Haunted North Cornwall
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About this ebook
Michael Williams
Michael Williams (PhD, University of Pennsylvania) is Emeritus Senior Professor of Old Testament Studies at Calvin Theological Seminary, a member of the NIV Committee on Bible Translation and the Chairman of the NIrV Committee. He is the author of Deception in Genesis, The Prophet and His Message, Basics of Ancient Ugaritic, The Biblical Hebrew Companion for Bible Software Users, How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens, Hidden Prophets of the Bible and is editor and contributor of Mishneh Todah. His passion is to provide curious believers with knowledge of the Old Testament and its culture so that they may grow in their comprehension and appreciation of redemptive history and be adequately prepared to promote and defend the faith through word and action. Michael resides in Florida with his wife, Dawn.
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Haunted North Cornwall - Michael Williams
CONTENTS
Title
Foreword by Peter Underwood FRSA
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Introduction
one Inventor at The Castle, Bude
two Bossiney
three Tintagel
four Boscastle
five Launceston and St Clether
six Warleggan
seven Airfield Mysteries
eight Haunted Jamaica Inn
nine Famous Ghosts of North Cornwall
ten More Ghostly Evidence
eleven Some Final Reflections
Select Bibliography
Copyright
FOREWORD
THERE can be no better guide to this ghostly realm than the deeply knowledgeable and widely experienced Michael Williams. A man of complete integrity, deep understanding and rare wisdom, it is always good to see him.
I love Cornwall and have been visiting the area for more years than I care to remember. Certainly we took the children there when they were young and impressionable and today, as old-age pensioners, they still remember those magic days of long ago. For a good many years now I have been visiting this jewel of the West Country twice a year and my visits are enriched, enhanced and brightened by Michael and his delightful wife Sonia.
On one visit we explored The Castle at Bude with its singular atmosphere and it is good that this interesting treasure of Cornwall is researched and investigated in this volume by Michael and his excellent Paranormal Investigation group. The Castle is just one of the many places in Cornwall that Michael and I have visited, and I am never disappointed when he takes me to some deserted airfield or battlefield or ancient place of unusual interest. In this volume not only are we treated to visiting haunted places but we invariably learn something of the history of the place and we appreciate some of the mystery and fascination of the unknown, for Michael is a much respected Cornish bard, an author and writer of considerable experience and an accepted authority on Cornwall.
This is a valuable volume that will accompany me on future visits to my favourite county. Michael and I share the same interests, and having talked, officiated, investigated and broadcast together, I hope the future holds new exciting explorations, missions and achievements and causes yet to be conquered. And as history lengthens like a shadow behind us, anyone can enjoy some of the secret wonders of Cornwall with this volume in their hands.
We are indebted to Michael Williams for exploring, explaining and writing entertainingly about the ghosts of North Cornwall, a place where you never know when you may encounter a ghost or ghostly activity, and this book will help you to know the best places to frequent – or to avoid!
Peter Underwood, 2014
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Iam deeply grateful to Peter Underwood for writing his generous foreword. Once more I owe so much to my wife, Sonia, and Elaine Beckton, two invaluable allies on this and many other projects. Elaine and the Paranormal Investigation team have given insights into paranormal exploration, especially mediumship, throughout this volume. I am also very grateful to Zena O’Rourke, editor of The Cornish Guardian , who allows me to write on the paranormal from time to time. Stephen Cleaves, a member of the paranormal group, has contributed a rich harvest of photographs, and David Flower, in his busy life as a press photographer, has found time to take three photographs. Appreciation to Declan Flynn and Lucy Simpkin for their help and encouragement at The History Press, and also to Luke Thompson for reading the proofs. I am touched too by the generosity of the Q Memorial Fund – Q’s Mystery Stories (1937) is here in my St Teath library. And my thanks to all the people who have loaned illustrations. Last but not least, I am indebted to those who have given interviews revealing insider knowledge and, of course, the ghosts themselves.
All photographs and illustrations, unless otherwise indicated, are attributed to and remain copyright of the author.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
MICHAEL Williams is a Cornishman and Cornish bard. He and his wife Sonia founded Bossiney Books and were regional publishers for twenty-five years. They live near St Teath, North Cornwall. Michael has written and broadcast on the paranormal for many years. His recent authorship includes Writers in Cornwall and The Three du Maurier Sisters . He is the president of Paranormal Investigation, a group exploring the edge of the unknown in the South West, and he is currently writing and researching conversations with eminent Cornish personalities.
