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The Ghost of the Quarantined at Q Station in Sydney

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At the old North Head Quarantine Station in Sydney, it is said that the ghosts of the quarantined still linger. Over 50 ghosts are said to roam the Q Station, claiming to be one of Australia’s most haunted places. 

The golden stretch of Manly Beach, in the northern suburbs of Sydney, is a sun-soaked paradise where surfers carve through crashing waves and families gather to bask in the warmth of the Australian coast. But just beyond its inviting shoreline lies a place steeped in death, sorrow, and lingering spirits — a site whose tragic past bleeds into the very air around it.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia

Perched on the headlands near Manly sits the notorious Q Station, formerly known as the North Head Quarantine Station, one of the most haunted locations in all of Australia. Today it’s a museum of the past and things like clothes, luggage and other personal belongings are left with their tombstones. And if we are to believe the legends, so are the ghosts of those who never left as well. 

Q Station: Hospital, Boiler House and Wharf at the old Quarantine Station, with humpback whales passing by. The building complex by the beach is said to be haunted by many ghosts. // Source

A Grim Chapter in Australia’s History

From the 1830s to 1984, the North Head Quarantine Station served as a detention and treatment site for immigrants suspected of carrying deadly diseases. Before the Europeans came it belonged to the Carrang Gel Aboriginal people and it was an important ceremonial and teaching place. The place’s legacy would soon change as the arrival of new ships often meant outbreaks of smallpox, the Spanish flu, scarlet fever, and the bubonic plague — afflictions that would claim the lives of over 500 souls within the station’s gates.

Arriving at the Q Station: The Sydney Ferry Kookooburra at Manly Quarantine Station 1930. These people will be passengers from a liner which, inbound, has reported carrying some contagious disease and needed to be quarantined.

The isolation and strategic role of North Head was recognized in 1828 when the first vessel, the Bussorah Merchant, was quarantined at Spring Cove. Governor Darling’s Quarantine Act of 1832, set aside the whole of North Head for quarantine purposes in response to the 1829–51 cholera pandemic in Europe.

Read More: Check out the stories of Isla de Pedrosa – the Haunted Island and Poveglia Island — The Most Haunted Place in the World for more stories about haunted quarantine stations.

In an era before modern medicine, treatment was crude, and survival was rare for the most ill. Victims were separated from their families, stripped of their possessions, and subjected to invasive carbolic acid showers designed to “disinfect” them. They had to stay symptom free for 40 days before being let out. It is said that the cries of the dying and the hopeless murmurs of those quarantined still linger in the salt-heavy air around Manly Beach.

Bildetekst: Quarantine Carvings: One of the most historic features of the quarantine station is the series of engravings along the escarpment adjacent to the jetty. The carvings were executed by people staying at the quarantine station, and cover an extensive period that stretched from the early nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century. Some were executed by stonemasons and sculptors and show a high degree of skill.

The Haunting of the 1st Class Shower Block

Among the Q Station’s most infamous hotspots is the 1st Class Shower Block, a place once reserved for passengers wealthy enough to afford better quarters on incoming ships — but death did not discriminate. Here, those showing symptoms would be ordered to strip and doused with scalding carbolic acid, a brutal attempt to eradicate infection. The showers contained 10 percent of carbonic acid, and although it took all the fleas and ticks, it also took off a layer of your skin. There are however no records of people having died in this block. 

Shower Block: Picture from 1919 showing the 3rd class shower block

Today, visitors on night ghost tours report hearing disembodied whispers asking, “Why are you here?” and feeling unseen hands shove them, even when standing alone. The room is heavy with a stifling, oppressive atmosphere, as though the anguish of those tortured in life still clings to the damp stone walls. Some people report about someone peering over the top pf the shower cubicles.

In the Shower Block there have also been reports of a man wearing a fedora and a woman wearing a bloody gown. There is also said to be a little girl appearing. It is said that the little girl looks to be around six years old and you can hear her complaining and doesn’t want to go under the acid shower. 

