This spooky guest house used to be a funeral home

converted funeral home
Romantic getaway on the haunted chapel anybody?
(Image: SWNS)

Fancy a fright? You possibly can keep in a transformed funeral dwelling that also has coffins and the embalming desk up as a ornament. 

There are three totally different cottages to select from: the transformed funeral dwelling, the church or the haunted effectively home.

Individuals have reported listening to unusual noises once they stayed on the vacation cottages the place a person mysteriously drowned within the 18th century.

The one-bed vacation dwelling will set you again £195 an evening and nonetheless has many authentic options from when it was a funeral dwelling. 

Coffins line the wall below the signal ‘Funeral Director’, whereas legit embalming tables relationship again to the seventeenth century are within the kitchen. 

There’s additionally The Chapel, full with graveyard, and the Effectively Home, named after its authentic objective. 

Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the owners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they have turned into holiday lets. The Chapel was a former funeral directors complete with embalming tables on the wall in the kitchen and heaps of original features inluding ghostly orbs and sounds. See SWNS story SWNJfuneral. Travellers can rest in peace on their next holiday after a former funeral home was converted into a spooky guest house. The five-bed property decorated with coffins, gothic architecture and set with its own graveyard promises guests a haunted stay with many reports of spiritual awakenings within the three buildings. Ran by a married couple, guests are able to enjoy a night at one of the three properties within the 12 acre plot ??? The Chapel, The Well House or Crossbrook Farm - for just under ??200 a night. Stuart Dudley, a 44-year-old architect and co-owner of the holiday letting, said: ???In the Well House, which is one of the buildings guests can stay in at the property, the legend is a French gentlemen drowned in their in the 18th century.
Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the homeowners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they've changed into vacation lets. (Image: Emma Trimble / SWNS)

The Chapel nonetheless appears to be like very very like a church, full with spires and a cross. Inside, the uncovered brickwork and vintage mattress body make this really feel like a visit to the previous.

There’s even a wooden fireplace to heat your self by and a scorching tub exterior.

Homeowners Stuart and Victoria Dudley transformed the derelict buildings close to Bromsgrove, Worcestershire into three luxurious vacation lets.

Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the owners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they have turned into holiday lets. The Chapel was a former funeral directors complete with embalming tables on the wall in the kitchen and heaps of original features inluding ghostly orbs and sounds. See SWNS story SWNJfuneral. Travellers can rest in peace on their next holiday after a former funeral home was converted into a spooky guest house. The five-bed property decorated with coffins, gothic architecture and set with its own graveyard promises guests a haunted stay with many reports of spiritual awakenings within the three buildings. Ran by a married couple, guests are able to enjoy a night at one of the three properties within the 12 acre plot ??? The Chapel, The Well House or Crossbrook Farm - for just under ??200 a night. Stuart Dudley, a 44-year-old architect and co-owner of the holiday letting, said: ???In the Well House, which is one of the buildings guests can stay in at the property, the legend is a French gentlemen drowned in their in the 18th century.
Some authentic options stay
(Image: Emma Trimble / SWNS)

Legend has it that a French gentleman drowned within the effectively within the 1700’s. There’s now a memorial commemorating his dying on the entrance of the effectively,’ 

Architect Stuart, 44, admits that many company have reported listening to unusual noises and feeling spooky chills in most of the rooms. 

The cottage’s spooky repute precedes it; an attention-grabbing combine of individuals come and keep. 

Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the owners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they have turned into holiday lets. The Chapel was a former funeral directors complete with embalming tables on the wall in the kitchen and heaps of original features inluding ghostly orbs and sounds. See SWNS story SWNJfuneral. Travellers can rest in peace on their next holiday after a former funeral home was converted into a spooky guest house. The five-bed property decorated with coffins, gothic architecture and set with its own graveyard promises guests a haunted stay with many reports of spiritual awakenings within the three buildings. Ran by a married couple, guests are able to enjoy a night at one of the three properties within the 12 acre plot ??? The Chapel, The Well House or Crossbrook Farm - for just under ??200 a night. Stuart Dudley, a 44-year-old architect and co-owner of the holiday letting, said: ???In the Well House, which is one of the buildings guests can stay in at the property, the legend is a French gentlemen drowned in their in the 18th century.
Visitors have reported some spooky occurings
(Image: Emma Trimble / SWNS)

There are the anticipated company who're into religious therapeutic and witchcraft but in addition couples searching for a romantic break and people who find themselves taken with gothic structure and English historical past.

‘We’ve had American company come and go to with their households too as a result of they love the character and atmosphere of the place,’ Stuart added. 

Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the owners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they have turned into holiday lets. The Chapel was a former funeral directors complete with embalming tables on the wall in the kitchen and heaps of original features inluding ghostly orbs and sounds. See SWNS story SWNJfuneral. Travellers can rest in peace on their next holiday after a former funeral home was converted into a spooky guest house. The five-bed property decorated with coffins, gothic architecture and set with its own graveyard promises guests a haunted stay with many reports of spiritual awakenings within the three buildings. Ran by a married couple, guests are able to enjoy a night at one of the three properties within the 12 acre plot ??? The Chapel, The Well House or Crossbrook Farm - for just under ??200 a night. Stuart Dudley, a 44-year-old architect and co-owner of the holiday letting, said: ???In the Well House, which is one of the buildings guests can stay in at the property, the legend is a French gentlemen drowned in their in the 18th century.
Very unsettling vibes (Image: Emma Trimble / SWNS)

Of all these company, many have stated they've ‘felt a presence’ within the cottage. 

‘That is typically described as a way of change of temperature, or they've seen orbs within the images they've taken once they go and think about them once more,’ Stuart famous.

‘At evening we’ve heard unusual sounds and after we’ve gone to examine it our there’s nothing there.’

Stuart and Victoria have taken images themselves to examine and say they later noticed those self same peculiar orbs. 

Victoria and Stuart Dudley are the owners of Crossbrook Farm in Bromsgrove which they have turned into holiday lets. The Chapel was a former funeral directors complete with embalming tables on the wall in the kitchen and heaps of original features inluding ghostly orbs and sounds. See SWNS story SWNJfuneral. Travellers can rest in peace on their next holiday after a former funeral home was converted into a spooky guest house. The five-bed property decorated with coffins, gothic architecture and set with its own graveyard promises guests a haunted stay with many reports of spiritual awakenings within the three buildings. Ran by a married couple, guests are able to enjoy a night at one of the three properties within the 12 acre plot ??? The Chapel, The Well House or Crossbrook Farm - for just under ??200 a night. Stuart Dudley, a 44-year-old architect and co-owner of the holiday letting, said: ???In the Well House, which is one of the buildings guests can stay in at the property, the legend is a French gentlemen drowned in their in the 18th century.
(Image: Emma Trimble / SWNS)

‘Typically, you’ll be in one of many properties at evening and also you’ll see shadows transfer and the temperature will abruptly drop,’ he added. 

The chapel, funeral and graveyard date again to the seventeenth century whereas the farm used to gather apples and pears to make cider.

Victoria, 49, stated the couple tried to protect as most of the current options as they may once they refurbished the properties. 

A lot of them are hidden away below the plaster or left and never uncovered.

As for the coffins, they have been purchased from a funeral director up north.

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