After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal - Hellfire Club: Sex, Scandal & Satanism in Georgian England
Episode Date: December 4, 2023Sex, Satanism and Scandal surrounded the Hellfire Club that operated out of a network of caves in the country estate of 18th century aristocrat Francis Dashwood. The most powerful men in the country c...ame to Dashwood's underground lair. Rumours swirled of everything from orgies to human sacrifice and Satanic spirits. But was it all as diabolical as it seemed?Maddy tells Anthony the story this week.Produced by Freddy Chick and Charlotte Long. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Discover the past with exclusive history documentaries and ad-free podcasts presented by world-renowned historians from History Hit. Watch them on your smart TV or on the go with your mobile device. Get 50% off your first 3 months with code AFTERDARK sign up now for your 14-day free trial http://access.historyhit.com/checkout/subscribe/purchase?code=afterdark&plan=monthly
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1750. Deep in the Buckinghamshire countryside north of London.
We're standing in the last of the evening light on the outskirts of West Wycombe,
a rolling parkland peppered with classical temples and follies,
all nestled amid the Chiltern Hills.
Somewhere behind us in the dark is a magnificent house, the seat of Sir
Francis Dashwood, politician. It's Dashwood who has brought us here, a mysterious invitation
delivered by one of his footmen arrived only hours ago. But we're not here for the house,
or even the grounds. Before us is what looks like a rocky cliff face, with a dark, roughly hewn opening at its centre.
This is the entrance to the West Wickham Caves,
a system of underground tunnels and cells first excavated as a chalk mine,
and which now serve quite a different purpose.
We hesitate on the threshold. We've heard the stories. That Dashwood's life away from
Parliament is controversial.
There are rumours of pagan worship, of bacchanalian festivities and rituals to worship the flesh. His friends, it's said, dressed like monks,
imitating the habits and routines of a monastic order turned on its head,
an inverted holy sect dedicated to the hedonistic.
Voices are coming from within now,
and as we move closer, the faint orange glow of torches can be made out,
lighting the way down a long, winding and jagged corridor. We step inside,
about to find the truth, whatever it is, that awaits us underground. Hello, Hello and welcome to this episode of After Dark Myths, Misdeeds and the Paranormal. Now,
if you ever thought that you had a successful house party, that recollection of Sir Francis
Dashwood's escapades in his country seat will have put your party to shame,
no doubt. We are talking today, under the expert guidance of Dr Maddy Pelling,
about the Hellfire Club. Hi, Maddy.
Hello. You're introducing me like I'm a guest.
I know, yeah, you do live here. Yeah, I do live here. I'm always here. Yes,
we're talking about the Hellfire Club, or clubs, more importantly.
Before we get on to the context of the time, so we'll talk a little bit in a moment about what's going on in the world,
I think it's kind of important to point out that the word or the title for this club, the Hellfire Club, is not contemporary to the 18th century.
It is attributed later and I always found this frustrating because there's a really famous one in Dublin that was conducted up on some hill somewhere out near Wicklow or Killiney or that
side of that side of the county I'm not from Dublin so I don't know the exact geography but
it was out there somewhere and I always found it frustrating it was called the Hellfire Club and
then any little bit of research I did into it when I was an undergrad or whatever I was like
this this is not that interesting like what why is this called the hellfire club so do we know I I don't know why it was specifically
called the hellfire club afterwards I don't either and I'm not sure when that name is first
attached I think it's probably the end of the 18th century into the 19th century when you start to get
the publication of sort of essentially salacious gossip that's fed into fictional
accounts of 18th century life. And you start to get these references to these seedy private lives
of certain politicians associated with some of these clubs. And it's about inverting the moral
life of the British aristocracy, I guess. It's about evoking the
devil, evoking darkness, evoking immorality in some way. And it's that idea that we'll discuss
today, how far the reality actually reflects that is maybe another thing entirely. But
this idea of hellishness, of evil at the heart of the British establishment. We're talking about
people who really are at the centre of British infrastructure. We have the writer and politician
and satirist Paul Whitehead. We've got John Montagu, the Earl of Sandwich, who is, at various
points in his career, is the Lord of the Admiralty, he's the first postmaster general. You know,
people who are really seriously in charge. And we have potentially even Benjamin
Franklin, founding father, visiting the caves a few times. So these are men involved in the
highest offices of power in the 18th century world, the real sort of movers and shakers
of this world. And so the rumours about them and about what they're getting up to in their
personal private lives is so important to how they're presented in the public eye. And I think
that's why the name the Hellfire Club has survived so long. So let's just set the scene a little bit
in terms of the time that we're talking about here specifically. So we're talking about the 1750s
into the 1760s. So we've got George II on the throne.
We're in the middle of the so-called Enlightenment. There's scientific advancement going on.
