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Is the first person who died after a shark attack in Australia haunting Brighton Beach in Adelaide, South Australia. Ever since, people claim to have seen the ghost of Kitty Whyte on the jetty and beach she jumped out into the ocean from.
Is the first person who died after a shark attack in Australia haunting Brighton Beach in Adelaide, South Australia. Ever since, people claim to have seen the ghost of Kitty Whyte on the jetty and beach she jumped out into the ocean from.
The sun-bleached sands of Brighton Beach in South Australia shimmer with serenity, a popular escape where locals and tourists alike stroll the shoreline, fish from the jetty, and bask in Adelaide’s coastal charm. But beneath its breezy, postcard-perfect surface, this beach harbors a haunting that’s whispered about by generations of beachgoers.
Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia
If you find yourself near the Brighton Jetty at dusk, keep your eyes on the water — for it’s said that a spectral woman appears, diving gracefully from the pier into the waves in vintage swimming clothes. She vanishes before she ever resurfaces. This eerie apparition is believed to be none other than Kitty Whyte, whose tragic and untimely death left a ghostly imprint on the beach she so loved.
Kathleen ‘Kitty’ Whyte wasn’t just any swimmer. In the early 20th century, she was a local heroine, renowned for her skills in the water and her commitment to teaching swimming to Adelaide’s youth. She was even awarded the Grand Diploma of the Royal Life Saving Society for rescuing a drowning woman.
But fate had a cruel plan for Kitty. In 1926, after concluding a lesson with local children, she decided to take a solitary swim in the very waters she knew so well. Whyte was visiting Brighton from Yadlamalka Station near Port Augusta in South Australia’s north for her annual summer holiday. She was 35 years old and didn’t know it would be her last swim. Kitty Whyte became the first person in South Australian history to be killed by a shark as her two children had to watch the whole thing on the jetty.
It was a 3.5 m long shark and although her body was pulled out from the water, she did die in the hospital because of it. Her death sent shockwaves through the community. The horror of the attack, so sudden and violent, marked Brighton Beach indelibly. And according to local lore, Kitty never truly left.
A Ghost on an Eternal Loop
Paranormal experts, including Allen Tiller, author of Haunted Adelaide, believe that Kitty’s spirit lingers as a residual ghost — a spectral imprint left behind by the trauma of her passing.
“A residual ghost is like a video recording on loop,” Tiller explained in an interview. “What people are seeing on the beach is how she would have been remembered.”
Witnesses have described seeing a young blonde woman in antiquated clothing sprinting along the shore or diving gracefully from the jetty. Yet, when approached, the figure vanishes without a trace. What makes these sightings all the more chilling is the uncanny way her appearance never seems to fit the modern era — her garments, her hairstyle, and her very presence belong to a different time.
Chilling Encounters at Brighton Beach
Sightings of Kitty’s ghost aren’t rare, and stories have circulated for decades. One particularly eerie account tells of two young men walking along the beach at twilight, startled by the sight of a woman running toward them in the sand, her clothes out of place for the time. Before they could react, she disappeared into the gathering dusk.
Fishermen and night swimmers alike have reported feeling an unexplained presence near the jetty, and lifeguards have claimed to hear the faint splash of a dive with no one else in sight.
While most encounters are benign, there’s an unshakable sense of melancholy attached to them — as though Kitty is still drawn to the waters, repeating her final moments in a ceaseless loop.
A Memorial and a Mystery
In honor of her bravery and life, a water fountain and statue stand near Brighton Beach, a quiet tribute to the woman whose story is etched into the community’s history. But even these memorials haven’t put Kitty’s restless spirit to ease.
Memorial: The sculpture commemorates the life of Kathleen (Kitty) Whyte and her contribution to the local community. Source
Today, the beach remains a popular gathering place — but those who know the legend advise a cautious glance toward the sea at twilight. And if you happen to glimpse a lone figure diving into the waves, never to surface, you might just have caught a fleeting moment of a century-old tragedy still replaying itself.
So the next time you walk along Brighton Beach, especially near the jetty as evening falls, listen to the soft hush of the waves. You might just hear the ghost of a dive, a splash… and silence.
Mirroring the famous Dance Macabre mural that used to hang on the walls near the Predigerkirche in Basel, it is said that plague victims were buried in the patch of grass outside of the church. Legend has it that when the city needs it, the dead will rise from it in a macabre procession, as a warning of an oncoming disaster.
Where history whispers and shadows reign, the Rathaus in Bern is said to be haunted by a myriad of ghosts. Who are the ghosts lingering in the City Hall after dark?
The two adjoining cloisters by Basel Cathedral are said to be haunted by a couple of spectres entombed within the building. In the darkness of Basel’s Double Cloister, it is said you can hear the moaning of a man slowly suffocating and feel the unsuspected slap from a man, as mean in death as he was in life.
A lock keeper from the adjacent lock next The Portobello Bar in Dublin is said to be haunting it. Ever since his mistake cost the lives of someone crossing, he is said to be lingering in the area.
In an old sanatorium in Switzerland the ghost of Hermann is said to have been haunting for ages. But who was he when he was alive, and what was his true name before he died in the remote fortress up in the mountains? And is he still haunting the old halls where he never made his recovery?
After his master died at sea, the faithful dog was by his master’s grave, day in and day out. After dying of hunger and grief it is said that the Newfoundland dog is still seen, slipping between the graves at Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin.
Once, the city of Bern was filled with nuns working and living inside of the city walls. According to ghost stories though, some of them remained, even after the Reformation that closed their convents down. And those stories tell about them being guilty of terrible things with terrible ends.
Seeking new land and a new life, the Salladay family went to Ohio, but brought a silent killer with them: Consumption. Falling into odd superstitions, they believed the only way to stop the disease was to stop the undead from rising from their graves.
Is Cell Number 11 in the former prison for the criminally insane haunted? The attic of the Norwegian Justice Museum in Trondheim, Norway has had many who come out, claiming so.
Now a place you can rent and stay at, the Beck House in Canada is said to be one of the more haunted places. Those who have stayed the night come back with stories of strange encounters, believed to be the ghost of the Beck family members.
Where the Nydegg Church is today, there once used to be a castle. Tales about ghosts lingering around the old Nydegg Castle and the stairs leading up to it still roams. And one of the more infamous and feared ghosts of Bern is the Burgträppe-Balzli.
The Haunted Ruins of Beaupre Castle in Wales is one of the places in Wales said to have been haunted by the wailing spirit and deadly omen of the The Gwrach y Rhibyn, also known as the Hag of Mist.
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