Famous Ghost Pictures

Look just to the right of my friend and you’ll see a person which appears to have no legs or is coming out of a grave! Some people think it looks like a little boy, some say an old man, or even an old lady, what do you think


This picture was taken in 1959 by Mrs. Mabel Chinnery apparently no one was
in the backseat when the picture was taken. Mrs. Chinnery recognized the
person in the backseat as her dead mother whose grave she was just visiting!!!
She staked her reputation on the authenticity of the photograph

This picture was taken by Tony O’Rahilly in 1995, as Wem Town Hall, Shropshire,
England, burned down. The girl in the doorway was not seen at the time the photo
was taken. When examined by photographic expert Dr. Vernon Harrison, former
president of the Royal Photographic Society the photo was deemed genuine, in that
it was not tampered with. In 1977 there was another fire in this place, started
accidentally by a young girl by the name of Jane Churm. Is this her ghost?

A ghostly face can be seen in this group photo of R.A.F. Airmen taken in 1919
by Sir Victor Goddard. (R.A.F. officer, retired) Lending credence to the idea
that this is a actually a real picture of a ghost is the fact that members of the
squadron pictured easily identified the man. It was their fellow airman Freddy
Jackson, an air mechanic who had been killed two days earlier in an accident
involving an airplane propeller . The man in the close up is located in the top
row, fourth from the left. Note the face to the right of the man pictured in the
zoom…

James Courtney and Michael Meehan, crew members of the S.S. Watertown, were cleaning a cargo tank of the oil tanker as it sailed toward the Panama Canal from New York City in December of 1924. Through a freak accident, the two men were overcome by gas fumes and killed. As was the custom of the time, the sailors were buried at sea off the Mexican coast on December 4.
But this was not the last the remaining crew members were to see of their unfortunate shipmates. The next day, before dusk, the first mate reported seeing the faces of the two men in the waves off the port side of the ship. They remained in the water for 10 seconds, then faded. For several days thereafter, the phantom-like faces of the sailors were clearly seen by other members of the crew in the water following the ship.
On arrival in New Orleans, the ship’s captain, Keith Tracy, reported the strange events to his employers, the Cities Service Company, who suggested he try to photograph the eerie faces. Captain Tracy purchased a camera for the continuing voyage. When the faces again appeared in the water, Captain Tracy took six photos, then locked the camera and film in the ship’s safe. When the film was processed by a commercial developer in New York, five of the exposures showed nothing but sea foam. But the sixth showed the ghostly faces of the doomed seamen. The negative was checked for fakery by the Burns Detective Agency. After the ship’s crew had been changed, there were no more reports of sightings.

his photograph was taken in 1963 by Reverend K. F. Lord at Newby Church in North Yorkshire, England. It has been a controversial photo because it is just too good. The shrouded face and the way it is looking directly into the camera makes it look like it was posed – a clever double exposure. Yet supposedly the photo has been scrutinized by photo experts who say the image is not the result of a double exposure.
The Reverend Lord has said of the photo that nothing was visible to the naked eye when he took the snapshot of his altar. Yet when the film was developed, standing there was this strange cowled figure.
The Newby Church was built in 1870 and, as far as anyone knows, did not have a history of ghosts, hauntings or other peculiar phenomena. Those why have carefully analyzed the proportions of the objects in the photo calculated that the specter is about nine feet tall!