The Shower Room: A couple on a ghost tour took this image inside the 1st class shower block. A man wearing a fedora hat can be seen at the end of the corridor with a small child, even though the room was empty at the time. This image probably help popularize the story of the ghosts haunting the shower rooms.

Gravedigger’s Cottage

Another place said to be haunted is the Q Station Gravedigger’s Cottage and is left like when it was last lived in and looks like time stopped in the 80s. The building has also been known as the Boatman’s Hut and the Cookhouse and is perhaps one of the earliest structures of the old quarantine station. It is also said to be one of the most haunted. 

It was actually officers or perhaps doctors living in the house, but on both sides were the Quarantine Station’s cemeteries. Some say that the energy in the house comes from the legend of two doctors torturing some of the residents. Some guides talk about two entities named Martin and Samuel that don’t like women at all. It also gets its name because of the man in a black cloak and wide brimmed hat that has been seen in the house many times. Today he is simply known as Sam the gravedigger.

People report a strangling sensation of hands wrapped around your throat, or something pushing your chest or the feeling of being put underwater unable to breathe. According to mediums and paranormal investigators that have been inside the house, this is because the house is haunted by a woman that allegedly was attacked and drowned in the bathtub of the house. 

She is said to be seen crying, sitting crouched in the bathtub. 

The Old Nurses’ Quarters and the Hospital

In the old nurses quarters in the complex, people have reported about a threatening figure cloaked in shadows. Some will go as far and say that it is a demon haunting these quarters. 

Nurses Haunting the Q Station: A nurse is pictured above walking past the 1st class living accommodation as she makes her rounds in 1935. // Source

In the hospital there is also said to be a grieving mother, looking for her child. Allegedly, she arrived with her young child who died of a smallpox outbreak and the mother died shortly afterward. Her ghost is said to wander the corridors, clutching a bundle believed to be her child she was separated with in life. 

In the hospital a Matron is still looking after her ward, and hates when people behave disrespectfully. There are as with many hospitals, many spirits of the ghosts of the nurses wandering the halls. 

The names of Elizabeth McGregor who had served in the first world war and Nurse Annie Egan who lost their life to the Spanish Flu when they were working as nurses have been known to appear at their old place of work. Nurse Annie Egan was actually a 27 year old Catholic, and when she died she had pleaded to be allowed a priest to give her last rites as well as the other Catholics. Her wishes were denied though as they feared the priest would spread the flu when he left. She died December 3rd in 1918. 

Child Spirits of the Quarantine Station

Of all the tragic tales to emerge from the Q Station, none are as sorrowful as those of the children who died within its confines. Roughly 20 child spirits are said to roam the grounds, their ghostly presences felt most strongly during the quiet hours of night.

The most well-known of these is Isaac Lowes, a young boy who succumbed to scarlet fever on August 24th in 1878. Isaac’s spirit has been witnessed by numerous guests, often spotted in the corners of rooms or darting behind old furnishings. He is sometimes accompanied by Mary-Anne, a little girl known to grasp the hands of visitors during ghost tours, her cold, phantom touch sending shivers through the living.

The Ghost of Mr. Slimey and Other Ghosts at Q Station

There are many vague and mysterious hauntings said to happen at Q Station, but some are very specific. It is said that the ghost of a flirtatious mortician they today call Mr. Slimey, can get quite handsy with the visitors. He is reportedly a very well dressed man with a top hat. 

There is also said to be a sweet Chinese man said to be a fisherman they now call Mr Chen. He often roams around the 3rd class living quarters that used to take up to 60 people in one room. 

There is also said to be a disfigured man, an angry guard and other ghosts haunting the premise.  A ghost of what the guides now only call Red keeps watch over the showers, watching out for any diseases after dying of scarlet fever himself. But there are certainly many more said to haunt the grounds.

