In his counting house - He locked up and went to the local Ail House which was his usual habit.
At home it would have been MArley who was the visitor and Scrooge would have gone to bed to away his ghostly intervention
Scrooge dismisses the caroler and tells him to leave and stop bothering him.
Once all the visitors left the counting house Scrooge left . He made his was as usual to a near by tavern where he would eat food and then look through his bank deposit book.
went back to sleep until the next ghost came
He becomes happy, helps others, and gives everyone presents.
He shuns them and tells them to leave him alone
He goes-to the local inn which is is usual routine and then home.
He locked up the counting house and went to his local Inn as he always did for food
He locked up and went home
Scrooge regrets mistreating his former business partner, Jacob Marley, who visits him as a ghost to warn him to change his ways.
He initially chases him away
The Ghost of Christmas Present
He does not visit anywhere in his beadroom In the original story he is always taken from the room
In part of the book when Scrooge is still mean, a caroler comes to his window and sings a carol in hope of food. Scrooge in turn throws a something at him and shoos him away.
The first of the three Christmas spirits who visits Scrooge is the Ghost of Christmas Past. This spirit takes Scrooge on a journey through his past to help him reflect on his life choices and actions.
Caroler
So that scrooge sees the wider world and how they celebrate and keep Christmas
His nephew the son of Fan his sister visits him and wishes him a Merry Christmas and asks him to have Christmas with him and his wife. Scrooge refuses
Scrooge initially feels excitement and joy when the ghost of Christmas Present visits him. The ghost takes Scrooge to various places, including the house of Bob Cratchit and the home of Scrooge's nephew, Fred.
Jacob Marley is the very first ghost to visit Scrooge early in the production to set the scene for the remaining visitations
In Dickens' Christmas Carol, after Marley, Scrooge is visited by the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future.