And there is a kind of cultural reaction to that as well. There's an interest in darkness
and folklore. And we're only a generation away at this point from the last woman to be killed for witchcraft in
Scotland in the 1730s. So there's still a sort of crackling just beneath the surface, this fear
of the unknown, of darkness. And the roles that individual characters, individual figures,
white upper-class men play in this world, and how they wield their power in public life and
behind the scenes becomes central to British identity, I think. So one of the things that's
worth establishing at this point, I think, is the correct, shall we say, way in which men were
supposed to socialise in the middle of the 18th century. So we're talking 1750s, Maddy, that's correct,
right? Yes, yeah, the 1750s. So smack in the middle. So in the 1750s, men are supposed to
socialise in the public sphere. They are supposed to be seen so that they can be measured and that
they can be pitted against ideal masculine types. So when men come together, we're expecting to see
them in coffee houses, we're expecting to see them in tavern together, we're expecting to see them in coffee houses,
we're expecting to see them in taverns, we're expecting to see them, yes, in gentlemen's clubs, but in establishment places in town, in London, for instance, where they can be monitored. It's
about monitoring. And the reason it's about monitoring is because men are powerful and
power plus secrecy gives rise to a lot of suspicion. So what's happening with these hellfire clubs and why they've endured, as Maddy's been describing,
is because it takes masculinity and it takes privacy and it puts them together in an unregulated
environment, either the private home or, as Maddy was saying, in the cave or other kind of chaotic
locations, certainly not within regulated
parameters. And so this gives rise to suspicion, intrigue, rumour, and it means these stories
start to escalate from these private relationships between these men.
So let's get to Dashwood's Hellfire Club. So Francis Dashwood is a politician and his country seat in West Wycombe in Buckinghamshire is, for anyone who's ever seen, I think it's 2002, the columns running the length of the lower floor and the first floor.
It's this really kind of regulated, neoclassical, Roman-style building.
And again, we're talking about the tension between public and private life,
that once you go literally underground on this estate,
there's this very not neoclassical, complicated, strangely shaped cave system that he
excavates first as a chalk mine, looking to make some money off his land, and soon realises this
is the perfect place to host some of these parties and to move this semi-public performance
and parody of public life, to move it somewhere private because that's what's needed
but more than that it becomes it grows a whole culture of itself doesn't it so he calls
his friends who take part in this they're called monks he calls himself an abbot and the whole
thing is called the order of the friars of saint francis of wickham obviously francis a play on
his name and so francis saint franc Francis of Assisi. And he calls
them sometimes the Medmenum monks. So there's a sort of a Catholic overtone, which is interesting
here as well. We are in the 1750s, only a decade away from the last Jacobite rising of 1745,
and there's huge Catholic support at that time for King James and this is very much again an
inversion of Protestant sober Georgian public life and it comes with a whole iconography so
he fashions himself as the abbot and he makes everyone supposedly and we're going to be using
that word a lot because this is really crucial that it's really hard to pin down these details but supposedly he makes his members wear ritual
clothing so they wear white trousers and some kind of jacket and a cap to look like a monk
and he wears this this sort of red ensemble as the abbot in charge of all these rituals and they have
latin mottos they inscribe little dedications to each other in sort of hidden clues throughout
the West Wickham parkland and in the cave itself. And interestingly, if you go there today,
the walls are absolutely covered in later 19th century graffiti left by tourists. But actually,
there are a series of deeply carved, scary monster faces, sort of of masks a bit like the sort of tragedy theatrical masks
if you can imagine those yes and i read those as being potentially from this period and i think
they are part of this iconography that that dashwood and his friends adhere to and create
there and interestingly above the the ground where the caves are, there is a church,
I think it's St. Lawrence's Church, which is part of the West Wycombe Parkland. And so the caves
underneath are literally the underworld, the antidote to this Christian world above. This is
meant to be a kind of underworld, a kind of transformative portal into darkness in which the rules of
Georgian society are laid to one side. So it's absolutely fascinating. And they meet
twice a month there. And they take part in these choreographed rituals. There's a lot of drinking.
There's supposedly a lot of sex. We know that Frances Dashwood's sister attended sometimes.
a lot of sex. We know that Frances Dashwood's sister attended sometimes. We know that there were potentially sex workers from the local area or brought in from London who attended.
There were mistresses, there are family members. So it's not purely a masculine gathering,
but it's very much, I would say, about expressing masculine virility and quite heterosexual masculine virility. Is that
fair? Yeah. I mean, we're talking about circumnavigating traditions and regulations
of masculinity in the mid-18th century. But actually, think about what they're doing.
They are, as elite men, shoring up their power to regulate, that they cannot be regulated because they inform the regulation.
