Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: The Body in the Cylinder
Episode Date: February 24, 2021In 1945, residents of a Liverpool neighborhood found a desiccated body in a long cylinder they’d been using for years using as a bench. It launched a mystery that’s still alive today. Learn more ...about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh. There's Chuck and Jerry's lurking there on mute,
just hanging around, being a weirdo, looking all weird. And this is short stuff, as I said already.
We should tell everyone the other day it was kind of funny. We were recording and
about five minutes in, Jerry somehow unmuted herself and she was in some sort of a conference
call. Yeah, with like a doctor maybe. We couldn't get a hold of her. And it was just like, shut up.
Yeah, I mean, she wasn't recording, but it was very distracting to us. And that's the important
thing, you know? Yeah, I have a thing in my brain where they're, and this happens a lot when you
have a kid, like you'll be listening to music. And then she'll come in with some dumb toy that's
playing different music. And it just, it breaks my brain and makes me want to break things.
It's not good. I don't know what it is. It's a big trigger. Yeah. Well, I like the anecdote. It was
very charming, but now we're not going to be able to get to the end of this episode. All right,
let's do it. We've wasted, I don't know, a minute. So, all right. Well, let's start by talking about
the Blitz, because that's kind of where the story technically begins. And the Blitz is like this,
the German bombing of England. And Germany really, really bombed England in general,
but most people think of London being bombed the most as the Blitz. That's not entirely true.
Well, London was for sure bombed a lot. We don't want to, you know, take anything away from what
they suffered. But Liverpool, I think, was number two in England as getting walloped by the Germans.
And there's a place in Liverpool where after the bombing, they, I think it's near
what was then called Great Homer Street. And after the bombing, they kind of left it that way for
a little while, because I think everyone was just recuperating from the war. And then in 1943,
some American soldiers finally started clearing out this area and found a little something interesting.
Yeah. Well, at first, they didn't think it was interesting. It was part of the rubble that was
cleared out by those American soldiers. But it was a long tube, a cylinder. Let me say this.
Found something that would prove to be interesting. Right, exactly. But we are in agreement that at
the time, they didn't think it was interesting at all. No. It's just a metal chamber sort of, right?
Yeah. It just looked like a tube. You know, I think it was a little under seven feet long,
less than two feet in diameter. And it was just made of steel. It just looked like some big,
dumb thing. But apparently it was heavy enough and big enough that rather than being removed with
all the other rubble, it just kind of got left in the area and became kind of a fixture in this
little part of the neighborhood. So much so that people would like sit on it as a bench sometimes,
and children would play on it and roll it along and all that stuff. And that's the way it stayed
for at least a good two years, between 1943 when they cleared out the rubble and 1945 when something
kind of big happened. Yeah. I think one end was sort of factory sealed. Yeah. And one end was kind
of stamped shut by the bulldozers and stuff that were clearing stuff out. Yeah. And over time,
over those couple of years, that end that was sort of stamped shut kind of worked its way loose a
little bit, just enough for a little kid that was climbing on it to see a bony skeletal foot.
Yeah. A little boy named Tommy Lawless, who appropriately found the skeletal foot in the
cylinder on a Friday the 13th, 1945. Yeah. So the little boy who went on to become Ringo Starr,
went and fetched a cop, the local cop, Robert Bailey. It would be Bailey, I guess, but I've
never seen it spelled that way. B-A-I-L-L-I-E. Yeah. Sure. That's Bailey, right? And he said,
well, this is way above my pay grade rather famously and went and got the detectives and
they all kind of came together and said, what is going on here? And this mystery was launched.
That's right. I think it's too early for a break, but that is a good cliffhanger.
I thought so too. All right. We can do whatever we want. We're gods here. That's right. Let's take
an early break since you set it up so well and we'll come back right after this.
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All right. Great cliffhanger. They find this thing. They find the skeletal foot. They need to get
inside of it. So they get a welder to open it up and they get some coroners and some forensics
people in there. And what they end up finding was an entire skeleton of a man, about six foot tall
dude, Victorian dress. And they had, it was a little bit of hair still left even on the skull.
And here's one key that kind of flummoxes me that I'll kind of harp on a bit later. But
Yeah, me too. There was a brick wrapped in burlap as a little pillow. Yeah. Which to me kind of
confuses a lot of the ideas they had of what might have happened to this guy.
It really does. And it's weird that the brick was there and wrapped in burlap. I don't know
if it was the guy who writes Passing Strangest, which huge shout out. This is actually kind
of a somewhat well known mystery. The body in the cylinder is what it's called. But Passing
Strangestness did far and away the best job of kind of getting this point across. And that guy
describes it as a pillow. So I don't know if that's, if it was just hammer, if that's generally
what it's like. But it is very weird that it was there and in that position.
Do we have his name?
From what I can tell, the guy who wrote that and probably the guy who has the
blog Passing Strangest, which seems to be defunct, which is a shame because it's pretty
interesting, is named Paul Dry. At the very least, that's the name of the person who's accepting
compliments on the comments under the blog. But you want to hear something truly bizarre, Chuck?
Sure. There is a little tag called Trackbacks. One of them is Indonesia, blowing up boats in CGI
Pompeii. Another is a fishing shop. The third one is SYSK Internet Roundup.
Really? Isn't that cool?
Does that mean we covered this before?
