The Magnus Archives - What The Ghost? - Highgate Cemetary
Episode Date: May 27, 2021We hope you enjoy this episodes of What the Ghost? presented by Georgie Barker.Content Warnings:Cemeteries & tombsGhostsHuman remains & desecrationVampiresDiscussion of: death & burial, th...e occult, foodMentions of: war, injurySFX: continued high pitched sounds, bells, shoutingTranscripts:PDF - https://bit.ly/34mO7f4DOC - https://bit.ly/3wzOQpjThank you to all our Patrons for your continued supportIf you'd like to join them, visit www.patreon.com/rustyquill.Written by Sasha SiennaEdited by Annie Fitch & Jeffrey Nils GardnerProduced by Lowri Ann DaviesPerformances"Georgie Barker" - Sasha SiennaSoundeffects this week by dsp9000, JohnsonBrandEditing, TrygveN, HMTSCCSound, InspectorJ & previously credited artists via freesound.orgMusic;- Selected tracks by Kevin MacLeod from https://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/ full list here; https://bit.ly/3foprJK- "Wizard's Duel" by Skinny PigCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop & https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quill.You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hey there, Haunts fans! Welcome to another episode of What the Ghost, the show that brings you all the creepiest, bone-chillingest stories and spooks.
This time, we'll be digging into the strange history of one of the world's most haunted spots, London's Highgate Cemetery.
Not just another gruesome graveyard, Highgate has been at the centre of more than one fearful fright fest since its founding in 1839.
You may think that ghostly apparitions in a graveyard are nothing notable,
but though you may well find your fair share of garden-variety ghosts if you take a trip to Highgate,
the legends surrounding the cemetery speak of something far more sinister than your standard spectre.
Highgate started life as yet another reminder of Victorian mortality.
The traditional graveyards attached to parish churches
had long since become incapable of managing the horde of dead
that was constantly growing in Victorian London.
Highgate was the first of seven modern cemeteries to be built,
large enough to house the incessantly growing number of corpses Highgate was the first of seven modern cemeteries to be built,
large enough to house the incessantly growing number of corpses,
with winding avenues lined with ornate mausoleums for the rich and death-revering. And it was the first British cemetery to be built outside of church grounds.
Rumours of ghost sightings started early, but that's hardly surprising.
The cemetery was big news to the locals, and the Victorians had a fervent obsession with the occult.
A few fireside stories of ephemeral figures half-seen after a couple of beers were to be expected.
For decades, Highgate was simply a large, ornate burial ground for those souls who were either too fashionable or too scandalous for Westminster Abbey.
It wasn't until the 1940s, when the Blitz hit London, that Highgate started to change.
Though it was never bombed itself, the previously sought-after and well-kept graveyard became
all but abandoned and overgrown. In a matter of mere
years, the wild of nature took over, and the weeds got so out of hand they weakened mausoleums,
making the cemetery dangerous grounds to enter. Even now, after decades of restoration and in
the heart of a capital city, the ecosystem retains such a hold on Highgate that visitors
are forbidden from wandering around large areas of it without a guide. Legends say these
precautions are to protect curious tourists from more than just falling stones. Regular
listeners will already know that the tomb walls were often built as much for protection as for reverence. And remember that those tombs that do lock
always do so from the outside.
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With the wildlife firmly in control, Highgate Cemetery lay largely abandoned by human society
for decades. We can't possibly guess what may have happened there in that time.
All we can know is that in 1968, on Halloween night,
something happened that would shock the local community
and change the graveyard's history forever.
A group of teens, apparently obsessed with the occult,
broke into Highgate Cemetery
and turned their fascination with the supernatural into bizarre action.
According to a report in the London Evening News at the time,
they arranged flowers taken from graves in circular patterns
with arrows of blooms pointing to a new grave, which was uncovered.
A coffin was opened and the body inside disturbed.
But their most macabre act was driving an iron stake
in the form of a cross through the lid and into the breast of the corpse.
Ghoulish or what?
Of course, this might have just been the work of some bored underage drinkers who'd managed to get their hands on some absinthe.
But the strange occurrences didn't stop there.
All sorts of people started reporting seeing grey figures walking within
the grounds, and even venturing into the nearby Swains Lane. Many of the people making these
claims were well-respected members of the community. Surely they couldn't all have been
trying drinking drugs for the first time? In fact, there may be a much simpler explanation.
The first person to claim they'd seen one of these figures
was none other than Daniel Tarrant,
an enthusiastic occultist
whose name will certainly be familiar by the end of this episode
and might appear in others.
Unlike most reported ghost sightings,
Daniel chose to make this one by the medium
of a letter printed in the local newspaper.
And what's more, he even put out a call
for other residents of the area
to get in touch with their own sightings.
Anyone who's listened to our episode on the Devil's Dance
knows how contagious ideas about the supernatural can be.
Is it any wonder that so many people reached out to Daniel?
And can we trust anything they say?
What is odd, though,
is how few of the responses Daniel received
actually matched his own.
If all the claimed sightings of ghostly figures were merely copycats of Daniel's account,
wouldn't we expect them to be roughly the same as that first story?
While Daniel claimed to have seen a tall man in a hat striding across the cemetery grounds,
others said they were startled by spectral cyclists appearing from nowhere,
or that they saw eerie caped figures floating on both sides of the high fences around Highgate,
seemingly moving straight through the walls as though they were air.
Almost all of the figures were described as grey,
and some were said to be accompanied
by the distant sound of bells ringing a chillingly mournful melody.
