Are you game to take a ghost tour in Canberra’s most haunted building?

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Do you believe in ghosts?

I’ve been sitting firmly on the fence for decades, but after a fascinating late night ghost tour of one of the country’s most haunted buildings—right here in Canberra—I’ve teetered a little further to the believer side.

Behind the sandstone-clad walls and columns of the rather grand National Film and Sound Archive building, just beyond the city centre, lies a web of mystery and paranormal events.

Exterior of National Film and Sound Archive building at night

It’s not just one mysterious story that’s been reported, or even two or three. It’s dozens of them: different stories or various iterations of the same story. I can’t give too much away, but the stories are rather compelling. Reports of a pesky and persistent poltergeist who throws objects around an office, and a string quartet that plays in the night, for example. Things that go bump in the day as well as the night.

In fact, there’s a story for almost every room or space in the building, too many to be told in the two hour tour that takes you into the bowels of the building into places you can’t normally access.

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Many stories come from staff members who have worked or still work in the building, or from visitors, like the group of school children in the front row of a presentation who laughed uproariously at the little girl they saw under the stage pulling faces at them through an air grate.

The building itself has rather a surprising history. Originally designed as the entrance into a planned zoo, it was repurposed after the depression hit and the funding government coffers ran dry. A reimagining saw it begin life in 1931 as the Institute of Anatomy instead. It housed a collection of rather unusual and sometimes macabre items—human skeletons, a mummified body, mutant animal bodies, foetuses in formaldehyde, and famously beloved race horse Phar Lap’s heart—most from the personal collection of Dr Colin MacKenzie, the institute’s first director.

The institute was used for the dissection and scientific study of bodies and body parts, including those of soldiers and others acquired by dubious means, and even housed a morgue, Canberra’s first. Until the 1960s and 70s, it was a major tourist attraction where people would come to gawk at its gory collection. The building’s morbid history can possibly explain a lot.

inst of anatomy

The ghost tour is led by Tim the Yowie Man, local researcher, guide and gifted story teller. He’s fascinated by the mysterious and has a penchant for interesting facts, and knows a lot of them. He’s been doing these ghost tours for about four years and is ably assisted by the enthusiastic and knowledgeable Jeremy from the Archives, who provides the historical research to add into the mix of facts and stories presented.

Tim tells us that about often during tours someone feels very unwell and many have had to leave. No one left on our tour, but as we stood in a corridor upstairs known as a hotspot for paranormal activity, two women in our group reported feeling a touch on their shoulders. In the dark, with torches glowing, of course. I must admit that as I stood in that corridor, my heart beat was a little more pronounced than it should have been. There was definitely a bit of tension in the space. And then there were two electromagnetic field meters that simultaneously went off as we were all gathered quietly in the morgue, listening to tales of its past.

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Incidentally, that same morgue is the place you may well go to for a job interview if you ever apply to work at the National Film and Sound Archive, and work meetings if you get the job. It’s a heads-up that working there might be just a bit out of the ordinary. The people who work there seem to accept that and just get on with the job.

Even if you’re not into ghosts and all things paranormal, the tour is a fascinating insight into the history of this gem of a building and its art deco interior and unique architectural features, including Australian flora and fauna-inspired skylights and a specially-created writing font all of its own. You also get to see a couple of pieces of archival film footage that tie into the mysteries presented.

The whole thing may have got into my head. I woke up that night as I rolled over in bed, feeling a clear double tap on my left shoulder to help me on my way. I think it was a dream, but then again …

What about you? Have you got any ghost stories to tell? I’d love to hear.

Ghost Tour Details
National Film and Sound Archive, McCoy Circuit, Acton ACT
$70
More information: shop.nfsa.gov.au/event-tickets/ghost-tours

First published at HerCanberra

36 thoughts on “Are you game to take a ghost tour in Canberra’s most haunted building?

  1. Fascinating story! Will reblog and post in the near future on my blog, BookEmJanO – thanks so much for sharing your experience. We’re all skeptics til we encounter Something Else . . . 👻😊

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  2. I’ve always been on the fence – maybe because the idea frightens me. I felt a distinct chill up my spine when you mentioned about the kids seeing that little girl pulling faces. I remember visiting the site when it was the Institute of Anatomy. It would have been when we were living in Bombala and came up to Canberra for a day trip – as we sometimes did from there- so would have been late 70s. Fascinating stuff. As unsettling as I find the idea, the stories would be rivetting.

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    1. I’m a bit the same – intrigued but scared to be a true believer. There were a few of those on the tours. Apparently there’s a number of stories about the little girl under the stage! And btw I used to live in Bombala for a little while, mid 80s

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      1. No way! really? We were there from 1979 – 1981…or was it 1982. Dad was the manager of the Bank of NSW & we lived up the top of the hill in Maybe St.

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  3. Hi Christine, I might not be as brave as you! I believe there are souls that are still ‘here’ for whatever reason. I remember after my Mum died, I am positive she visited me, although who knows it might have just been a dream but a very realistic one! Thanks for sharing your visit with us at #MLSTL and I’m sure it is a topic that will start conversations. Have a great week! 🙂

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  4. My daughters and I went on a ghost tour of haunted buildings in New Orleans several years ago. It was a lot of fun and a little spooky. I don’t necessarily believe in ghosts, but a tour like that can definitely get in your head. #MLSTL

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  5. Ghost tours give me the heebie jeebies – we have one in WA where they take you into one of the old jails and the corridors that run underground as well. I must say that the idea leaves me a bit cold, but I can see the appeal it would have for hardier souls!
    MLSTL and I’ve shared this on my SM 🙂

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  6. I love ghost tours but only if I get a great storyteller. I was on a tour once where I didn’t think there would be a lot of ghost stories and yet the storyteller got me looking over my shoulder just to make sure I wasn’t being watched or followed. And then there was the awful tour that had all the customers cutting out early because it was so bad. Shame too because we were in Gettysburg where over 7000 men died in a three day period. In the evening, walking the fields where these men died and the storyteller was so dull he ruined the entire experience. There should have been plenty of ghosts among the massive battlefield or at least he should have been able to keep our interest.

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  7. I’ve spent a lot of hours in this building doing research or having coffee and I’ve never seen anything spooky. I suppose ghosts only come out at night when researchers and coffee drinkers are in their beds. Great post!

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  8. I’m not a believer in ghosts and my hometown does a couple of ghost tours – one of the cemetery and one of an old area of town (original buildings etc). I like the notion that you get a bit of education on this tour as well! Sounds like fun.

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  9. Fun! I’ve been on many paranormal tours here in US. I’m an avid believer myself. Enough experiences that swayed me many years ago. Thanks for sharing with us. I wish I were closer your way. I’d definitely take this tour. Sharing for MLSTL

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  10. I must confess I’m a skeptic when it comes to the paranormal, but the tour sounds interesting. If I ever come to Canberra I will put it on my list. #TeamLovinLife

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  11. I wouldn’t go on this but I think my film-maker (just about to graduate) granddaughter would find it interesting. I totally love Canberra and am disappointed I have not been for a few years now we are an extra 90 minutes travel one way. I “may” try to get there for Autumn. I love visiting the High Court in session and Old Parliament House. as well as the War Memorial (of course!) Denyse

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    1. I’ve been there many, many times myself and never seen/felt/heard any either, but then again, there are apparently many who have, daytime and night time. I’ve only heard recently about though myself.

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