So they are free to have these bacchanalian, debauched, you know, sex parties, drinking parties,
indulge in copious amounts of food, because they know other people can't. And they also now know
that nobody can really stop them because they're in their own country seat, they're on their own
land, they're doing whatever they want to do in their own space. So in many ways, this is
not a revolutionary or a revolt against that regulation. It's just showing where the regulation
comes from. We have examples of that in our own time with things like the Bullingdon Club.
Absolutely. And that kind of, that performance in a private space of privilege.
These are the men. There are women on the periphery, absolutely. But these are the men
that are going to be making the rules so they can break them.
They can break them.
And, you know, we can talk about the COVID regulations now. And we're talking about those
people who are, you know, privately educated through secondary school, who then go on to
Oxbridge, and they know they're going to be making those rules, but they also think they don't have to follow them. And that's
exactly, this is the origins of all of that attitude or this is the personification of all
of that type of attitude in the middle of the 18th century. It didn't originate in the middle
of the 18th century, but here it is nonetheless. And it's from this period that it's become so
notorious and has been imitated ever since, I think.
Let's talk about Dashwood specifically and some of his self-styling, because within the privacy,
as you say, of his own estate, he very much performs this role as someone who is breaking the rules. And he doesn't necessarily try to keep it secret within this space that he owns,
he's in charge of. And one of the things that he does is commission a series of portraits of himself as a monk. So let's talk about one of these. It's a painting by Hogarth,
by the artist William Hogarth. Anthony, tell us a bit about it. What are we looking at here?
Okay, let's start in the background of the picture. I see a country seat to the left of
Dashwood, who's central to the picture. That's probably his, I'm sure. Oh yeah,
and there's the cave. So in the foreground, then Dashwood is leaning up against the caves that
Maddy has been describing. Well, I presume they're those caves. It would make sense.
Dashwood is depicted in, I guess, Monk's Habit. He has a brown, what looks like a brown costume
on over a white shirt. He also has a kind of halo of a crescent moon, rather, with a face in the crescent moon
over his head. Again, I'm assuming kind of alluding to that costume element, but it also
inverts ideas of the halo in religious portraiture. Then he is pointing to a tiny little naked woman who is reclining on some white satin sheets on
part of the cave. There is a mask lying in the background waiting for him to adore and I guess
as part of his secret rituals. There is also an upturned plate on the ground and that plate was
full of fruit and now the fruit is spilling away. Often, and Maddy's far more adept at art history than I am, but often fruit in pictures represents offspring and family
and so potentially this is representing something about upturning family notions or the traditions
of family and this is spilling all over the ground. So that's what I'm seeing. How wrong am I?
No, I think that's really fair to say that it's depicting this disruption of
aristocratic patriarchal life, this sense that you have your family seat, you must produce an heir
to pass it to and protect your wealth and your land. And what I think is just so fascinating
about this painting is his gesturing to, yes yes he's got the mask that he's going
to put on you know this this reference to him having a secret life or masking his the reality
in some way and this idea of I suppose donning a costume and and for revelry but the tiny woman I
mean she's probably just slightly bigger than a Barbie but she's depicted as a real fleshy person.
And it's the literal visual representation of female objectification
that she is just part of this selection of pleasures
that are on offer.
And that wine and women is very much on the menu
at these parties.
I just think it's fascinating that he commissioned this,
that there is a visual record of what he was getting up to and that this version of himself,
he wanted to commemorate it and to...
Well, that's funny, isn't it? Because you say what he was getting up to. Is this what he was
getting up to? Or is this what he was leaning into portraying that
people thought he was getting into? And he's like, I'll give them what they want. I mean,
if I see this in the 18th century, the first thing I'm doing is laughing. As a Georgian,
I'm laughing at this. Not as a 21st century historian. As a Georgian, I am going to laugh
at this. So I think that's what the purpose is. That's just my interpretation. There's no hard
and fast here. But I think this is comedic. I think this is self- purpose is. That's just my interpretation. There's no hard and fast here.
But I think this is comedic.
I think this is self-fashioning.
But also leaning into the gossip as opposed to going, guys, here's a historical account of what we do when we get together. Yes.
And this is absolutely crucial to understanding the history of the Hellfire Clubs in the 18th century.
absolutely crucial to understanding the history of the hellfire clubs in the 18th century that they rely on the rumours that are told about them as much as anything else they're trading on them
in their public life until they can't anymore and we will get to how this starts to become a problem
rather than an advantage and we're going to hear a little bit more about one of these famous
anecdotes and have a little think about just
how we can identify what is true here, what's really going on, or if that's the point at all. Wendy's Small Frosty is the ultimate summer refreshment.
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Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn.
Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves.
Catherine Howard, Catherine Parr.
Six wives, six lives.
