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Local
Ghosts
and other mysteries
Number of pages: 15
Contents:
Local Ghosts and Apparitions
Achddu, Burry Port
The Ghost of Sarah Beal
Box Cemetery
The Ghost of Cannoneer Will Kelly
Bryncaerau Mansion and Parc Howard
The Ghost of the
Hapless Lover
The Ghost of Lady
Howard
Bwylch-y-Gwynt and Machynys
The Ghosts of the Mad
Monks of Machynys
The Ghost of a Servant
Girl with a Lantern
The Vale of Neath Public House
The Ghost of William Brazel
Llanelly House
The Ghost of
Mira Turner
The Island Place Mission
The Vision on the Wall
Spudder’s Bridge
The White Ghost
Extract
The Ghost of Mira Turner
The story of the ghost that haunts
Llanelly House is well documented and describes how a young servant girl
who was made pregnant by the master of the house killed herself because
she feared the shame that would be brought on her and her family. One
story describes how she threw herself down the stairs whilst the other
story relates how she threw herself from an upstairs window falling to the
courtyard below.
Different stories have been
recounted over the years by people who have seen the ghost, but the most
fascinating one was told by the daughter of a lady who was responsible for
cleaning Llanelly House during the 1960s. The daughter and her friend were
waiting for the mother to finish cleaning the downstairs rooms and they
wandered upstairs and got lost in the maze of rooms. Feeling frightened
and about to panic the two young girls who were about nine or ten years
old, saw what looked like a young women in dark clothes beckoning to them
to follow her.
The frightened young girls
followed the figure that disappeared into one of the rooms. The girls
found themselves at the top of the flight of stairs and ran down to
explain what had happened. The mother told them not to worry they must
have seen the ghost of Llanelly House.
This was an intriguing story and
all the more so when the UK Census details of 1851 show that a young
servant girl called Mira Turner who had been born in Reading, Berkshire,
was working as a housemaid for the Chambers family. At that time Llanelly
House was divided into two parts with William Chambers Senior, his son William Chambers
Junior, his wife and children living in one part and Doctor Thomas
Bedlington Cook, his wife and four children living in the other part. One
of the doctor’s children was also another doctor, John Kirkhouse Cook aged
37 and unmarried.
Looking through records of burials
for the parish of Llanelli, Mira Turner was listed as being buried on 9
August 1851 aged 22 years. At first it was thought that Mira might have
died through natural causes or one of the diseases that were prevalent at
the time. Llanelli Registry Office provided a death certificate for her
which revealed that she had committed suicide by taking Laudanum whilst
temporarily insane. The coroner was William Bonville of Bryn Towy, near
Carmarthen and the Registrar was David Arthur Davies of Llanelli.
It was common practise in the 1800s for girls who
became pregnant out of wedlock to be considered insane or immoral and
would have been ostracised by society.
Many young women were placed in
mental institutions, or forced to seek shelter in a workhouse having no
means of support because they would have lost their job. Many girls, like
Mira, could not cope with this situation and killed themselves rather than
face the wrath of society.
It is intriguing to consider how
Mira was able to obtain the laudanum, which is not a drug that would have
been readily available to a servant girl. Did one of the doctors provide
the laudanum? Laudanum would have made her feel drowsy. Did she fall down
the stairs or fall out of the window because the drug made her unsteady?
Was she given the laudanum deliberately and was she pushed or thrown down
the stairs or through the window to make it look like suicide?
It would have been unthinkable in
those days for the ‘gentleman’ responsible to face up to his
responsibility and his family would have ensured that no blame was
attached to him.

Mira Turner's Death Certificate
Order
Further Information
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