Bachorza Manor

Both its lords and their servants reported odd sounds coming from empty rooms; also, the paintings were supposed to disappear or move during the night.

This myth purportedly affected the selling price of the house in 1935;[1] Dołęga-Zaleski, who purchased Bachorza that year, claimed not to believe these rumours, yet his wife and the last lady of the manor, Natalia Dołęga-Zaleska née Ślepowron-Roman, maintained to have seen a parade of phantoms dressed in an old fashioned way shortly before her death in 1942.

[2] The manor in its current form was built around 1850 in accordance with a design by Chrystian Piotr Aigner,[3] a renowned Polish neoclassical architect.

The main section of the building is one storey high and its central feature is the entrance decorated with a portico seating on a tetrastyle colonnade and enclosed by a simple pediment.

The park is currently disintegrating and the only remaining feature is a long avenue surrounded by poplar trees leading from the gate to the main entrance of the manor.