I'm Professor Susanna Lipscomb, and this month on Not Just the Tudors,
I'm joined by a host of experts to tell the stories of the six queens of Henry VIII,
who shaped and changed England forever.
Subscribe to and follow Not Just the Tudors from History Hit,
wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you. Among the more salacious stories to circulate about Dashwood's club
was one involving the initiation of two of its members,
each of whom despised the other.
The first was John Montagu, the Earl of Sandwich. Montagu was born
to privilege and raised to serve as a statesman, his place beside Dashwood and his band of hedonistic
monks virtually a birthright. The second was John Wilkes, a radical politician known as much for his ugly face and squinting eyes, a favourite subject among
satirical artists, as he was for his populist and xenophobic views. Wilkes was an outsider,
a disruptive voice for change, a supposed man of the people whose unpolished manners left much to
be desired by his upper-class associates,
but whose rise through the ranks had nevertheless secured him a spot in the hellfire.
For any joining the club, an initiation in the caves was paramount.
And so, one dark night, the group gathered together to welcome Montague and Wilkes into the fold,
gathered together to welcome Montague and Wilkes into the fold, Montague visibly balking at the idea of standing side by side with Wilkes as equals, but Wilkes had already planned his
response to Montague's snobbery. The men gathered in a small cell beneath the chalk, a mock altar
set up on one side with benches before it and a large wooden chest nearby.
The pair took to their knees, as instructed, ready to begin their symbolic investment.
But without warning, the chest flew open, and from it sprang the devil himself, dressed as a monk, bearing fangs and covered in terrible hair.
Montague screamed and ran for his life, convinced he was about to be dragged to the underworld.
The rest fell about laughing.
Wilkes had planted a live monkey in the chest, a practical joke that humiliated his rival, but one that would ultimately cost him.
I wonder if Montague went home and had himself a sandwich, because he is the Earl of Sandwich, right?
He is the Sandwich Man.
Did he invent sandwiches?
I think he did. He's the fourth Earl, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. Fourth Earl is the Sandwich Man, yeah.
He's the Sandwich Man. Wow. You learn something new every day and after dark.
Do we think this story is true?
No.
Why do I think nothing is true?
Like, I'm way too...
You are very suspicious, as is the want of a historian.
That's fine.
So this story comes down to us.
It's published in a text called Crystal or the Adventures of a
Guinea, which is what is known in the 18th century as an it narrative. So this is a story that's
written from the perspective of an object that moves through Georgian society. In this case,
it's Guinea, a coin that finds its way into the pockets of different members of society,
including a member of Dashwood's so-called religious order. And it's from his
pocket that he witnesses, the coin witnesses. I'm gendering the coin. The coin could be female,
who knows. But the coin, importantly, witnesses some of these scenes in the caves. Now, this is
published at a moment when there's resentment building towards these men and the things that
they're getting up to. There's grumblings in Parliament amongst other politicians. There's reports in the press that they're getting
up to no good, that they're worshipping the devil, that they're involved in all this kind
of ritualistic, dark stuff. And I think we can take this account with a pinch of salt.
And this story is repeated in other texts. And in some texts,
it's a monkey. In other texts, it's a baboon. Quite where John Wilkes would have got this animal from and how he would have got it all the way out to Buckinghamshire to pop it in a chest
and for it to appear at the opportune moment is interesting. But I think what it does tell us
is so much about the class tensions here. John Wilkes is not necessarily from this highest strata of society.
He's a radical politician. He famously is the editor of the North Britain, which is a newspaper
that is critical of, first of all, the Prime Minister. At this point, it's John Bute,
and also critical of the King, who from 1760 is George III. And he is
very popular. He has these quite xenophobic views. He's very anti-Scottish. The Prime Minister Bute
is Scottish. He has sympathy for the Americans and goes on in the American Revolution to play
quite a significant role there. So he's quite a divisive figure. It's so interesting to me that
he makes his way into the Hellfire Club because he is going through the ranks of political life
and therefore is invited to this secret world. But he's absolutely not welcome there. And Sandwich,
when he's not busy making sandwiches, is appalled by Wilkes' presence there. And he feels that it is in some way an insult to him.
Yeah. I think as far as I'm aware with Wilkes, he has this anti-establishment streak to him,
certainly. They do try to bring him down though, right? They try to discredit him, if I'm correct.
They do. They absolutely do. So Sandwich is absolutely seething about what's happened and
whether or not there is a prank with a monkey
involved it's very clear there is tension between the two men and that this has stemmed at least in
part not only from their political the difference of their political views but from something that's
happened during one of these meetings of the hellfire club and sandwich takes a very public
form of revenge so as part of the Hellfire Club culture, Wilkes has written
a pornographic essay, essentially a poem, called An Essay on Woman. And it's in and of itself a
parody of Alexander Pope's Essay on Man, which is all about male morality and soberness. And
it's dedicated to a courtesan, Fanny Murray. and it's basically, it's just porn. It's just poetical porn.
