She appears without warning — a pale figure in green, drifting through a first-floor chamber at Crathes Castle, often carrying what looks like an infant in her arms. Servants in past centuries refused to enter the room after dark. And then, one day, the builders found the bones.

A Castle Built to Last Centuries
Crathes Castle stands in Royal Deeside, Aberdeenshire, about 15 miles west of Aberdeen. Construction began in 1553 and the Burnett family — who had held the land since Robert the Bruce himself granted it in 1323 — did not complete the tower until 1596. For another side of the story, read about why Culloden still breaks Scottish hearts.
The result was a masterpiece of Scottish baronial architecture. Pink granite walls rise to crow-stepped gables and pepper-pot turrets. Inside, the painted ceilings are among the finest surviving examples in all of Scotland, their vivid colours and biblical scenes still strikingly clear after 400 years.
The gardens are equally extraordinary. Yew hedges, planted in 1702, have been sculpted into extraordinary shapes over three centuries. The castle and its grounds are now cared for by the National Trust for Scotland, and visitors come from across the world — though many are drawn as much by the legend as the landscape.
The Ghost Who Would Not Leave
The sightings of the Green Lady stretch back further than anyone can reliably record. What is consistent across the accounts is this: a young woman in green, sometimes carrying a child or an infant, seen most often near the fireplace in a first-floor chamber that came to be called the Green Lady’s Room.
Witnesses described her as sorrowful rather than threatening. She did not slam doors or rattle chains. She simply appeared — and then was gone. Servants at Crathes reportedly considered her presence an ill omen, a warning that someone in the household was about to die.
The Burnett family, who occupied the castle for nearly four centuries, were long aware of the ghost. For generations, the story was simply part of life at Crathes — strange, unexplained, and quietly accepted.
The Discovery Beneath the Hearthstone
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Then came the renovation works. Accounts differ on precisely when — it is thought to have been during the 18th century — but at some point, workmen lifted the hearthstone in the Green Lady’s Room and found what lay beneath it.
Skeletons. The remains of a young woman and, with her, an infant.
No names. No explanation. No record of who had placed them there or when. Just bones, hidden beneath the hearth of the very room where the Green Lady had been seen for as long as anyone could remember.
The remains were given a proper Christian burial. Some accounts suggest the sightings grew quieter after that — as though whatever had kept the Green Lady wandering had, at last, found some peace. Others say she has never quite left. She is, by most accounts, still there.
Scotland’s Other Haunted Towers
Crathes is far from alone. A Green Lady also walks the corridors of Stirling Castle, her identity just as elusive, her story just as old. At Glamis Castle in Angus, the secrets sealed inside its ancient walls have never been fully told. Scotland’s castles were not merely fortifications or grand residences — they were places where whole lives were lived, where grief and violence and love left marks that stone alone cannot always contain.
The Green Lady of Crathes is unusual because the discovery of the remains gave the legend something rare: physical weight. It crossed the line from folklore into something more unsettling — the suggestion that behind the ghost, there was a real woman, a real tragedy, and a real silence that had never been explained.
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Visiting Crathes Today
Crathes Castle is open to visitors throughout most of the year and sits just off the A93, easily reached from Aberdeen or as part of a wider Scottish heritage journey through Royal Deeside. The painted ceilings alone are worth the visit — and the walled garden is one of the finest in the northeast.
The Green Lady’s Room is still there. The hearthstone has been replaced. If you linger long enough, in the quieter hours of the afternoon, in that particular first-floor chamber, you will understand exactly why no one who has ever heard the story quite forgets it.
Scotland has always known that some things cannot be explained — and has never pretended otherwise. The Green Lady of Crathes is one of those things. Half history, half legend, and altogether unforgettable.
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