In the summer of 1989, as the streets of West Belfast echoed with the all-too-familiar sounds of the Troubles, a different kind of terror gripped one local family. Their ordinary terrace house became the centre of an extraordinary tale that would captivate the neighbourhood and haunt the memories of residents for decades to come.
“She threw me down the stairs,” the father told BBC reporters at the time, his voice trembling as he described his encounter with a spectral woman—a presence only he could see. Outside, neighbours gathered in the street, rosary beads clutched in nervous hands as they prayed for the family’s protection.
For young Reggie Chamberlain-King, growing up in nearby Andersonstown, the whispered stories of the haunting sent shivers down his spine. The tale of a family driven from their home by a violent spirit became legendary in an area already deeply familiar with fear and displacement.
Against the backdrop of Northern Ireland’s ongoing conflict, the supernatural seemed to offer a different kind of darkness. Stories of witchcraft, ghosts, and devil worship spread through communities like wildfire, perhaps reflecting the deeper anxieties of a society living through troubled times.
Now, 35 years later, Chamberlain-King returns to his childhood home to unravel the mystery that has lingered in his mind since those fateful summer days. In a new four-part series, “Assume Nothing: A Belfast Haunting,” he delves into the truth behind one of West Belfast’s most chilling paranormal tales.
The series promises to explore not just the alleged haunting itself, but the wider context of a city where real-life horrors and supernatural fears became eerily intertwined. Through interviews with witnesses, newspaper archives, and local historians, Chamberlain-King attempts to separate fact from fiction in this compelling piece of Belfast folklore.
Was there truly a malevolent presence in that modest Belfast home? Or did the pressures and traumas of life during the Troubles manifest themselves in unexpected ways? These are just some of the questions the series seeks to answer.
“Assume Nothing: A Belfast Haunting” will be available on BBC Sounds from Saturday 19th October, with weekly broadcasts on BBC Radio Ulster at 1:15pm. For those brave enough to listen, it offers a unique glimpse into a ghost story that continues to resonate through the streets of West Belfast, long after the family fled their haunted home.