Q Station Turned Supernatural Landmark

Today, the Q Station has been transformed into a resort and restaurant, offering scenic views and seaside hospitality known as Q Station by the beach. But beneath its manicured grounds and polished dining rooms lies a history of unrelenting suffering. Ghost tours continue to this day, luring the curious and the brave into encounters with Manly Beach’s haunted past.

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References:

‘This place is pure evil’: Are you brave enough to enter Sydney’s most haunted bathroom?

Haunted Sydney Quarantine Station Ghosts – Adelaide’s Haunted Horizons

Inside Australia’s most haunted hotel Quarantine Station | Daily Mail Online

The Haunted Jenny Dixon Beach and Wilfred Barret Drive

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One of the most haunted beaches in the world is said to be the Jenny Dixon Beach in New South Wales. Here, the last decades have been filled with stories of vanishing hitchhikers along the roads as well as older ghosts coming in from the sea. 

The sun-drenched coasts of New South Wales, Australia, are known for their rolling surf, golden sands, and laid-back seaside towns. But there’s one beach where the lapping waves seem to carry more than seashells and driftwood. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia

Beneath the tourist-friendly veneer of Jenny Dixon Beach lies a sorrowful, sinister past — one whispered about in local pubs and by late-night campfires.

Jenny Dixon Beach: This beach in New South Wales, known for its ghost stories and haunting legends and is to find on most of the “most haunted” lists of haunted beaches in the world.

The Hitchhiker of Wilfred Barrett Drive

One of the ghost legends haunting the beach actually comes from Wilfred Barret Drive, a stretch of road along the beach between Magenta and Noraville, and is the ghost of a vanishing hitchhiker, now called Jenny Dixon by the locals. 

Horror Movie: The Ghost Story inspired the 2011 horror film Jenny Dixon Beach and has attracted many curious paranormal investigators hoping to communicate with her.

It was sometime in the 1970s when an unspeakable act of violence left its stain on this otherwise idyllic coastline. Or, as the area was nicknamed  “the child abuse capital of NSW” by The Daily Telegraph in 2022, perhaps it was never peaceful at all. Some even claim that the murder was as early as the 1950s. 

According to local legend, a young woman was hitchhiking along Wilfred Barrett Drive, the road that skirts the dunes by Jenny Dixon Beach. In many variations of the legend she was headed home from work. She was picked up by a group of men, often said to be five. Instead of offering her a safe ride, subjected her to a brutal assault on the Jenny Dixon Beach. 

They left her to die alone on that dark beach or maybe in the bushes close to it. Some say that she was found there, dead, some say that she was still alive when they found her, but died a few days later of her injuries. The police had nothing to go on. Her killers were never caught. Justice, it seems, got lost somewhere between the trees and the tide.

But the woman’s restless spirit didn’t stay buried with her in those coastal sands. It is said that her ghost lingered for revenge. Some say that a group of five men died in horrible and mysterious ways over the course of the next few years. One hanged himself. One died in a car accident, claiming that someone walked in front of his car in his dying breath. One drove off a cliff and one either died of a self-inflicted gunshot or ran his car over an embankment after picking the ghost up in his car, driving him mad when no one believed him. Before they died, they allegedly complained about seeing and hearing things before they died. 

For decades, drivers traveling Wilfred Barrett Drive at night have reported seeing a woman in white, pale and sorrowful, walking the roadside. She is also said to be seen close to the Nora Head cemetery where it is believed the girl is buried. 

Some have even claimed to pick her up. She rides in the car for a while, sitting in the backseat, murmuring little or nothing at all, before vanishing into thin air, leaving behind only the lingering scent of cigarette smoke.

The Truth Behind the Hitchhiking Murder Victim

According to most sources, there seems to be more police reports about people seeing the ghost of the hitchhiker from Wilfred Barret Drive than about the murder she supposedly died from. Local people as well as those just travelling through not knowing about the legend are supposedly seeing the vanishing hitchhiker from time to time. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories of haunted roads

The part about the men seeing and hearing things before they died is also a classical horror trope from books and movies, but if you talk about the stories in the surrounding neighborhoods, they will definitely know what you talk about as well as having a few stories of their own. 

