"...we should pass over all biographies of 'the good and the great,' while we search carefully the slight records of wretches who died in prison, in Bedlam, or upon the gallows."
~Edgar Allan Poe

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



I've shared stories about ghosts.  I've shared stories about witches.  It's not often that you see the two combined.   The "Glasgow Daily Record," September 10, 1928:

The "ghost" of an old woman, reputed to be a witch, who died two years ago, is said to have been seen by many people in the Cambridgeshire village of Horseheath, and, in consequence, women and children are afraid to leave their homes after dark. 

While she lived in Horseheath, " Mother Redcap," as the "witch" was known, had a sinister reputation, and the ghost seems determined to live up to this record. The apparition is said to have shaken its fist in the faces of villagers whom it has met at night, and generally to have behaved in a very menacing manner.

Remarkable tales are told in the village about the old woman. 

"She was employed at a farm," a villager stated. "One day a black man called, produced a book, and asked her to sign her name in it." 

The woman signed the book, and then the mysterious stranger told her that she would be the mistress of five imps who would carry out her orders.

Shortly afterwards the woman was seen out accompanied by a rat, a cat, a toad, a ferret. and a mouse. When she died, her "imps" were killed, it is said, and buried with her in her coffin.

I couldn't find much more about "Mother Redcap," but apparently Horseheath was a village with a strong tradition of witchcraft that lasted well into the 20th century.  It may still exist, for all I know.

Monday, March 23, 2026

The Haunted Cottage on the Hill




In 1956, author Miriam Allen deFord (1888-1975) described the eerie phenomena she and her husband experienced after they moved into a seemingly innocuous little home, only to realize they were really renting a hefty dose of The Weird:

When the owner showed me the little cottage on a hill in Mill Valley, California, nearly forty years ago, she made a strange remark. 

We were on the sun porch, which had big glass windows around three sides. “If these windows ever break,” she said, “you will have to pay to have them replaced.” 

I assured her that it was very unlikely we would ever open them. But a few weeks later I understood what she meant. The windows had heavy hasps, almost beyond my strength to move. On the windiest days they stood firm. But often, on calm, clear days, one of them would suddenly fly open and bang against the trees outside. 

Finally, my husband, Maynard Shipley, tried an experiment. He went out on the sun porch and spoke aloud. 

“If this is a demonstration of some sort of extrasensory power,” he said, “please find another way to demonstrate. We can’t afford to have these big windows replaced if you break them.” 

They never opened again. 

But that was not the first “manifestation” to occur in the little house, furnished with the owner’s own belongings. 

One Saturday afternoon I brought home a bag of fruit. My husband picked out a pear, then observed that it was too pretty to eat, polished it, and laid it on the bare center table in the living room. 

We were both sitting near the table, reading, he facing it and I with my back turned to it, when I heard a strange bumping sound. Subconsciously I counted; there were twelve bumps in all, in rhythmic pairs. I thought he was kicking a table leg, and asked him to stop. He did not answer, and I turned around to see his eyes fixed on the pear. I was just in time to see its last two vibrations; it was jumping up and down, rising about two inches each time. 

Perhaps this is the place to explain that neither my husband nor I believed (nor do I now; he died in 1934) in occult phenomena. He was a writer and lecturer on scientific subjects, I was and am a freelance writer and a labor journalist. We were both agnostics, with no faith in survival of the personality after death. But we both had open minds and we could not deny the evidence of our senses--though the experiences we underwent made neither of us a Spiritualist convert. 

In fact, my husband’s first thought was that the pear was abnormal--perhaps that some parasite was in it. He cut it open, and it was perfectly sound. As he lifted it from the table there was a tinkle like that of a silver bell, and a tiny whiff of white smoke arose from below the table and was dissipated in the air. 

That was the first peculiar phenomenon we witnessed in the cottage. Here are some of the others; I am not including any that were not seen by at least two persons. 

