The Ghosts of St James Cemetery. The Most Haunted Graveyard in Liverpool.

The site now known as St James’ Cemetery has a history that reaches back long before it became a graveyard. Originally the area was a sandstone quarry on the edge of Liverpool’s expanding Georgian town. The quarry was heavily worked during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, providing building stone for much of the growing city. When quarrying stopped in the 1820s, the vast bowl-shaped pit remained — a deep hollow surrounded by steep rock walls. Rather than leaving the scarred landscape unused, Liverpool authorities chose to transform the quarry into a garden cemetery, a popular Victorian concept designed to provide both burial space and landscaped public grounds. In 1829, the quarry officially opened as St James’ Cemetery. At the time Liverpool was one of the fastest-growing cities in the British Empire, and burial space was urgently needed. The dramatic sunken layout of the quarry allowed thousands of graves to be arranged along winding paths and terraces carved into the rock. Over the next century more than 57,000 people were buried here, ranging from wealthy merchants with elaborate tombs to ordinary dock workers and children lost to disease during Victorian epidemics. The cemetery soon became a solemn but beautiful place, filled with monuments, mausoleums, and tree-lined pathways that contrasted with the towering stone cliffs around it. . Over time the burial ground closed to new interments and was gradually transformed into St James’ Gardens, a public green space beneath Liverpool Cathedral, whose massive tower now dominates the skyline above the quarry. Despite becoming a peaceful garden, the combination of Victorian graves, cathedral shadows, and the deep quarry setting has given the area a reputation as one of the most atmospheric and allegedly haunted places in Liverpool. Many ghost stories connected with the site — from the Limping Shadow, Johnny Greenteeth, A Vampire, The Woman in Black to the Quarry Whispers — draw inspiration from its dramatic landscape and long history. Dani and Matt head there in the dark for an explore.