A real case connected with the ghost story is the disappearance of the Holmes sisters from the 1950s. Eighteen year old Grace and her little sister, eleven year old Kathleen went for a walk to Norah Head lighthouse and never returned. 

A day later, their dead bodies were found in a swamp close to Tuggerah Lake. A local fisherman was suspected and even charged for their murder, but was never convicted. 

Today the case remains unsolved. 

The Woman from the Janet Dixon Ship

But the hitchhiker isn’t the only ghost said to roam Jenny Dixon Beach, and this one comes from a much older time. 

In 1973, four terrified campers burst into town with a story straight from a nightmare. The group of 12 year old boys that had been camping on the beach, claimed a woman in a long, old-fashioned dress appeared to them in the dead of night, reaching out from the shadows with desperate, pleading hands. The boys said they threw sticks at her, but they went right through her transparent body. They ran up the stairs from the beach towards the car park, but she followed them, still with her arms outstretched towards them. She vanished before their eyes, leaving behind a bone-deep chill and footprints in the sand where no one should have been.

Local historians tie this spirit to a maritime tragedy: the wreck of the Janet Dixon, the coal schooner from which the beach takes its name. It was passing through Norah Head, just south of Jenny Dixon Beach by the Tasman sea. Because of the unfamiliar coastline of at least seven ships wrecked in these parts between 1871 to 1903. This was when the lighthouse was built. 

In the mid-19th century, the ship was lost to the treacherous waters off the Central Coast. One woman — thought to be the captain’s wife or a passenger — washed ashore at what would later become Jenny Dixon Beach. Her young son, who had been aboard with her, never did.

This story has also been attributed to Raymond Grove who lives close to the beach, and he spent the rest of his life trying to find out who she was. This is most likely also where the story of a grieving mother searching for her son comes from. 

Since that night, the woman is said to roam the shore, searching for her lost child, her sorrow carried on every crashing wave.

The Haunted Jenny Dixon Beach

Jenny Dixon Beach is a strikingly beautiful place to visit by day. The waves sparkle, the sand is soft, and the headlands offer a stunning sunset view. But when the sun dips below the horizon and the ocean turns black as ink, the beach’s other side awakens.

If you ever find yourself driving that lonely stretch of Wilfred Barrett Drive after midnight and a lone figure appears on the roadside, pale and dressed in white, do yourself a favor:

Keep driving.

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References:

The Ghost at Jenny Dixon Beach Urban Legend – Central Coast News

Hacks is one of the best shows on TV and the new season is now streaming on Stan. 

Jenny Dixon Beach Ghost – Unexplained Australia

The Legend Of The Ghost at Jenny Dixon Beach 

How creepy ghost stories help us deal with the real-life trauma that haunts us

The Monte Cristo Homestead: Australia’s Most Haunted House

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What really happened within the walls at the Crawley family and their grand Monte Cristo Homestead in New South Wales? How come there were so many violent deaths, and is it true they are all haunting the house to this day?

There are many places that warrant being haunted in Australia. In the wilderness of the outback to the mysterious legends from the Aboriginals and the first Europeans sent to the country when it was a prisoner camp. However, few places are as notorious as The Monte Cristo Homestead in New South Wales, Australia is known as one of the most haunted places in the country. 

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Australia

Visitors have reported eerie experiences, including sightings of ghostly apparitions and unexplained noises. Learn more about the history of this haunted location and the spine-tingling encounters of those who have dared to visit the manor overlooking the town.

The Monte Cristo Homestead: Australia’s most haunted house, steeped in history and ghostly tales.