There was a whirring, metallic sound sometimes that we tried in vain to locate. Finally we went into the bedroom, the doors and windows of which were closed, so that there was no breeze. Hanging on a nail on one of the doors was a metal coathanger, which was vibrating like mad. 

In the bathroom was an old-fashioned bureau with drawers which had brass pulls, so stiff that they stayed in any position in which they were placed. Twice, when my husband entered the room, all the brass pulls began to dance up and down. 

In the kitchen was a wooden gadget fastened to the wall, on whose arms we hung various utensils--basting spoons, can openers, spatulas, things of that sort. Frequently when Maynard approached them, all of these started to vibrate. 

A door led from the kitchen to the bedroom. It was always closed at night. Every night, precisely at eleven, there would be a sound like that of a wet mop striking the kitchen side of this door. When it was opened, nothing was there. 

We brought home a trailing piece of wild blackberry vine and put it in a hanging vase on the living room wall. It started to swing back and forth like a pendulum and kept it up for forty-eight hours. Maynard tried to account for this on scientific grounds, and in fact had an article published in The Scientific American in which he discussed the movement as a possible effect of radiant energy on a living plant, since it happened to be halfway between a window into which the sun poured, and a wall light which was on at night. But later, when we tried the experiment with many other plants, the vase did not swing at all. We heard constant raps, day and night, and nearly every evening small bluish-green lights, like faint electric bulbs, used to move horizontally across the room, about four feet from the floor, and then vanish; this happened in both the living room and the bedroom. 

In the living room was an old-fashioned Franklin stove--all the furniture was of turn-of-the-century vintage--which burned wood. In its lid was fixed a common iron stove-lifter. One night, in full electric glare, we saw this lifter raise itself about three inches from the lid and sail horizontally across the room, dropping with a thud on the floor at the other end of the living room. Another time we saw a large china bowl on the top shelf of an open china closet in the kitchen lifted as if somebody had hold of it, and deposited gently on the floor beneath; it was not even cracked. 

But the prize exhibit was the folding bed. For those who have never seen such an object, it is a bygone piece of furniture which when closed is just like a big closet door against the wall. This one was in the living room, and we never thought of using it until I was ill with the flu, and my husband tried to sleep in it. (It opened out into a regular double bed.) I say “tried,” because every time he got into it he had the distinct impression that he was not alone--that somebody else he couldn’t see was in the bed, somebody who didn’t want him in it. He stuck it out for three nights, and then he said, “Well, if you want the bed you can have it,” and got out and spent the rest of the night in a chair. 

After I was well we decided to try an experiment with a weekend guest. Our visitor told everybody that she was “a natural medium” and a devout believer in Spiritualism. So without mentioning anything about the bed we put Genevieve in it. About two o’clock in the morning there was a knock on the bedroom door. Genevieve said she couldn’t sleep in that bed because somebody else was in it! We fixed her up on the sun porch, but we never told her why we had given her the folding bed. 

We found our Mill Valley “ghosts” extremely interesting, and we hated to leave them when the owner decided to sell the house and we had to move. Later the house was destroyed in a fire which burned all that part of the town. 

We never had anything again approaching the crowding phenomena of our “haunted house,” but perhaps the “ghosts” did follow us for a while in San Francisco and later in Sausalito, where we lived until my husband’s death. 

One day I received a letter telling me of the death of a very dear old friend. That evening Maynard and I were washing and drying dishes together in the kitchen of another rented cottage. We were facing the window and it was very dark outside. I was talking to Maynard about my friend, whom he had never known, when suddenly there was a crashing blow at the window--enough, one would think, to have broken it. “Cats,” Maynard said, and went outside to look. No cats, no anything. He came in again and we started to talk it over. It came again, just the same as before. This time we didn’t even look. 