And Sandwich actually reads this text out in Parliament as a way of exposing Wilkes
as being immoral, as being a bit of a cad, and as being part of this underworld that
Sandwich himself was being initiated into.
But this is his opportunity to expose Wilkes, and he does so.
He's discredited, I guess.
Yeah, so his standing within the political system is damaged
and he's pushed more and more to the edge.
And eventually he is arrested not for an essay on woman
but for one of the issues of his newspaper,
the North Britain, the 45th edition,
in which he critiques the king himself,
which is obviously a problem, you know.
And Sandwich's revenge, it's just so damaging. And I think what's interesting for us here is
the way that these behind the scenes tensions, this performance of masculinity and the ways that
it can go wrong at these secret societies, the way that bleeds into their public life.
And by the end of the 1760s,
what you have is this quite fierce debate in the public space, in Parliament, in the press,
about the morality of some of these figures who are meeting in private. And their questions are
raised about their suitability to lead the country. It's also been theorised that Sandridge, Montague, contrived that document
that Wilkes didn't write it at all, and that he basically planted it in order to discredit him.
And the reason I came across that when I was doing some research is they're both tied,
both Montague and Wilkes are tied to the Chevalier Dion, who was a French spy that was operating in London at the time.
And the story of the Chevalier Dion is a queer history.
And it's probably worth mentioning at this particular point that these hellfire clubs are very much heterosexual, as we would term them today.
They're very much heterosexual outlets, particularly for the men involved. That is interesting in its own right, because we know, or we think, that at the Vine
in Hampshire, for instance, John Shute and Horace Walpole now, so the son of the Prime Minister
Robert Walpole, plus more of their friends, who we would now identify as queer or gender
non-conforming, they had very similar type gatherings and activities in the
chapel at the Vine. They would dress up as monks, they would have magic, role reversal, irreligious
events, but it was a group of, again, what we would now identify as queer men doing this together.
And just as the Hellfire Club is bringing these men together, they are a type of
man, a man who is able to conform to and wishes to conform to heterosexual life. So it's interesting,
these clubs and this idea of switching things on their heads is very much an elite idea,
but also crosses boundaries between gender regulation, gender non-conformity, and lives in this murky world where, again, privacy is the real problem.
What are men getting up to when we cannot monitor them?
We need to be able to monitor men because if we don't, they're dangerous.
What are they plotting?
Especially if they have power, what could come from these secret meetings
that could disrupt England, Britain, the world as we know it?
The eventual decline of Dashwood's Hellfire came in the 1760s with a series of scandals surrounding its members.
In 1762 Dashwood was appointed as Chancellor of the Exchequer, a role he far from excelled at
given his infamous financial illiteracy.
Then there was the arrest of Wilkes for seditious libel the following year,
most likely the work of Montague in revenge for his humiliation.
Gradually, the private and public lives of Dashwood and his monks became incompatible,
and the not-so-secret club, whatever the truth behind it, an insurmountable
stumbling block for any aspiring statesman. But such clubs would hardly disappear. Instead,
they slipped further into the shadows, where their activities would be harder to discover. A generation after Dashwood, his own nephew
set up the Phoenix Society, its Latin motto translating to,
When one is torn away, another succeeds. A direct reference to his uncle's previous
exploits. And there were more like this. In Scotland,
the Beggars' Benison, a club whose members met to drink and fornicate,
survived long into the 1780s.
Among its members was the Prince of Wales,
the future King George IV,
who bequeathed to the group a snuffbox
filled with his mistress's pubic hair.
What a way to end on pubic hair.
I was waiting for something else.
Like, oh, we're ending on pubic hair.
There we go.
It's too tempting for them, isn't it?
It is too tempting for them.
And by them, I mean elite, privileged men
who are controlling the narrative
historically, politically, socially,
culturally. It is too tempting for them not to try and retreat together to show that they don't need
to adhere to the rules that they're instigating. It is too tempting for them. The thing that we
have to take away from that is thus it ever was, thus it ever shall be.