The History of The Monte Cristo Homestead

The Monte Cristo Homestead was built in 1885 by Christopher William Crawley, a wealthy pioneer. Originally a farmer, he and his Wiradjuri wife, Elizabeth settled close to the Railway line that opened in 1878. They opened a hotel and it was big business. They went from barely getting by to be the top of the social class in town and the wealthiest in the region. 

The Crawleys: The ghosts of Christopher and Elizabeth Crawley are believed to haunt Monte Christo Homestead.

The Victorian homestead remained in the Crawley family for over 90 years until it was purchased by Reg and Olive Ryan in 1963 for 1000£. Between the Ryan’s it was left empty for a decade with several caretakers coming and going. Although they tried to watch out for the place, the house was vandalized, the furniture stolen, and it looked like it would decay to ruins. Even the Catholic church refused it as a gift because of how ruined it was. 

Instead, the Ryans restored the homestead and opened it to the public for tours as a museum, souvenir shop and antique showcase. When they first moved into the bat-infested house, they had a couple of chairs and air mattresses, but little by little, it was restored to its former glory as the finest house in town. 

The House is a Haunted One

However, it wasn’t long before visitors began reporting strange occurrences to the Ryans and their five children, leading to the homestead’s reputation as one of the most haunted places in Australia as they advertised themselves as.

The first sign for the Ryan’s that their new forever home was haunted was one foggy evening when they came from town with supplies. Back then, the house didn’t have any electricity. When they saw light coming out from every door and window in the house they had to stop the car, thinking it was squatters that had moved in. When they got closer, the lights turned off, and when they checked the house, there was no one there.

denisbin/Flickr

They tried to explain it away, but over the years, the family noticed a lot of weird things happening they felt had to be a part of the house’s haunted history. When bringing pets, they refused to enter the property and didn’t want to stay in the house. In one of the more extreme cases, they once came home to find all of their chickens and pet parrot strangled to death as well as a litter of kittens who had been murdered. 

The Ghosts of The Monte Cristo Homestead

The Monte Cristo Homestead is said to be home to at least ten ghostly inhabitants, including the ghost of a maid who fell to her death from the balcony, a stable boy who was burned alive, and a former caretaker who is said to still roam the halls. 

denisbin/Flickr

Visitors have reported hearing footsteps, seeing apparitions, and feeling cold spots throughout the homestead. Some have even claimed to have been touched or pushed by unseen forces. Despite its spooky reputation, the Monte Cristo Homestead continues to attract visitors from all over the world since the Ryans opened the house for visitors in the 90s, who are eager to experience its ghostly inhabitants for themselves.

The Ghost of Christopher Crawley

The Monte Cristo Homestead is known for its many ghostly inhabitants, but there are a few rooms that are said to be particularly haunted. The Blue Room, where the former owner of the homestead died, is said to be the most haunted room in the house. 

According to rumours, he died from a sudden blood poisoning because his starched collar infected a boil on his neck in 1910. They seemingly looked like any other hardworking victorian couples, but rumors about mistreatment and them being cruel to their servants started spreading. 

Over the years, the children of the Ryans have always had a feeling of being watched by an elderly man.

A Night at the haunted house: For years, you could stay at Monte Cristo Homestead to have a look for yourself if there is any truth to the haunted rumors.

The Ghost of Elizabeth Crawley

Also his wife, Elizabeth is said to haunt the manor. She became a recluse after the death of her husband. During the 23 years she lived on after her husband, it was said she only showed herself twice and spent most of her time in the chapel attic. She died when she was 92 of a ruptured appendix.

She is often dubbed the Grey Lady, wearing her black lace dress, lace cap and with a stand up beaded collar and walks through the halls, still treating the house as her own, ruling it with the same strict manner as when she was alive. It is said that she doesn’t particularly like having guests.

It is said she is dressed in all black, carrying a silver cross as she comes out from the little room she converted into a chapel. 

