
The River Ness flows from Loch Ness through the centre of Inverness and out into the Moray Firth. The ghost of a woman and a smell of decay have been experienced on Ness Islands Inverness Former Telephone Exchange, Friar’s Lane An usher reports being yanked backwards by an unseen hand on his shirt collar when he was entirely alone. It’s invisible, but it makes its presence felt. The other ghost is that of a small child, a little girl who can be seen in the gardens.

For some reason her last sighting was in 1980. Since the late nineteenth century, when she committed suicide, the ghost of the bishop’s wife has visited the palace. It still stands and was incorporated into the new theatre which was given his name.Īfter a recent two year refurbishment the centre, comprising Eden Court Theatre and the Bishop’s Palace, houses two theatres, two cinemas, two dance/drama studios and three floors of dressing rooms. The house was built for Bishop Robert Eden in the nineteenth century. On the banks of the River Ness, a theatre of strikingly modern design was built in 1976 in the grounds of what was once the official residence of the Bishop of Moray.

Witnesses has seen the ghosts of a bishop’s wife, who committed suicide, and a child at Eden Court Theatre and Bishop’s Palace in Inverness. Eden Court Theatre and Bishop’s Palace, IV3 5SA Shop workers blame the ghost of a workman injured and killed in the foundry. When the building was moved it seems to have carried with it the ghost of a factory worker injured on the site, for since the shops opened light bulbs and fuses have blown and doors open and close without any human hand. It now fronts Falcon Square and houses outlets for Laura Ashley and Pizza Express. To overcome the problem the old foundry was dismantled brick by brick and rebuilt at a ninety degree angle to its former position and placed to one side of a public piazza named after the foundry. This was refurbished in 1993, and plans to make an extension were held up until 2002 because the listed Falcon Foundry was in the way. It fell into disuse and much of the foundry was destroyed but for a portion that has been listed as a category B building, one of the few that remain of Inverness’ Victorian industrial past.Ī shopping centre was opened nearby in 1983. The railway reached Inverness in 1855 and behind the railway station in 1858 a foundry was opened by John Falconer. Every month over 600 patrons come together to make these releases possible.The ghost of an injured worker haunts the Inverness Falconry Foundry.
#CORS3 03 RETURN TO THE GHOST TOWER OF INVERNESS FOR FREE#
The maps on Dyson’s Dodecahedron are released for free personal use thanks to the support of awesome patrons like you over on Patreon. In an adventure like this I would end up writing some “dungeon dressing” into the empty rooms (if uninspired, I would roll on the DMG dungeon dressing tables) – just to have something to mention when the door is smashed open into yet another empty side room. Each room in B1 is described with a some detail, giving you a feel for the structure and the purposes of the rooms. While non-encounter rooms are fine with me, I realize how spoiled I am by being introduced to dungeon design via B1 – In Search of the Unknown.

On this map there are a score of unkeyed rooms with no text whatsoever. This map also got us to talking about old school adventures and the number of “empty” unkeyed locations on the maps. Ghost Tower of Inverness Dungeon Map – Player Version
