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Galleries of Justice was the team’s first successful public investigation which led to many more being organised and some of the attendees became regulars on their investigations.
The Galleries of Justice is unique location a sit has two court rooms, The Shire Hall and the Victorian Court. As you progress down into the bowels of the building you come down to the cells featuring one grizzly room where up to thirty men were kept, The Night Cel. Further down is the Women's Cel and again any where between 10 and thirty women lived here and there was only one bed!
As you walk down some rather thin steps this leads you to the former Chapel and the Medieval Caves which run underneath Nottingham and are not usually accessible by the public.
From here you can access the Exercise Yard and this is where the prisoners got their daily exercise and saw the object of their demise, the Gallows. Many of the prisoners who were executed are buried under the flagstones and some have head markers against the wall where they now lay.
The images below are taken from our investigation at the National Railway Museum, York, a very interesting and unique location and one of the teams best investigations as Michael Smith believed he saw something, yet to this date cannot say exactly what he saw, EMF (Electro Motivation Force) readings going off the scale in the ladies toilets without any explanation - and we tried everything, a very loud bang coming from an area where a man in a very tall hat and long coat had been seen.
One of the best examples you can see, supplied by attendee Louise Matthews, is that of a blue streak near the Royal Carriages, and again this is an area where alleged activity has taken place.
The Royal Armouries collection consists of some 70,000 examples of arms, armour and artillery dating from antiquity to the present day. It includes royal armours of the Tudor and Stuart kings; arms and armour of the English Civil Wars, including the Armoury from Littlecote House; British and foreign military weapons from the Board of Ordnance and MOD Pattern Room collections; hunting and sporting weapons, as well as an exceptional collection of oriental arms and armour.
Royal Armouries, Leeds, is a very unusual location and was the first to be investigated for paranormal activity by the team. Reports of security staff seeing apparitions, hearing footsteps around Henry VIII's armour led to the team investigating this new building which is believed to have been built on ley lines.