Almost the same thing happened later in another house. This time we were in the dining room. I was seated with my back to the front window, which looked on the porch; my husband sat opposite me, facing it. Again we were talking about somebody recently dead. And again there was a smashing blow at the window. This time Maynard caught a momentary glimpse of something round and white that had struck the blow. But when we both dashed out on the porch, seconds afterward, there was nothing whatsoever there. 

In the apartment in which we first lived in Sausalito, there was a big bare kitchen with wooden walls. On a nail on one of the walls hung several big paper shopping bags. We had a close friend whose husband had one day taken a train for a short business journey and had never been seen again; no trace was ever found of him, and nobody knows to this day whether he is alive or dead, though it is probable that he is dead. 

One morning at breakfast we were talking about our friend’s dilemma; after searching and waiting for several years, she had decided to get a divorce to remedy her anomalous position. 

“My own belief is that Charlie is dead,” my husband said. 

At which moment, suddenly, with no breeze anywhere, all the paper shopping bags on that nail raised themselves slowly to a horizontal position and then as slowly fell back again. 

If either of us could be considered a “physical medium”--whatever that really is--it was not I, but my husband, in whose presence metallic objects shook and danced. After he died, I would have given anything, including my life, for some evidence that something of him still lived and could communicate with me--as we had often promised each other to try to do, if it were possible--but it never came. There was just one slight and unexplained happening. 

About a week after his death, while I was still living alone in our Sausalito home, preparing to leave it, one of our friends came to visit me. We were sitting before the fireplace, and I was saying to her what I have just said above. There was a silence. And then we both distinctly heard a strange sound. It was like a large, soft, heavy object falling to the ground from a short height--the nearest analogy I could think of was a bag of laundry. 

We searched the house systematically, from cellar to attic. Nothing was disturbed, nor was there anything out of position that in the least resembled what we both had heard. 

Nothing of the sort ever happened to me again. It was not enough evidence. 

Only twice in my life, before I met Maynard, have I had inexplicable experiences. Once, in 1917 in Hollywood, I saw a “phantom of the living”--so distinct that I took it for granted it was the man himself, and spoke to him--when he vanished. And later that same year, in Spokane, a friend whom I was visiting and I both heard heavy footsteps climbing the cellar stairs to the locked kitchen door, and then cross the floor. We not only searched the house but we called a policeman, who searched again for us with a bored air that we soon understood when a week later, at precisely the same hour, the whole thing happened over again--and several times more. This too was a rented house, and apparently the police had often been called to find the phantom burglar. 

I never heard any story to account for this. In our Mill Valley house I made inquiries, and discovered that the owner had lived in the cottage with her old father until he died, and that he slept in the folding bed; that was all. I might add that after we left, she was unable to sell the  house after all, and rented it again. I was told by neighbors that it was rented three or four times before the fire, but that nobody ever stayed more than a month or two. 

As for my husband, he had one other strange experience during our years in Sausalito, though it did not occur there. I tell it to complete the record, though he had only a quasi-witness. 

In the course of a lecture tour in northern California, he had a speaking engagement in the town of Woodland. He could not get a hotel room, and had to take a room for the night in an apartment over a grocery store. All night he was kept awake by constant sawing and hammering downstairs; apparently the grocery store was being repaired or remodeled, and the workmen for some reason were doing the job at night. He was very much annoyed when he paid the landlady in the morning, and was about to make some caustic comment when she said, with a queer mixture of bravado and timidity, “Were you able to get any sleep in that room?” 

Puzzled, he glanced in at the store when he got outside. It was precisely as he had seen it the night before when he went there after his lecture. There was no sign that any carpentry had been done on it. 

Just how and why we should have had that intensive period of unexplained phenomena for the year and a half in Mill Valley, gradually tapering off for three or four years more, and then never recurring, neither of us ever knew. The last thing I can remember of this nature that we experienced was also in our last Sausalito house. One moonlit night I happened to glance from a front window, and saw on the steps leading to the front porch a curious thing--a sort of cone of light, about two feet tall and about a foot at the base, milky and solid-looking in texture. We both went out and stood directly above it; there it sat, looking like crystallized soapsuds, but with the line of the steps visible through it. It glowed faintly as if with its own light; no moonlight struck anywhere near it. 