The Children Playing

The Nursery is also said to be haunted by the ghost of a child who died. The Crawley had a 10 month old baby named Magdalena or Ethel who died when the nanny dropped her by accident down the stairs in 1917. Or was it actually on purpose as some have speculated? Visitors have reported hearing the sound of a child crying and feeling a cold presence in the room. 

There was also another young boy who fell to his death when he fell down the stairs, but not much is known. Was she even real, the little girl? The location of the children’s graves are known, and the only Ethel, a 10 month old baby in Junee, is listed with other parents. She was in fact their grand child. 

The sound of children playing in the mansion’s halls have also been reported together with the flickering lights and sudden drops in temperature. 

The Ghost of the Maid

Finally, the Servant’s Quarters are said to be haunted by the ghost of a maid who fell to her death from the balcony on the second floor. It is said that you can still see the bleach stain from when they tried to remove all of the blood. Some say that she was pregnant with Crowleys, and her death was actually a murder to cover it up. Was it actually Elizabeth who pushed her?

Visitors have reported hearing footsteps of a busy maid in the dead of night and some people claim to have seen the ghostly figure of a woman on the balcony.

The Stable Boy

Another servant thought to be haunting the estate was the stable boy named Morris. He slept on a straw mattress that was set on fire after he called in sick for work and he died from the burns. Was it Crawley who wanted to teach him a lesson, or just a spark from  a fire nearby?

To this day, it is said you can hear the dying screams from the young stable boy Morris coming from the old Carriage house. 

island home/Flickr

Howling Harold

One day, a maid died after giving birth. Harold Steel, who was the son, grew up on the estate. Why was he the illegitimate child of Crawley perhaps? The rumor is speculating about this. Some also say that the maid died much later, and kept her son hidden in the servant cottages.

The Servant Cottages: The original homestead was used as the servant quarters. //island home/Flickr

He got into a carriage accident in Junee and developed a mental illness. This caused him to become aggressive, and they had to chain him in the back of the cottage for more than thirty years. His hair became dreaded and he howled in the night, making the locals believe that it was a creature chained in the house until they put him in an asylum when the authorities discovered him.

Still to this day, some claim they can hear the howling and hissing that Harold used to make coming from the cottages in the night. 

The Caretaker

In 1961, Jack Simpson, a caretaker, was shot dead by a boy who was inspired by the movie, Psycho and had seen the movie three times before the murder. The words “Die Jack, ha ha” were carved into the shed door, where they can still be seen today. “

It is said that the caretaker has joined the rank of the ghosts, although not much is found about the murder or if it ever happened at all. 

The Enduring Haunting of The Monte Cristo Homestead

Visitors to the Monte Cristo Homestead have reported a range of spine-tingling experiences. Some have reported feeling a heavy presence in certain rooms, while others have heard unexplained noises or seen ghostly figures. Many visitors have reported feeling a sense of unease or fear while exploring the homestead. 

What happens not to the Monte Cristo Homestead though? In January 2025, the family closed down the house for visitors because of the passing of Olive Ryan. They said that the Monte Cristo Homestead would never open again on their official Facebook page. Although the the house is now moving into a new phase, many ghost tours and guides want to keep the legacy and the houses history alive together with the ghosts. 

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References:

Monte Cristo Homestead – Wikipedia

Riverina Rewind: Remembering Junee’s Olive Ryan and life in Australia’s ‘most haunted house’

Hop Into The Easter Holidays With 16% Off Family Bundles At OTHERWORLD Byron Bay

Ghost tour operator vows to continue legacy after famous Junee ‘haunted house’ closes to public | Region Riverina

Monte Cristo Homestead Closed Down For Now – Junee Independent

Australia’s most haunted house – Monte Cristo Homestead | Traces Magazine

Strange but true: the mystery of the Monte Cristo Homestead and the supernatural science that explains it

“People don’t make it through the night”: Inside NSW’s haunted Monte Cristo Homestead.

Haunted Monte Cristo Homestead – Believing the Bizarre 

Meet the residents of Australia’s most haunted house in Junee | Region Canberra