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As the number of reported sightings grew, so too did the scare factor of the alleged encounters.
One man claimed to have been walking down Swames Lane one dark night when he was knocked down by a frightful creature emerging from the cemetery walls,
while another told of
breaking down near the graveyard and seeing through the rain the scowling face of a hideous
apparition with glowing red eyes staring straight back at him. There were even accounts of coffins
exploding underground or shattering the walls of their tombs. Pretty creep-tacular.
or shattering the walls of their tombs.
Pretty creep-tacular.
Or is it?
There's a perfectly rational explanation to most spectre sightings, if you look hard enough,
and the stories surrounding Highgate Cemetery are no different.
Of course, it's no coincidence that these tales all take place at night,
in a poorly lit area near an overgrown miniature wilderness, in
a place where residents are used to bright lights and solid concrete.
Even the exploding coffins can be explained, by the intense buildup of gases created by
bodies decomposing in hermetically sealed mausoleums.
And while it's true that the explosions seemed to have continued long after the Victorian burial practices that made them possible had stopped, surely it's more likely that some
unknown but perfectly logical factor was slowing down the process rather than that a supernatural
force is working on the skeletons of the Victorian dead.
Isn't it? It's hard to trace exactly how it happened, but before long, a theme
started to emerge from the reported ghost sightings in and around the graveyard. One that went back
to the original, ghoulish incident with the possibly intoxicated teens. That's right, within weeks, the local consensus among the
paranormal community was that a vampire had taken up residence in Highgate Cemetery and had possibly
been there since its Victorian heyday, safely locked in stone until some misfortune or neglect
had set it free. Daniel Tarrant was one of the most vocal believers in the Highgate vampire,
and some say it was Tarrant himself who originally started those rumours.
But he was far from the only one convinced.
Rival occultist Shane Sheffield was also fanning the garlic-scented flames
that had people sharpening steaks all across Islington.
Between them, Tarrant and Sheffield had the national press claiming the king of the vampires was living in Highgate Cemetery,
spending each night practising dark magic in some crumbling tomb.
By the end of the 1960s, the Highgate Vampire was such an iconic tale
that the graveyard was used as the location for filming Count Dracula,
starring none other than celebrity spectre Christopher Lee.
Despite the fact that they largely agreed about what horrors were lurking in Highgate,
Tarrant and Sheffield both spent much of their time trying to discredit each other.
Tarrant and Sheffield both spent much of their time trying to discredit each other.
Before long, Tarrant could barely mention hooded ghosts without calling Sheffield a charlatan, and Sheffield spent less time talking about fangs and more time talking about Tarrant's trickeries.
Each of them claimed that they alone could defeat the Highgate vampire,
but rather than actually trying to do so, they made the
dubiously reasonable decision to take their respective magic arsenals to the cemetery
to fight each other instead. Was this just a case of a petty rivalry gone too far?
Or was something more sinister at work? On the night of Friday the 13th, March 1970, Tarrant and Sheffield
agreed to hold a quote-unquote wizard's duel in Highgate Cemetery in South.
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Around sunset on the evening of Friday the 13th,
ITV Broadcast interviewed Tarrant, Sheffield,
and a number of less avant-garde locals who claimed to have seen something supernatural in Highgate Cemetery.
No doubt it was intended as a fluff piece,
a light-hearted curiosity to cut across the heavy politics of the day,
but the effect was deadly serious. A light-hearted curiosity to cut across the heavy politics of the day.
But the effect was deadly serious.
Within a few hours, hundreds of so-called concerned locals had swarmed the graveyard,
intent on finding and killing the vampire.
Or at least, that's how the night started.
What followed was a violent frenzy of wild bloodlust.
Or at least, it would have been bloodlust if their targets could bleed.
But no, these were hunters of the dead.
Few first-hand accounts exist from those who were part of the mob.
But by the time the sun rose, the bodies laid to rest in Highgate Cemetery had been massacred. Corpses had been
dug up by fevered hands and lay in daylight with stakes driven deep into their hearts.
The once sturdy stone walls of tombs had been smashed to pieces, and the bones inside broken
and thrown apart. One local even awoke to find an uninterred corpse at the wheel of his car, apparently placed by the marauders, the keys hanging from the skeletal hand as if the body was set to drive away.
Little seems to have changed after that delirious night.
Several people were prosecuted for desecrating graves, but it seems the living all managed to escape physical harm.
Rumours of ghoulish and ghostly sightings are still whispered around Highgate,
but no visitor to the cemetery has ever looked at a grave with furious rage since.
Except, of course, fervent capitalists who find themselves at the tombstone of Karl Marx.
capitalists who find themselves at the tombstone of Karl Marx. Perhaps it was simply a case of irresponsible news broadcasting resulting in mass panic, but there is another, eerier explanation.
Not long after the mob descended on Highgate Cemetery, it was bought by an obscure group
known only as the Highgate Friends.
For years, the entire site was closed off,
with no public knowledge of what went on behind those ancient trees.
Eventually, the mysterious owners opened a small section of the graveyard to visitors.
But even today, the west side of the cemetery can only be seen as part of a guided tour, keeping to a carefully laid route
and never straying to the wilder parts of the overgrowth. You might even visit there yourself,
but be careful if you do. Some say that the Highgate vampire still haunts the place,
and that if you stray from the path, you may find yourself deeper in the wilds than you bargained for.
Or find that the wilds are deeper in you. This episode is distributed by Rusty Quill
and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution
non-commercial share-alike 4.0 international license.
For more information, visit RustyQuill.com,
tweet us at TheRustyQuill,
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