Maynard was all for stooping down and touching it, but I held him back; I had a foolish nervous feeling that it might give him an electric shock, or be in some other way unpleasant to touch. Just then an automobile passed the house, down our hilly street, and instantly the cone vanished. If it had been some trick of light which the auto’s headlights had reversed,it should have reappeared when the car had passed. It did not return, and we never saw anything like it again. It was some time later that it occurred to us that the thing, whatever it was, resembled pictures we had seen of ectoplasm. 

If my husband was one of those people somehow in tune with so-called parapsychic phenomena, it seems peculiar that he had not had similar experiences in the past, instead of just during this limited period. It may have been that for some reason he was in a particularly receptive condition in those years; or it may have been that I, though not myself a “medium,” in some way supplemented his receptivity. The whole question is one which was beyond our powers of explanation. “There can be no such thing as the supernatural,” he used to say. “Everything that occurs is a part of nature. All we can say is that these things occurred, that they were not subjective, and that therefore they will be susceptible to scientific explanation some day, even though they are not now.” 

In an attempt to secure some informed outside judgment of the phenomena, we wrote an account of them and sent it to Dr. Walter Franklin Prince, of the Boston Society for Psychic Research. He was extremely interested (though no better able than we to explain our experiences), and intended to publish the account in a forthcoming volume in his series of Human Experiences, based on an extensive questionnaire sent out by the Society; but he died before another volume could be compiled. 

After Maynard’s death I again wrote a statement of what had happened in the Mill Valley house and sent it to Harry Price, the well-known English psychic researcher. He too was both interested and baffled. 

About all one can say at the present stage of our comprehension is that the house was “haunted”--whatever that word really means--and that we, and especially my husband, were susceptible media through whom the haunting became objectified. Any more satisfactory elucidation will have to come--for me, at least--as a result of further objective investigation on a purely scientific basis. I offer this detailed description, minus dubious or very minor phenomena and those witnessed by only one person, as a document for such research.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Weekend Link Dump

 



Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

While you read, feel free to visit our open bar.




Watch out for those hypnotic serpents!

The murder of the Coy family.

A brief history of soap.

Cats may wind up curing cancer, which wouldn't surprise me a bit.

When you're a spiritualist, you don't care if your fiance is dead.

The scientific debate over free will.

The pyramids of Mars.

A surprisingly modern ancient message.

A nursery rhyme's scandalous history.

How "ye" turned into "you."

The 2,000 year old bus fare.

The theory that UFOs are time-travelers.

A Quaker spy in the American Revolution.

The mystery of insect migration.

The trial of dueling French prisoners.

The trout that incited a mutiny.

Unraveling the mystery of a 2011 tsunami.

The strange case of the Nebra sky disc.

An ancient society that lived underground.

Burying the dead in 1896 Belgium.

You might want to know that a hen has adopted a Public Works department.

A look at the "Tibetan Book of the Dead."

What fashionable Londoners were wearing 200 years ago.

The real "Count of Monte Cristo."

"The Most Wonderful Horse in the World."

The 20 second festival.

The recluse who photographed mid-20th century New York.

A cursed creek in Pennsylvania.

The unsolved murder of Permon Gilbert.

