Sorry, No Ghost
The Queen's House at Greenwich was built by architect and stage designer Inigo Jones for James I's Queen, Anne of Austria, and her daughter-in-law, Henrietta Maria. Work was completed in 1635. It is claimed to be the earliest neo-classical building in Britain and to contain the earliest example in Britain of a spiral staircase without a central support.
TheTulip Staircase- so called because the ornamental ironwork of the banisters is believed to represent tulips (more probably fleur de lys- in tribute to Henrietta Maria's French origins)- was where in 1966 a Canadian clergyman inadvertently shot one of the most famous- and convincing- photographs of a ghost ever taken. I took several snaps, but nothing untoward turned up on any of them. Swizz!

TheTulip Staircase- so called because the ornamental ironwork of the banisters is believed to represent tulips (more probably fleur de lys- in tribute to Henrietta Maria's French origins)- was where in 1966 a Canadian clergyman inadvertently shot one of the most famous- and convincing- photographs of a ghost ever taken. I took several snaps, but nothing untoward turned up on any of them. Swizz!

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It's lovely.
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Out of interest I checked to see when the ghost picture was taken- and the answer is between 5.15 and 5.30 on the afternoon of June 19- so in daylight. Neither the Rev'd Hardy nor his wife saw anything unusual at the time. It was only when the picture was developed that the ghost showed up.
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My wife was once working behind the counter in small shop when she saw a person who wasn't visible in the flesh on the shop's CCTV. The shop, by the way, was in the cellar of a Masonic Lodge- and so a place of "power"- where one might expect the energies to be a little freaky. It's not unusual, I think, for ghosts to show up on recording devices (especially digital ones.)
Staircases are liminal and transitional. They feature in lots of ghost stories (true and fictional)