• The Horror of Rabie Hall
    Jun 15 2026

    In tonight's episode, a passionate young woman fights to protect her brother's position, unaware that ancient evils and trusted enemies are poised to destroy him and all he holds dear. Some of the biggest mistakes we make are born from our very best intentions.

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    33 mins
  • Mutton Stew
    Jun 7 2026

    Welcome to Gaslight Ghost Stories and Victorian Murders. In tonight's tale we remember a harder time, when food was quite scarce, staying warm was expensive, and a good future was hard to come by.

    In the 19th century, millions of young men left farms and set off to cities, desperate to find paying work and a way to feed a family. A good many didn't survive.

    And yet, as this story illustrates, evil people exist in all times, and they can make a hard economic era even worse. Is there any light in this kind of darkness? In this story we find out together.

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    17 mins
  • 🎉 The Confession of the Cursed Mrs. B
    Jun 7 2026

    Welcome to the Gaslight Ghost Stories and Victorian Murders Podcast. Sometimes a desire to do the right thing turns into the biggest mistake you've ever made. In this tale of a family blessing that becomes a family curse, a parish priest faces and impossible choice.

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    15 mins
  • The Silent Child of Aston Abbey
    May 31 2026

    An ancient family manor, love, lust, horror, and a spirit that will never rest until it sees justice done.

    The nineteenth century liked to call itself civilized. It built railways, factories, grand estates, and glittering cities. It spoke of duty, obedience, God, progress, and respectability. But beneath the lace collars and polished mahogany, cruelty lived easily. It was not an accident. It was part of the machinery.

    Families were often cruel, and home was hell for many. Every child was another mouth to feed, another fragile body to send into service, factories, streets, mines, or ships. Childhood was short, if it existed at all. Most worked, begged, stole, sickened, and vanished. They were beaten for disobedience, punished for hunger, and treated as morally defective when they were merely exhausted, grieving, or afraid.

    Women, like children, were property.

    Without a voice, a right to legal protection, or the ability to earn their own fortune, women were at the mercy of men. Ever at risk of falling pregnant if raped, forced to watch their children starve if the father or some other man were unwilling to support them, relying on men to provide food, lodging, and medical care for the whole of their lives, women walked a tightrope. Rich or poor, beautiful or ugly, young or old. A woman who didn't know her place at any age, at every age, could easily find herself in an early grave.

    In Victorian life, silence was often not weakness. It was survival.

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    38 mins