That's all for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at an author's encounter with a haunted cottage.  In the meantime, here's some James Taylor.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



Mysterious showers of stones are a tiresomely common Fortean phenomenon, but inexplicable egg falls are unusual enough to pique my interest.  The “Reading [England] Post,” December 11, 1974:

Flying eggs are bombarding a school in Wokingham in what must be the strangest unsolved mystery of the year. For over the past two weeks, white chickens' eggs have been 'shelling' the Keep Hatch primary school in Ashridge Road, and no-one knows where they come from, though one theory is that crows are stealing the eggs from farms and jettisoning them in flight. The ordinary standard eggs have smashed on cars parked in the road, on houses, splattered over fencing and come near to scrambling on peoples' heads. It's not the first time that Keep Hatch school has been supplied with "free' eggs. Last year, the same thing happened--and some mums are blaming aircraft for the "bombing." Five eggs landed undamaged on grass one day this week, and mothers taking their children to school in the morning have seen the eggs dropping vertically from the sky.

Now the school caretaker, Mr. Derek Dare, is investigating and keeping an egg watch until he comes up with some answers. 

"People may think we are imagining things, but we know what is happening and no-one can explain it," said Mr. Dare. 

Yesterday, at least ten mothers told of their egg sightings over the past two weeks. Mother of two, Mrs. Jean Simpson, of Whaley Road, said: "I was standing near some grass, talking to another mum, when I heard a terrific thud. "It made me jump, it was so loud.  I looked round and saw this egg on the grass, unbroken. I have seen eggs splattered on the road, and I have seen them coming down. I know it sounds ridiculous, but it is absolutely true." 

And Mrs Ann Norman, of Budges Road, said: "The eggs must drop from a great height, because of the noise they make when they land. I reckon they are dropping from aircraft because when I saw one fall, an aeroplane was flying overhead." 

Eleven-year-old Trevor Agar, of Barrett Crescent, and his friend, David Thomas, 10, of Pigott Road, heard several thuds on their way to school one morning.

"We jumped over a fence and found five eggs scattered on the grass. They were dropping from the sky. It was quite frightening, really," said Trevor. 

Despite the egg jokes, caretaker Mr. Dare is taking the bombardment seriously. "It's very funny, but I am worried that an egg might hit one of the small children on the head.  It could be dangerous if they are dropping from high up in the sky. They must come down a long way because they are freezing cold when you pick them up off the ground," he said. 

Keep Hatch headmistress, Mrs. Eileen Thomson, said: "It's a mystery, but I can't believe that aircraft are jettisoning eggs. We are all baffled." 

A spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority at Heston, Middlesex, said: "I think someone is imagining things." He explained that modern aircraft were "sealed units and that it was extremely unlikely that eggs could be dropped from a high-flying plane. Added the spokesman: "It's the first time we have ever had such a weird complaint.  People moan about bits dropping off aircraft or fuel being jettisoned, but never have aircraft been blamed for dropping eggs. The days of miracles have come." 

Two other theories are that young children could be raiding mum's fridge, or that crows are stealing eggs from nearby chicken farms and dropping them over the school. A spokesman for Berkshire County Council said if there were serious complaints, the matter would be investigated.

Two days later, the same newspaper carried an unsatisfactory follow-up:

Another Berkshire resident has under shellfire . . . from mystery eggs. 

Earley hairdresser Peter Jones is the second person this week to report eggs falling from the sky.

Many readers must have felt that story on Wednesday--that flying eggs were bombarding Keep Hatch School, Ashridge Road, Wokingham--was merely a three-minute wonder. 

But we weren't joking. Yesterday, Mr. Jones, 31, from Launcestone Close, Earley, came up with another example.

“The last one,” he said, “was at the weekend, when an egg came from the right, flew across the garden, and landed two doors away.  Before that we had a lot of them.  It started about three weeks ago, and I didn’t take much notice.  Then one night three or four of them landed in the garden and smashed.  In all, we must have had a dozen.  They’ve all been raw, and one didn’t break because it landed on the grass.  I really don’t know where they came from.”

All his theories so far have fallen down.  Ducks’ eggs, maybe, since he lives close to a lake.  Problem--no ducks overhead.  And, anyway, says Mr. Jones, “their aim’s too good.  They couldn’t be dead-eye ducks all the time.”

