September 26, 2008
Luxury Foreclosures - The Haunted House
This has to be my favorite foreclosure story recently. Not satisfied with the usual, “credit crunch,” excuse, a British businessman is claiming he handed his £3.6 million ($6.6 million) mansion back to the bank because it is “haunted.” I am assuming the bank has some sort of arrangement with the dark side for dealing with these things, and no doubt the bank’s exorcism department will be pleased to get a little action after years of hiding in the basement.
Mr. Anwar Rashid moved into Clifton Hall, a 52 roomed mansion in Nottinghamshire, just 8 months ago, but is now claiming the reason the bank has taken possession is because he and his family have been terrorized by the house since moving in. Blood stains mysteriously appearing on the children’s clothes, unexplained noises and ghostly sightings became a normal part of the family’s brief stay.
Comparing their experiences to the Nicole Kidman film, “The Others,” Mr. Rashid said,
Clifton Hall is a beautiful property. I fell for its beauty but behind the facade it is haunted. We were like the family in The Others. The ghosts didn’t want us to be there. There was a knock on the wall and we heard this, “Hello, is anyone there?” Two minutes later we heard the man’s voice again. I got up to have a look but the doors were locked and the windows were closed.
On one occasion my wife went downstairs to make milk for the baby at 5am and she saw our eldest daughter watching TV. My wife realized something was up, so she went back upstairs to check on her and found her fast asleep in bed. When we found red blood spots on the baby’s quilt, that was the day my wife said she’d had enough. We didn’t even stay that night.
Mr. Rashid, apparently made his fortune in nursing homes and a hotel in Dubai, and had plans to turn Clifton Hall into an up-market wedding venue. By an eerie co-incidence, a license for this venture was recently denied by local authorities - just like happened in the film
Although, he denies allegations that his failure to pay the mortgage was a result of the failed business plan.
The Hall itself dates back to the Norman Conquest, has 17 bedrooms, 10 reception rooms, 10 bathrooms, a gymnasium and a movie theater. Charles the First allegedly stayed briefly in 1632. According to local folklore, a woman dressed in white jumped from a window to her death, while tunnels in the grounds were said to have been used by Satanists. So, if you are on the lookout for a haunted bargain expect this one to be hitting the auction block sometime soon.
Filed under Luxury Properties by Mark Knowles










Trackback URI
http://blog.luxuryproperty.com/luxury-foreclosures-the-haunted-house/trackback/
Leave a Comment