Absolutely. And that is why i think it's endured these clubs
the hellfire club the whatever the hellfire club is whenever it's taking place this idea of the
hellfire club has survived in our cultural imagination so we have it in historical novels
like robert graves novel sergeant lamb of the ninth we have for any outlander fans out there
diana gabaldon actually has a historical novella
called Lord John, who is a character in Outlander, Lord John and the Hellfire Club. There are
references to the Hellfire Club in Blackadder, in the Marvel comics, in Neil Gaiman's The Sandman,
there's a sort of underground bar called the Hellfire Club. It's everywhere, this idea of
secret societies. And, you know know we live in an age of
sort of conspiracy theories now and you know anxiety around there being a sort of an elite a secret elite in charge of everything but that really to a certain extent was the case
in the 18th century and they're not even secret they're not even secret they're performatively
secret everyone's talking about them but they are
happening behind closed doors and the rumors are seeping out of that and i think you're right that
we're still seeing the legacy of that and certainly certainly in popular imagination it's very much
still there in our collective consciousness didn't we in the last few years as well have
a potential incident with a pig's head in one of these secret clubs. You know,
we tend to think all too easily when we're looking at these documents and we're hearing these
histories, gosh, it must have caused such, society must have stood still trying to unpick the nuances
and the realities and take away the gossip and put in the facts. It didn't. Society kept going.
These are just things that were whirling around in the background, and we still have them whirling around in the background
now. And I think it's a really good way to find a way into history and realise that, you know,
historians often caution about drawing too many parallels between what people in the past are
feeling and what we are feeling today. But I've got to do it nonetheless, because how else are
we supposed to experience history? We know what this is like because we have experienced it too.
Yes, I agree. And I think that that is the appeal of history, is to make those comparisons. And
the Hellfire Club for me in the 18th century is so useful as a way in to think about the 18th
century political system, how power was dispersed,
how people performed their gender,
specifically their masculinity.
What's fascinating is we can never really get
to the concrete facts of what they got up to in those caves
because there is such little material culture left of it.
So we do not have their uniforms,
their monks' habits.
And that's suspicious. I'm sorry to monks habits and that's suspicious i'm sorry
to interrupt but that's suspicious because if you have 12 men who apparently have these uniforms then
likelihood is one of them is surviving somewhere maybe do you have it in your attic at home if so
right into us oh you're asking me no i wish i had it but i don't yeah if you do have one let us know
yeah let us know but you know there's we have one thing that we do have is things like the accounts for the
West Wycombe estate. And we can see for their monthly meetings, the club ordered in significant
amounts of alcohol, for example. So we know that there were gatherings taking place. We have the
visual record. We have the painting by Hogarth, there are several other portraits of Dashwood himself dressed as a monk with these sort of symbolic allusions, these visual
clues hidden in plain sight that make reference to some of the anecdotes we know about the club,
some of their ideas, the way that they sort of fashioned themselves. So there are these little
tantalising glimpseses but it's really hard to get
to the evidence and oh to be a fly on the wall in those caves i would not want to be i'd be like
get out of this cave i have no interest in seeing this manic chaotic scene well actually i do
subjectively i have an interest but yeah no it just wouldn't be wouldn't be my gig yes but you
know i think the fact that such societies,
and Dashwoods in particular, they still interest us.
They still cause us to debate ideas of privilege,
ideas of masculinity.
It's fascinating.
I think that's a really good place to leave it.
Thank you for joining us on After Dark Myths,
Misdeeds and the Paranormal this week,
and for exploring the Hellfire Club with us.
We would love to know your thoughts on what for exploring the Hellfire Club with us, we would love to know your thoughts
on what you think the Hellfire Club might have been.
Or if you have any further insights,
please do let us know.
We have another request from our listeners, Maddy.
We certainly do.
We want to hear from you.
So if you have experienced anything spooky,
if you want to suggest a episode topic to us, if you've been to a really great graveyard,
if you have a murder in your family tree, or if you just want to let us know the episodes that
you've enjoyed, you can get in touch with us. You can email us at afterdark at historyhit.com.
Now, if you're a long-time listener to After Dark, you'll know that we are no strangers to
an additional hidden scene every now and again, and we've got one for you today.
We have talked, myself and Maddy, in this episode about how the Hellfire Club was,
when you boil it down and you look at the historical archive, an elite group of men
playing with the symbolism, I suppose, of the devil and the occult and looking at what that
means for their masculinity. But
others will tell you that there's more to it than just that, and that the Hellfire Caves are, well,
and truly haunted. Well, this is After Dark, after all. So we sent our producer Charlotte to visit
the Hellfire Caves for herself, and the information and the stories she gathered from one of the
guides there is truly remarkable. We hope that you enjoy this and we'll
see you on after dark again next time
before i worked here about two and a half years ago or so now i didn't really believe much i was
very open to the idea of paranormal life and whatever but i was more if it slaps me in the
face i'll believe it literally within my first week I was hearing just a lot of voices down there as rocks thrown at me
I got at one point um my hair was a lot longer I got pulled against a wire that
had to go to the sports against stitches in the back of my head
it's nuts here I probably should tell you that after we've gone down the cave hi i'm producer charlotte and i thought i'd take a trip to the hellfire caves to have a look at them
in person and speak to the general manager willow randall all about the paranormal activity that's
happened here over the years and there have been a lot it's a very spooky place hi um do you know where willow is she should be just inside
let me go check for you cool thank you
Hi, I'm Willow Randall. I've worked here for about two and a half-ish years, and I am the general manager, among many other things, of the caves. I'm also a medium, whether, again,
I use the blanket term medium, but whether it's sensitive, whether it's spiritual, it's a lot of
things that I can see, feel, hear, o bethau, ond gallaf weld, teimlo, clywed a thredu gyda'r ysbrydion,
gan gydag ar wahanol a phosibol ffyrdd y byd.
