Michaela goes to the The Sun Inn in the Ribble Valley, which claims to be the most haunted pub in Lancashire thanks to the ghost of Lizzie Dean, a maid who died by suicide in the pub's attic in 1935.
Michaela travels to Ludlow and The Feathers Hotel; built during the reign of King James I, it boasts a world-famous timber facade and is said to be one of the scariest places to stay in the country.
Michaela visits The Four Crosses in Staffordshire, which has had dozens of reports of ghostly apparitions and other phenomena over the years, and explores a manor house in the Black Country. S2 E10
Michaela is off to The Ragged Cot Inn in Stroud; a coaching inn since the 17th century, its most famous ghost story revolves around the exploits of a former landlord who killed his family. S2 E9
Michaela Strachan visits Bolton's Smithills Hall; now a museum, the staff has reported faces appearing in mirrors, slamming doors, and even glasses being turned upside down. S2 E8
It's off to Derby as Michaela visits Derby Gaol; once used to house a variety of criminals in the mid-18th century, it now has a reputation as one of the most haunted places in the UK. S2 E7
Michaela Strachan visits Bolton's Smithills Hall; now a museum, the staff has reported faces appearing in mirrors, slamming doors, and even glasses being turned upside down. S2 E8
It's off to Derby as Michaela visits Derby Gaol; once used to house a variety of criminals in the mid-18th century, it now has a reputation as one of the most haunted places in the UK. S2 E7
Michaela visits The Angel Hotel in Coleford, which claims to be the oldest pub in the area and dates back to the 1650s, and travels to Clearwell Caves, where visitors have reported ghostly sightings.
Michaela Strachan visits The Grand Theatre in Blackpool, where a ghostly presence is believed to be an audience member who threw himself off the balcony after being rejected by an actress. S2 E5
Michaela stops off at The New Inn in Pwllmeyric, where folklore tells of a mother and daughter being hanged on a nearby tree for their alleged witchcraft - it is believed they haunt the old pub. S2 E4
Michaela is off to Lancashire to investigate the Pendle Hill witch trials of 1612, when nine women were accused of meeting on the hill to use sorcery to kill 17 local men. S2 E3
The Cage may seem an odd name for a quaint cottage, but it was once a village lock-up where a suspected witch was held before being hung; we also visit the Old Courthouse Inn in Great Bromley, Essex.
Michaela tours Berkeley Castle in Gloucestershire and the George and Pilgrims Hotel in Glastonbury in Somerset, which are believed to be haunted by the ghosts of priests and monks. S2 E1
Michaela visits the Grenadier pub in London which is supposed to be haunted by a young officer, then she visits the site where William Wallace was executed, a haunted elevator, and Cripplegate. S1 E8
Michaela travels to the town of Devizes in Wiltshire where she first visits the Black Swan hotel, once owned by a notorious highwayman, and visits St Mary's Walk graveyard and the old town gaol. S1 E7
Michaela visits Buckinghamshire to see the notorious caves at West Wycombe Park where the Hellfire Club met and the Ostrich Inn, once a haunt of highwaymen and at least one murderous landlord. S1 E6
We travel to Nottingham to visit the Galleries of Justice used as a court and jail since 1770 where many prisoners were executed, before a search for non-alcoholic spirits at London's Viaduct Tavern.
Michaela visits Colchester's Red Lion Hotel said to be haunted by at least three ghosts, then a once-secret bunker at Kelvedon Hatch near Brentwood that has seen some strange activity. S1 E4
Michaela Strachan visits Woodchester Mansion, which is a Victorian Gothic manor house that was never completed, then it's off to Prestbury, said to the most haunted village in England. S1 E3
Michaela Strachan visits Woodchester Mansion, which is a Victorian Gothic manor house that was never completed, then it's off to Prestbury, said to the most haunted village in England. S1 E3
We travel to Nottingham to visit the Galleries of Justice used as a court and jail since 1770 where many prisoners were executed, before a search for non-alcoholic spirits at London's Viaduct Tavern.