beautiful young woman died in childbirth in 1736, aged only 22.

It was not long after Lady Louisa's untimely death that her apparition was seen knocking on doors and stalking the corridors of Longleat House in a seemingly endless search.

After his wife's death, the 2nd Viscount moved out from Longleat House to live in the village of Horningsham. Some whispered that the real reason for him doing so was that he was terrified of running into Louisa as she walked the top passage after nightfall, looking for her loyal footman. He is also said to have nearly ruined himself and his two sisters by his extravagance after his wife died.

The ghost of Lady Louisa, or the Green Lady, as she has become known, is said today to be the ghost most frequently encountered at Longleat. The corridor outside the library where the footman met his death is now known as The Green Lady's Walk.

About the Author

Tim Trott is a lifelong explorer of the unexplained whose fascination with the paranormal began in childhood, sparked by ghost stories, eerie encounters, and a haunted house on his school grounds. As the creator of Your Paranormal, he invites readers to journey beyond the veil and uncover the mysteries of ghosts, UFOs, mythology, and the supernatural. What began as childhood curiosity has grown into a passion for unraveling the unknown—one story, one encounter, and one mystery at a time.

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