The Haunting of HMS Asp: A Ghost Story from the Royal Navy’s Own Records
Most ghost stories enter history through rumour, folklore, or fireside retelling. Very few, however, emerge from within the orbit of official institutions. The case of HMS Asp is one such rarity. Emerging from mid-nineteenth-century Wales, the account sits awkwardly between official record, personal recollection, and local memory. It has never belonged wholly to any one of them, which may explain why it has lingered longer than many similar tales.
What sets the Asp apart is not merely the nature of the reported phenomena, but the source of the account itself. The story was attributed to a serving Royal Navy officer and appeared years later in a regional newspaper. For some readers it has stood as a literal haunting; for others, it reads more like a product of Victorian unease and life at sea. Either way, it has proved difficult to dismiss outright.
A Modest Vessel with an Unsettling Reputation
HMS Asp was a small paddle-driven survey vessel acquired by the Royal Navy in 1850. Before that, she traded as the civilian packet Fury, carrying passengers and freight between Welsh and Irish ports. She was built for work rather than combat, and spent much of her service moving quietly between Milford Haven, Pembroke Dock, and neighbouring waters.
It was shortly after her commissioning into naval service that the first strange disturbances were reported.
Disturbances at Sea
According to accounts later attributed to her commanding officer, Captain George Manley Alldridge, members of the crew began experiencing persistent and unsettling phenomena. Loud banging and heavy footfalls were repeatedly heard in an after cabin that was confirmed to be unoccupied. These sounds were not isolated incidents, but occurred frequently enough to draw the attention of officers as well as the men.
More disturbing still were reports of a female figure seen aboard the ship. Lookouts and sentries later spoke of a woman seen crossing the deck in silence, most often while the ship lay still in harbour. On one occasion, a sentry was said to have collapsed in terror, suffering convulsions severe enough to require treatment.
Captain Alldridge did not accept these reports readily. He approached them as an officer trained to look for practical causes, and for a time resisted the idea that anything beyond misjudgement or nerves was at work. Yet he later stated that he himself experienced events he could not account for. He described the sensation of an icy, unseen hand placed against his forehead, accompanied by violent disturbances within his cabin as lockers and fittings appeared to move without cause.
Fear Below Deck
The strain on the crew became increasingly noticeable. Requests for transfer grew more frequent, and filling posts became a persistent problem. Whatever lay behind the disturbances, the belief that something was wrong aboard the ship was enough to affect discipline and confidence.
Even without accepting a supernatural cause, the fear itself is difficult to ignore. It was sustained, shared, and strong enough to shape behaviour over time rather than passing as a single moment of alarm.

AI generated image of below deck of HMS Asp
The Apparition Ashore
Matters came to a head when HMS Asp returned to Pembroke Dock for repairs. On this visit, the figure was reportedly seen leaving the vessel and walking along the dock. Several sentries challenged her, and when she did not respond, they fired, only to see the shots pass through her without effect.
She continued on towards an old churchyard nearby and vanished close to what was described as an unmarked grave. After this, the disturbances aboard HMS Asp were said to have stopped altogether.
To those who witnessed it, the conclusion seemed obvious. Whatever had troubled the vessel no longer remained with her.

AI generated image of the churchyard where the figure was seen heading towards.
A Murder in the Ship’s Past
In an effort to understand what had occurred, Captain Alldridge investigated the vessel’s earlier history as the Fury. He claimed to have uncovered a disturbing incident from her civilian service. Years earlier, a young female passenger had allegedly been found murdered aboard the ship, her throat cut, her body discovered in the same after cabin from which the unexplained noises later originated.
No surviving court or inquest records clearly confirm the crime. This absence is not especially surprising. Deaths at sea, particularly those involving passengers with no local connections, often left little trace beyond informal reports.
Publication and Legacy
Alldridge’s account did not remain a private matter. In 1868, it was published in the Pembroke Dock and Tenby Telegraph, placing the story firmly in the public record. From there it entered Welsh folklore and has been retold in various forms ever since.
Its endurance owes much to its unusual provenance. This is not a tale gathered long after the fact, but one tied to a named naval officer, a specific vessel, and identifiable ports and dates.
Between Record and Folklore
Read one way, the events suggest a haunting bound to violence and place. Read another, they resemble a slow accumulation of fear shaped by isolation, memory, and rumour aboard a confined ship.
In that respect, HMS Asp matters less as evidence of a ghost than as a glimpse into how stories form and persist at sea. Ships have always been closed worlds, and what happens within them has a way of lingering, especially when no clear explanation ever arrives.
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING
- Pembroke Dock and Tenby Telegraph, 1868. Account attributed to Captain George Manley Alldridge concerning disturbances aboard HMS Asp.
- Healy, Tim. The Book of British Ghosts. Mainstream Publishing, 2007.
- Kemp, Peter. The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea. Oxford University Press, 1976.
- Summers, Montague. The Haunted Sea. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 1934.
- Admiralty vessel lists and service summaries, mid-nineteenth century Royal Navy survey and paddle vessels.
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