Michael was founder of the Cornish Crusaders Cricket Club, which he ran for over half a century. He continues to support and encourage young cricketers in Cornwall. He is a patron of the Broomfield Horse Sanctuary near St Just in Penwith, is a member of World Horse Welfare and patron of Animals’ Voice, and campaigns nationally on animal welfare issues.
Author Michael Williams exploring the haunted coastline of Tintagel – Trevena on old maps. He is convinced that the high percentage of phantoms in the area is due to the powerful atmosphere and the fact that so much history has taken place hereabouts. (Photograph courtesy of David Flower)
INTRODUCTION
NORTH Cornwall and the paranormal come together naturally. I have been a ghost hunter for over forty years and have experienced more of the unknown in this area than anywhere else in the South West. It is quite simply one of the most haunted areas in all of Britain, outside London.
To the north is Morwenstow, with its contrasting territory of deep wooded coombe and beautiful but terrifying cliffs. It is the first or last bit of Cornwall before Welcombe. ‘Here,’ reflected the Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman, ‘one is reaching not only the end of Cornwall but it seems the end of the world.’ Morwenstow is also known as Hawker Country, and of all the parsons parading through Cornish history, Robert Stephen Hawker is the most famous.
Hawker was the vicar here for forty-one years. He died in 1875, an earthly end coloured in controversy. Though he is buried in Plymouth, some say he has never left North Cornwall.
He lived in an era before the motor car and travelled by horse or pony, riding or driving a cart. He dearly loved a pony called Carrow and they covered hundreds of miles around this border territory. On one occasion, as the pair of them journeyed from Welcombe back to Morwenstow Rectory, the great man recalled: ‘As I entered the Gulph between the Vallies today, a storm leaped from the Sea, and rushed at me roaring – I recognised a Demon and put Carrow into a gallop and so escaped.’ He never forgot his encounter with the demon and thereafter sang hymns whenever he rode through these valleys – and sang them loudly.
Over the centuries, layer upon layer of mystery has grown up, on and around parts of this coastline and countryside. Many of us think some events can leave ‘an atmosphere’, which the subconscious can play back like a piece of old film. The diversity of the North Cornwall phantoms is remarkable: human footsteps; horses’ hoofbeats; the old butler ascending an original staircase at a different level from today’s; the kitchen corridor haunted by the smell of frying onions; the ghost train which is always on time; the grey van in a narrow lane near Helston, there one moment and gone the next; and the ghostly black dog seen near Tintagel, all make for a curious catalogue, of which these are only some examples.
Why is North Cornwall considered such haunted territory? There are various reasons: one is that ghosts often manifest near granite, and this terrain has more than its share of granite.
I cannot make this journey across North Cornwall without saluting Colin Wilson, one of the greatest paranormal writers in literary history and who happens to have resided in Cornwall. until his death in December 2013. Conversations with him and reading his books – there are about twenty of them in my St Teath library – have shaped a deepening awareness.
In our cottage, I once asked him, ‘Why are so many intrigued by ghosts?’
‘It’s quite a cocktail,’ Colin replied. ‘Mystery and adventure, romance and a kind of other-worldliness all play their part.’ He was fascinated by the fact that some of our North Cornwall villages boast not one ghost but several.
Colin Wilson, distinguished writer on various facets of the paranormal, who lived in Cornwall with his wife Joy, a garden historian. (Photograph courtesy of Joy Wilson)
On another occasion he recalled when he was commissioned to write a book called Afterlife. He was far from sure about the evidence for life after death, but when he had finished the manuscript, he explained that ‘the evidence pointed unmistakably to survival’.
Why is North Cornwall Such a Ghost Land?
Areas rich in history seem to generate manifestations (spirits/ghosts/images of the past) and North Cornwall is full of history: King Brychan of Wales fathered twelve boys and twelve girls, all of whom became saints or martyrs, and they brought their transforming power to the area. It was almost certainly their missionary work which prompted the old saying, ‘There are more Saints in Cornwall than in Heaven’. There was also the Civil War, which bitterly divided families, and the smugglers and the highwaymen who stained dark nights with darker deeds and sometimes blood. There is a creative chemistry found here by painters and writers who have discovered and continue to find inspiration; even in more modern times, characters like Organ Joe, the organ grinder tramping towns and villages, turning the handle of his music machine wherever people gathered and were likely to throw a coin into his hat, have found stimulus here.
Famous residents include Prince Chula of Thailand at Tredethy, J.B. Priestley at Old Borough House in Bossiney (he had interesting theories about the character of