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Haunting

Brown Lady Ghost Photo

The 1936 Country Life photograph of a ghostly figure descending Raynham Hall's staircase has survived every analysis. The Brown Lady—believed to be Lady Dorothy Walpole—is history's most authenticated ghost.

September 19, 1936
Norfolk, England
100+ witnesses

The Authenticated Ghost

The photograph taken at Raynham Hall on September 19, 1936, showing a translucent female figure on the grand staircase, has withstood nearly 90 years of analysis. The Brown Lady remains the most famous and credible ghost photograph in history.

The Photography

The moment:

  • Captain Provand (photographer)
  • Indre Shira (assistant)
  • Country Life magazine assignment
  • Interior photography
  • September 19, 1936

The Capture

What happened:

  • Photographing staircase
  • Shira saw figure descending
  • Told Provand to shoot
  • Flash photograph taken
  • Figure appeared on negative

The Image

What it shows:

  • Translucent female figure
  • Descending staircase
  • Glowing/luminous appearance
  • Period dress visible
  • Classic apparition

Lady Dorothy

The ghost’s identity:

  • Lady Dorothy Walpole
  • Wife of Lord Townshend
  • Died 1726
  • Possibly murdered
  • Locked in room

Her Story

The tragedy:

  • Married Lord Townshend
  • Had affair discovered
  • Husband’s rage
  • Imprisoned in house
  • Death followed

Analysis History

Examination over decades:

  • Immediate scrutiny 1936
  • Multiple experts
  • No tampering found
  • Negatives preserved
  • Passes every test

Technical Analysis

Findings:

  • Consistent lighting
  • No double exposure evidence
  • Technically possible
  • Not obvious fake
  • Remains unexplained

Earlier Sightings

Before the photo:

  • George IV (1820s)
  • Captain Marryat (1835)
  • Numerous others
  • Same description
  • Same location

The Brown Dress

Her signature:

  • Brown brocade gown
  • Period appropriate
  • Consistent detail
  • Hence “Brown Lady”
  • Always described

Country Life Publication

December 1936:

  • Full page feature
  • Immediate sensation
  • Worldwide interest
  • Defended authenticity
  • Historic publication

Significance

Most analyzed and authenticated ghost photograph in history with centuries of supporting witness accounts.

Legacy

The Brown Lady photograph established the standard for ghost evidence—an image that has withstood every attempt at debunking and remains compelling nearly a century later.