No, I think this guy is just a fan. I don't think the Trackbacks mean anything. I think he's saying
like, go check this out. Maybe, I hope. Let's find out. Well, that's small world.
So, all right. They've got this body in there and there's a lot of other stuff in there. We'll
kind of just list out what else was in this cylinder with the skeleton. They discovered a
London Northwestern Railway notice that had a tag about arrival of some goods that was dated
June 27, 1885. I think there was a postcard from Birmingham dated July 3, 1885. A couple of diaries
which they couldn't read. It was illegible. I would guess just sort of damaged to time would
be my guess. And then they found some papers and this proved to be, I guess, the biggest key.
They found some papers under the body, one of which was a receipt and account sheets for a
company, T.C. Williams & Company. And then some other kind of stuff that didn't prove to be useful,
right? Right. One of the things that got me, though, is that it was found in a bunch of
grave wax, like a pool or puddle of grave wax from the body decomposing onto the papers.
Is that what that's called? Grave wax? Yeah, grave wax. I think we ran into it first in our
Urban Explorers episode because people find it in catacombs. But what's astounding is that these
coroners from the mid-century were able to kind of get the papers back intact so that they could
read them again. That's astounding to me. Pretty cool. They also did find that a skull was damaged,
but I think they thought that was kind of due to the bulldozing and trying to get the body out of
there. That's right. Or the cylinder, rather. Yeah, so there didn't seem to be any evidence of
violence. There was just a dead body, so they have no idea what happened to this guy. At first,
I guess the coroner thought, this is like maybe a 10-year-old cadaver that we're looking at.
Everybody else said, what about every other piece of evidence that you've discovered along with this
guy? And he's like, well, technically, somebody could have dressed up like a Victorian person and
gotten a bunch of old papers and keys and stuff in a ring and died within the last 10 years.
And I think everyone kind of said, that's Bosch. The coroner wasn't ready to give that up yet.
They actually investigated a theory that it could have been a man named T.C. Williams' son,
whose name was also T.C. Williams. And maybe it was him, and he just happened to have some
old papers with him. And they said, I think we already said Bosch to that.
Yeah, because I don't think we mentioned, there was a paint manufacturing plant in that area
that was owned by Thomas Creegan Williams that fit the time period. So they're like,
it can't be that guy. Like you said, maybe it's his son. But they ended up finding him,
and that went in that right? They found the son. Or his body. Yeah, the son had been buried back in
1909 in Leeds. So he was accounted for. But what was strange, Chuck, is that the older man,
his father, had not been accounted for. The man who owned this manufacturing plant in the 1870s
and 1880s in this area of Liverpool had suddenly just vanished right around 1885.
Right. They did end up kind of figuring out that the tube in the cylinder itself was part of a
ventilation shaft, which to me sort of only confused things a little bit. It was put forth,
and I don't know if this was Paul who kind of put this forth. No, it was Ringo. Or
general evidence that perhaps this man was despondent and suicidal over the loss of the
factory and crawled into the shaft for final privacy. That seems a little, a bit of a stretch
to me. Yeah, it also seems like a stretch that a ventilation shaft should be closed off on one
side. What kind of ventilation shaft is that? Yeah, I guess, but don't they all end at some point?
They're supposed to end into the open air. I guess so. You know, I think that's just really
weird, like a one-ended ventilation shaft. I'm sure there's some kind out there, but it just
escapes me. And then the pillow also seems a little weird, that brick burlap pillow.
Yeah, that's the weirdest part to me is that that is clearly some sort of a purposeful thing
that someone has done. Right. For comfort. Yeah, but also it's like, do you hate yourself too?
Like a brick wrapped in burlap is not a comfy pillow. You could use almost anything else on
the planet and wrap it in burlap and it will be more comfortable than brick. Yeah, and they had
pillows back then. Right, exactly. There was another theory put forth that it wasn't Williams,
it was someone else that was maybe murdered in retaliation for that factory closing and maybe
they stuffed them in there. And Williams maybe just like disappeared after that, changed his name
and skipped down. Who knows? Yeah, so I think they finally closed the case in 1947, 45 actually,
right up right off the bat. They closed the case and said, we're never going to solve this.
Or we've totally solved it. We just can't say with 100%, but they basically said,
we don't know who it is. We don't know how he died, but you can probably surmise yourself.
And the prevailing theory is that it was TC Williams upon the ruination of his paint business,
possibly took his own life. The fact that he wrapped a pillow or a brick and burlap and took
it in the ventilation shaft with him with all this other stuff would suggest he didn't
accidentally go in there and get stuck. He probably died by suicide. Or it was somebody else made
to seem like TC Williams. But the astounding fact is that this happened in 1885. He was in that
ventilation shaft all the way up and through the bombing of Liverpool during World War II
and used to be rolled around the playground by children until they finally figured out he was
in there. Yeah, I'm sure there was more than one adult walking around that remembers playing on that
bed too. I know. And then a very special shout out to Josh and Chuck from the past, because it
turns out Chuck, we did talk about this in an internet roundup, which explains the track back.
So this is probably the last time we'll ever talk about the body of a cylinder.
Wow. No memory of that. I think this is the best version. I don't either. And plus no one saw
internet roundup anyway. So I think we're all good. I enjoyed that show. But big thanks and hats off
to Passing Strangeness for making such a great blog post. And if you haven't been on that blog yet,
go. It's very good. And since I said that, that means short stuff is out.
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