Other neighbours, say Mr. Jones, have also reported eggs in the garden.  In all cases, they’ve been white, hen-type eggs.

Mr. Jones is now wondering if he can put the eggs to good use.  “I don’t use egg shampoo at the salon,"  he says, “but I thought I might put some foam rubber on the lawn and try to catch them intact.  And if pigs could fly, we might get a few rashers, too…”

I couldn’t discover if the mystery was ever solved.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Help Wanted: The Macabre Death of Samuel Resnick







There are certain people who, for one reason or another, have a way of attracting people who are eager to murder them.  What makes the following case stand out is that exactly the opposite appears to have happened: A man was desperate to find someone willing to kill him, and he had a damned hard time achieving that goal.

Samuel Resnick was a jeweler in Albany, New York, for nearly thirty years until a heart condition forced his retirement in 1959, after which he and his wife Lillian retired to Phoenix, Arizona.  However, he still occasionally dealt in gemstones.  Life went quietly enough until the evening of March 1, 1962, when the 61-year-old Samuel told Lillian he was going for a walk.  That in itself was hardly unusual--evening strolls were a frequent part of his daily routine.  What was unusual is that he failed to return home.

Lillian and their 35-year-old son Martin immediately reported his disappearance to the police.  However, the mystery of Samuel’s whereabouts was not solved until March 4, when a horseback rider found his body on a little-used desert trail 10 miles outside of the city.  He had been beaten and then strangled with a rope.

The coroner estimated that Samuel died about four hours after leaving his home.  To most observers, the motive for his murder seemed obvious--his expensive diamond ring, a watch, his wallet, and a gemstone-studded Masonic ring were all missing from his body.  Neighbors told police that on the night Samuel disappeared, they had seen him talking to a couple of young men.  

The police, however, had reason to believe that something far more complicated--not to mention bizarre--than a mere robbery had happened.  A few months earlier, a man came to them with a startling story:  He had answered a “help wanted” ad that Samuel had placed in a local newspaper.  The man was appalled to learn that the job Resnick wanted him to do was to murder him.

Unfortunately, at the time the police shrugged off the man’s claims, but upon realizing that the jeweler had evidently found someone more cooperative, they began searching the advertisements in back copies of newspapers for possible suspects.  A 19-year-old named Clemmie Jackson caught their eye.  Clemmie was not around when police went to his home, but a search of the car belonging to his uncle turned up a length of rope identical to the one that had been used to strangle Samuel.  They also found a cluster of paper strips like ones found near Samuel’s body.  Clemmie’s brother, R.E. Jackson, told police the strips came from the paper shredding company where he worked.  R.E. claimed he knew nothing about the Resnick murder, and had no idea where his brother was.

On March 17, Clemmie was arrested in Crockett, Texas.  He readily--almost eagerly--told police his version of how Samuel Resnick came to die.  And what a story it was.  Clemmie had placed an advertisement in the papers looking for work.  On February 25, Samuel responded to the ad, telling Clemmie that if he was willing to kill him, the young man could have all the jewelry he was wearing, as well as any cash in his pockets.

I would like to think that if a stranger asked me to murder them, my response would be a polite “No, thank you,” and a quick rush to the nearest exit, but Clemmie was apparently a more accommodating and open-minded sort.  He gathered together a band of accomplices--his brother R.E., and three friends, Jesse Tillis, John Henry Lewis Jones, and Ernest Spurlock--and settled with Samuel that the big day would be March 1.  However, Clemmie said that at the last moment he had “chickened out” and allowed his confederates to do the deed without him.

When these men were arrested, they all confirmed Clemmie’s story, adding that they had agreed to the murder “because Mr. Sam had cancer and had only six months to live and wanted to leave his family some money.”  They went on to say that after meeting “Mr. Sam” at the prearranged spot in the desert, he coached them on how to strangle him, adding, “Do a good job.”  Two of them stood on each side of the jeweler and pulled the rope, but it quickly broke.

