Aston Hall, a Jacobean mansion now turned museum, is nestled just north of the city center of Birmingham, England, at the coordinates 52.5060° N, 1.8889° W. Throughout its storied history, it has been the source of many fascinating tales and folklore, the most prominent of them being those of numerous eerie hauntings. Designed and built by Sir Thomas Holte in the 17th century, Aston Hall is one of the last great houses to be built before England’s Civil War. Sir Thomas was renowned for his temperamental nature and tyrannical rule over his household, and it is his spirit that is said to roam the mansion at night. Holte supposedly locked his daughter away in a room after she, contrary to his wishes, decided to marry a man who was not from nobility. The story goes that she remained in that room till her death, causing her spirit to be restless and roam the corridors. Visitors and staff of the mansion alike have reported sightings and unsettling experiences that cannot be explained logically. The sound of high-heeled shoes running bands, a smell of decaying flesh, and sudden drops in temperature, are just some of the unexplainable phenomena reported. Another protagonist in the mansion’s ghostly lore is Dick- the Mad Servant of Jacobean folklore, the ghost of a mischievous domestic believed to play tricks on the staff. Aston Hall, in its majestic grandeur, continues to enthral visitors, not just with its architectural brilliance but as a beacon of local folklore and eerie hauntings.