Purchased in 1862 for the future Edward VII, the estate is the royals’ Norfolk retreat where they spend Christmas.
Journalist Meredith Kile wrote that when “staff members were frightened by unexplained paranormal activity, the royal family attempted to rid their estate of any lingering spirits.” High society diarist and royal biographer Kenneth Rose wrote in his journal about a ceremony reportedly held at Sandringham House in 2000.
Mr Rose’s insider knowledge of the aristocracy and other notables was the envy of his contemporaries. When the author passed on in 2014 at the age of 89, he bequeathed the 350 boxes of his journals to Oxford’s Bodleian Library.
He recorded that the ceremony was held after staff complained about strange and unexplained paranormal activity in the room where King George VI passed peacefully in 1952.
The monarch was found by a servant at 7.30 am, having suffered a coronary thrombosis due to a blood clot in an artery, following years of heavy smoking and surgery the previous year. The Queen Mother apparently ordered a “religious cleansing ritual” to rid the room of any possible spirit activity.
“It wasn’t a conventional exorcism,” historian and royal biographer Robert Hardman explained in a recent episode of his podcast Queens, Kings and Dastardly Things.
“There was no dramatic casting out of demons like you see in films. It was said that the room contained a troubled spirit and that the parson was supposed to bless the space.” Kenneth Rose had claimed that Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother and her lady-in-waiting, Prue Penn, took part in the ceremony, which consisted of taking Holy Communion and saying special prayers.
“No one was quite sure who the ghost was supposed to be, despite it appearing in the room where George VI had died,” Mr Hardman commented. “Kenneth Rose speculated whether it might be the ghost of Diana, the late Princess of Wales, who had died a few years before.” It is unclear if any of the royals who were present believed in the paranormal.
Mr Hardman thinks their attendance could have been more as a show of support and action for their frightened staff.