Ond mae'r lle hwn yn wych ac rwy'n hapus iawn bod chi wedi dod yma hefyd. Diolch i chi am ymweld, mae'n wych.
Nid ydw i'n credu llawer cyn i mi weithio yma, ond yn ystod y wythnos cyntaf, roeddwn i'n clywed sgriniau yno,
gan gwybod fy mod i ar fy hun, gan gael sgriniau o fy cydweithwyr, chi'n gyr yn sgwrsio am fi y tu ôl yma, ac wedyn roedden nhw ar y cyfyngau.
I ni, mae'n anodd.
Rwy'n meddwl fy mod wedi tyfu i fyny 30 secondau yn ôl.
Felly, ni ddim yn meddwl llawer amdano.
Mae'n fel, o ie, mae'n dim ond y caefion.
Ac yna, pan fyddwch chi'n dysgu'r holl hanes a'r holl storïau
a'ch bod yn tyfu i fwynhau'r cwbl, rydych chi'n sylweddoli sut arbennig yw'r ffordd yw cael y lle hwn ar eich dwrstaf. learn all the history and all the stories and sort of grow to love it you
realize actually how special it is just to have this location on your doorstep
it's absolutely incredible. The thing is though it's some days I come down here
and it's literally nothing it's silent whatever and other days it is literally
like Clapham Junction in my head it is you know just kind of depends on the day.
This isn't even halfway down.
What?
Nope.
So this is the Bouncing Hall.
It is the halfway point.
And as I said, it's the largest man-dug chalk cavern in the world.
And you can hear the difference in acoustics.
And look up. 60 60 foot up 40 foot across
where did all the rumors come from all the satanic cults and worship and isn't there a temple for
satan somewhere in these caves yeah so the bottom very bottom chamber is called the inner temple it
is 300 feet directly underneath the altar of the church and again it's sort of
they've got heaven above and this man dug hell below which is past this point past the back
where you can see where the old door hinges used to be literally unless you were one of these 12
superior members you weren't allowed past this point and past there was where they would cross
the river Styx and they would have their supposed satanic meetings and perhaps sacrifice people.
Again, we can't confirm or deny.
We do not know.
Originally, it's said that the Hellfire Club
had one of the largest collections of satanic
and pornographic material at the time as well.
We've actually just passed on our way down.
They've carved the face of the devil into the walls.
I saw the devil.
So again, you can see two horns, a very, you know,
cheeky smile and was painted
a bright red originally.
You alright?
I'm not trying to be Derek Accora, but I felt like I just saw
some smoke. There is
one of the spirits we have down here, Suki,
the white lady. She is
said to be...
said to be depicted
by white smoke or a full white body apparition
so it is very likely that you did see her because i in a past life no knew her so we found out on
an investigation that in a past life my name was knew her. So we found out on an investigation that in a past life, my name was Catherine
and I was the only person that knew where Suki was going
the night she died, which was she was coming here.
And people always say, literally for decades have said,
you're always meant to work at the caves
and people come here for a reason.
And it's sort of like I have found my reason
of why I'm here.
And literally sort of, I dedicate my life to this place
and it's incredible.
But she actually died right there so she was a maid in the old coaching which is now the Georgian Dragon pub in in West Wycombe village which is literally 30 seconds down the hill
and she would often tend to a lot of the finer gentlemen that would come into the pub so
obviously as I said it was the main port between London and Oxford so people would stop in overnight byddai'n amlwg i lawer o'r ddynion ffynhau sy'n dod i'r pub. Felly yn amlwg fel y dywedais
roedd yn y porth penodol rhwng Lundain a Gwmpas, byddai pobl yn parhau i fynd yn ystod y nos.
Ac fe wnaeth hi unwaith yn llyfru â'r dyn ffynhau honno, nid ydym yn gwybod pwy yw'r dyn, mae'n cael ei
credu ei fod yn arglwydd o Lundain. Ac yn ddiweddar y dydd, fe wnaeth hi fynd am ei gweithgareddion a
fe wnaeth hi mewn ystod 12 oed sydd yno nawr, sydd yn amlwg yn ystod y cyfnodau hynny,
wedi byw ar y tŷp cyntaf neu'r tŷp o'r tŷp o'r maid yn byw ar y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷp oedd yn y tŷpd? Nid. Felly roedd hyn yn cael ei wneud yn y cyfnod cychwyn cyntaf, yn y 1820au yn y bôn.
