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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