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Two ghosts are said to haunt the nearby cottages belonging to Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse in Bunker Bay, Australia. Who were the people behind the ghosts of Happy Harry and Bloody Mary?
Two ghosts are said to haunt the nearby cottages belonging to Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse in Bunker Bay, Australia. Who were the people behind the ghosts of Happy Harry and Bloody Mary?
On the wild, rugged coastline of Western Australia, where the land meets the restless Indian Ocean, lies Bunker Bay — a place of natural beauty, secluded beaches, and pristine wilderness. But like many beautiful places kissed by isolation, it also harbors legends too unsettling to ignore.
Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia
Just west of the bay, inside the white limestone structure of Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse, locals whisper of two spirits that have made their eternal home in the shadow of the cliffs and cottages. Known to generations of residents as ‘Happy Harry’ and ‘Bloody Mary’, these two ghosts have carved out a spectral domain amid the windswept grounds and lonely cottages perched by the sea.
Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse: Photo taken of the Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse in 2017, which is in the Margaret River region, Western Australia. //Source
The light was installed in a bath of mercury that made it very easy to rotate. Before people knew how toxic mercury was, the keepers used to handle it without any form of protection, leading to madness, together with extreme isolation many keepers had to put up with. This has created many ghost stories from various lighthouses along the coasts around the world.
The Tragic Tale of ‘Happy Harry’
The first of these restless souls is Harry Balmire, a young Scotsman whose life met a grim end on these unforgiving shores. In 1907, Balmire’s ship was claimed by the treacherous currents near Cape Naturaliste. At least 12 ships have come to grief in the strong currents and dangerous reefs which lie off Cape Naturaliste’s sharp point.
The ship Carnarvon Castle caught fire and the survivors were taken to the lighthouse. There were at least 14 seamen rescued after weeks at sea in lifeboats. The crew stayed at the headkeeper’s home until they were well enough to travel. Desperate and gravely injured, he sought shelter at the nearby Lighthouse Keeper’s Cottage. But the remote refuge could offer him little more than temporary respite.
Stranded, dehydrated, and alone, Harry succumbed to his injuries in the cottage. And while his body was eventually laid to rest in the nearby Busselton Cemetery before being exhumed and sent back to Scotland, local lore insists his spirit remained. For over a century, visitors and lighthouse workers have reported seeing a lone figure holding a lantern, drifting along the grounds and through the misty car park at dusk.
Some say Harry’s ghost is a benevolent one, known for his soft presence rather than malevolence — earning him the nickname ‘Happy Harry’. But make no mistake, his spectral form is enough to chill the bones of even the most hardened locals.
The Violent Legend of ‘Bloody Mary’
While Harry’s ghost may be passive, the second spirit tied to the cottages is anything but.
Known by the fearsome name ‘Bloody Mary’, this entity’s story is darker and more violent. According to regional legend, a maintenance worker once took up temporary residence in one of the caretakers cottages near the lighthouse sometime in the 1990s. One night, he awoke to find a woman’s spectral form hovering above him. Without warning, the ghostly figure began to strangle him with cold, invisible hands.
Terrified and gasping for air, the man barely escaped, fleeing in the dead of night to the nearby town of Dunsborough. When locals found him, he bore fresh, angry red marks around his neck — chilling evidence of his encounter. He swore it was the ghost of Mary, a name that has since passed into local legend.
No one knows for certain who Mary was in life, though some claim she was a scorned lover, while others whisper of a murder victim whose body was never found. Some think she was one of the lighthouse keepers, Maud Elizabeth Govett Miner. In 1909 she was standing on a chair to fix the curtain when she fell. The doctor was unable to tend to her for many days and when he arrived, she had developed blood poisoning. Both her and her baby she was pregnant with died. What remains undisputed is her malevolent presence, which persists to this day in the hearts and fears of the community.
A Place Where Legends Refuse to Die
Some claim to hear soft weeping on windless nights, while others report a sudden, crushing sense of dread inside the empty cottages, as though unseen eyes are watching. The reputation of these haunted grounds has woven itself so tightly into local folklore that to visit Bunker Bay without hearing the names Harry Balmire and Bloody Mary would be unthinkable.
The rugged, storm-lashed beauty of Bunker Bay masks an undercurrent of the macabre — a place where the past’s restless dead still cling to the cliffs and cottages they once knew. Whether you’re a skeptic or a believer, there’s no denying the weight of these stories, carried on the salt-laden wind.
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