Pluckley Village
A Wealden village long listed among England's most haunted, its fame built on mid-century catalogues of local legend.
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Share a photoHistory & haunting lore
Pluckley is a small Wealden village in Kent whose national fame rests less on a single battlefield than on a catalogue of local stories amplified by mid-twentieth-century newspaper and Guinness-style lists of haunted places. The Black Horse inn, the churchyard and surrounding lanes became magnets for ghost-hunting weekends. Alleged figures include a highwayman, a screaming man associated with the old brickworks, and ladies of the Dering family, whose monuments and estate links give the folklore a thin documentary spine.
Published haunt counts should be treated as folklore tourism rather than a verified inventory. Residents live ordinary village lives among these tales, and many reported sites are private property or roadside spots with no evidential basis beyond retelling.
A rewarding visit focuses on the real Wealden settlement - church, pubs and countryside - enjoyed quietly and legally. The legends are part of local colour; they do not justify trespass, noise after hours or treating neighbours as exhibits.
Current site status
Public roads, the churchyard and pubs are accessible during normal hours; there is no single ticketed haunt attraction for the village as a whole.
Many alleged sites are private property and must not be entered after hours or without permission. Keep noise down, park considerately and respect residents.