Ac y peth y gallech chi ei wneud yw, os oes y barau wedi'u adeiladu neu ddim, os na allech chi fynd i mewn,
os na allech chi fynd i ddod a chael y cwbl o'r cyfarwyddwr.
Doedd gennych chi ddim rhaid i mi, mi sydden i'n meddwl, gwneud y cwbl o siliwrau, cuddio'r cendl ac allech chi ddod i lawr.
Roedd hi'n dod â ddyniaeth gwyd yn y caeaf gyda llantr, yn amlwg, cendl wedi'i ddynu ar y pryd. she donned a white dress came up to the caves with a lantern obviously candlelit at the time and she came all the way up and she didn't find the lord but she did hear a voice from within
the caves calling her so she followed it all the way down to the mounting hall where she didn't
find this lord she found three of the local village boys who burst into fits of laughter
they found it hilarious that they had managed to trick her all the way down here so she picked up
some rocks off the floor,
threw them at the boys in anger.
They thought, again, this was absolutely hilarious.
So they picked up some rocks, threw them back at her,
one struck her in the head.
And we don't know if the story ends in three different ways,
either that she died on the spot
and her body was not found until someone came down,
obviously could have been days or weeks down the line. was either the boys you know didn't realize what happened they freaked out
and they just ran and left her here or dragged her body back up or that she didn't actually die on
the spot it only knocked her out but then she sort of made her way back up to the surface of the caves
died on the surface and that's when she was found the next day are there any like records of her yn y cyfan o'r caeaf, wedi marw ar y cyfan ac roedd hwnnw'n cael ei chael y dydd nesaf.
A oes dim unrhyw recordiau o'i recordiau o'i gyrfa?
Felly, rydyn ni'n cael sgriniaeth sy'n dweud bod yna dyn ifanc wedi cael ei gael
gyda, chi'n gwbod, ychydig o ddiffyg i'w chyffyrdd, a dyna'r unig
diwedd ymddiriedol sydd wedi digwydd yno.
Yn amlwg, a ydw i'n credu hynny? Nid yn unig, oherwydd mae'n debyg iawn bod pobl wedi cael eu technically confirmed death we know to have happened down here obviously do i believe that absolutely not because it's very likely that people were killed during excavation because you
know chalk is such you know a very fragile rock you literally can hit it and the entire cave system
could collapse kind of thing so it's very likely that unfortunately people would have died but again
back in the 1700s it was very poor farmers it's unlikely that they would have kept any record of
that but she was believed to come from a very poor family and's unlikely that they would have kept any record of that but she was
believed to come from a very poor family and again in those times you know very poor people their
birth probably wouldn't have been registered we know that she moved here from afar and then again
it's sort of what we've been told through people working at the George and again I went there with
the team that I'm a part of and they wereael gweithgaredd poltergeist llawn,
ddwylliau'n llwyr, pethau'n llwyr, y math hwnnw.
Ac nawr mae ganddyn nhw chwe mirwyr yn y tîm oherwydd mae'r mirwyr yn dod i ffwrdd a'u ffwrdd.
Rydych chi wedi siarad llawer am y cyfnodau o'r gwahaniaethau,
ond pa mor ddau sydd gennych chi ar record o fuddsoddiant a fyddeolion? horrible sightings but how many do you have on record from like visitors and like medians
as in like physical evidence with videos or pictures or physical evidence and then also
just anecdotally as well anecdotally i couldn't count we have people come in every day telling us
experiences or we've had them ourselves i mean i'm a walking talking like spirit box so and again for
me i as i said i'm always up for debunking things
I'm always up for proving it wrong and I didn't even believe it before so I'm like yeah definitely
something isn't or I'm going mad it's one of the two but pieces of evidence we literally have
people emailing us with pictures that have got you know again it's you don't know what to believe or
not because people go oh there was no one standing in that hallway but you're like is there was there
someone standing in there but we probably weekly we get emails or you know messages on social media people sending us
evidence but literally every day we are open we have people coming in telling us their experiences
whether it happened that day or in the past so it's pretty incredible it's one of those things
as well it's because it's so like sensory deprived down here. Often I freak myself out if my trousers brush together,
if I'm walking or, you know, I feel like I hear an echo,
you know, or I mean the bats when they, you know, communicate.
It's so high pitched, it can almost sound like someone else.
So it's a lot of it to me, I'm like, is it something?
Or am I just going mad? Or am I hearing myself?
Because I freak myself down here so much.
And then I have to call someone and be like,
I'm scared, please call to me on the way up.
But, you know, but there are some things
that we literally cannot explain that happened to me.
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