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50 Berkeley Square is a reportedly haunted townhouse on Berkeley Square in Mayfair, Central London.In the late 19th century it became known as one of the most haunted houses in London, [1] with its attic room said to be haunted by the spirit of a young woman who had committed suicide there.
[49] [50] [51] The first and third of these, a bronze 'medallion' style tablet at 23 Highbury Place erected on 28 July 1915 [52] and a Hopton Stone tablet at 188 Camberwell Grove, erected after some delay on 21 December 1920, [53] survive. The second, another 'medallion' style bronze, was erected on 14 January 1916 at No.40 Prince's Gardens ...
45 Berkeley Square Mayfair W1J 5AS 1953 () 50 : Eric Coates (1886–1957) "Composer lived here in Flat 176 1930–1939" Chiltern Court, Baker Street Marylebone NW1 5SG 2013 () 33147 : Richard Cobden (1804–1865) "Died Here" 23 Suffolk Street Leicester Square SW1Y 4HG 1905 () 122 : Thomas Cochrane, Earl of Dundonald and David Beatty, Earl ...
50 Berkeley Square is allegedly haunted. [10] "Tomlinson", the title character of Rudyard Kipling's 1891 satirical poem, "gave up the ghost at his house in Berkeley Square". Peter Standish, a character from the play Berkeley Square written by John Balderston, about a Yankee who lives in a house on the square and is transported back to the 18th ...
The Ghosts of Berkeley Square is a 1947 British comedy film, directed by Vernon Sewell and starring Robert Morley and Felix Aylmer.The film is an adaptation of the 1944 novel No Nightingales by Caryl Brahms and S. J. Simon, inspired by the enduring reputation of the property at 50 Berkeley Square as "the most haunted house in London". [2]
The 50 Berkeley Square premises in 2014. The company was based at 50 Berkeley Square until 2015. In 2016 it moved to 46 Curzon Street, with an additional larger premises later opening in 48 Bedford Square. [9]
50 Berkeley Square is a reportedly haunted townhouse on Berkeley Square in Mayfair, in Central London. In the 1900s it became known as "The Most Haunted House in London";[1] mostly due to Peter Underwood's description of the house in Haunted London.[2]
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