Samuel was beginning to get exasperated.  He told them, “Here, let me show you how.”  He doubled the rope for them and got on his knees.  The young men began feeling qualms about the whole enterprise, and tried to talk him out of proceeding, but Samuel was insistent.  “And this time, he helped, too.”  Once Samuel was dead, the confederates stripped his body of his jewelry and money, and then beat the corpse and turned his pockets inside out to make it look like a simple robbery.  

At first, police found their story unbelievable, and one can’t really blame them for that.  But then, yet another Phoenix man came forward, saying that Samuel had tried enlisting him as a hit man.  “I think those boys you’ve arrested are telling the truth,” he added.  Three other men, including Samuel’s barber, also told police that the late jeweler had tried talking them into murdering him.

Samuel’s widow and son, along with his physician and the doctor who had autopsied him, all denied that Samuel had cancer.  However, the medical examiner conceded that the jeweler was in very poor health, suffering from a grossly enlarged heart, an enlarged spleen, and a congested liver.  It seemed possible that Samuel might have preferred a quick end to his physical woes.  It was surmised that his reason for choosing murder over suicide was to enable his wife to get the “double indemnity” benefits from his $50,000 life insurance policy with Lloyd’s of London.

Whether Samuel really wanted to die or not, the law still forbade anyone from obliging him.  The five young men were all put on trial for first-degree murder.  In brief, the defense argued that the ultimate blame for Samuel’s death rested on the victim, while prosecutors insisted that--whatever the jeweler may have requested--the defendants were fully responsible.  

In the end, the jury decided that murder was murder, whether the victim had solicited it or not.  Clemmie, the one defendant who had not directly participated in the killing, was acquitted, while the other four were convicted, with the recommendation that they be sentenced to life imprisonment.

In a final irony, Lloyd’s found the circumstances of Samuel’s death to be just weird enough to justify them refusing to pay on his policy.  You might say that his passing was a tragically wasted effort on all sides.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Weekend Link Dump

 


Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

Happy Friday the 13th!



The languages of ancient humans.

Dodo birds actually tasted pretty good.  Unfortunately for them.

An ancient coin that tells of a massive slave rebellion.

The long war against the Barbary pirates.

Traces of a mysterious ancient religion.

An extinct marsupial turns up alive and well.

The miniatures that served as Tudor love tokens.

In which we learn that "adult" has nothing to do with "adultery."

Ancient humans loved elongated skulls.

Yet another artifact that rewrites human history.

The mystery of the man in the reservoir.

How people woke up before alarm clocks came along.

A legendary cow.

A murder mystery in Medford.

If you live in Florida, keep your eyes peeled for giant scorpions.

The fire that destroyed the SS City of Montreal.

Syphilis has been around for a very long time.

Sir John Vanbrugh and his castle.

In which undertakers Tell All.

Da Vinci and the hidden crotch detail.

The Kentucky county that celebrates the time it got showered with meat.

How France came to legalize posthumous marriages.

The possibility that Amelia Earhart wound up as crab food.

That's all for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at a death that was part suicide, part murder.  In the meantime, here's some Vivaldi.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



This tale of…Fortean food throwing? appeared in “The Guardian,” November 11, 1978:

Police are seeking a phantom food hurler who has issued a fusillade of black puddings, eggs, bacon and other groceries at four old people's bungalows at Castleton, Derbyshire. 

The night attacks began a year ago when everything from eggs to legs of mutton hit the bungalow walls and doors and landed in the gardens. The local constable gave up free time to try to catch the thrower, and the events temporarily stopped.

Councillor Charlie Lewes, who has raised the matter with the High Peak Council, said: "It's annoying. The occupants of these four bungalows wake up to find the face of their homes strewn with food. The culprits are either raiding a deep freeze or have got a supply to be able to do it." 

Mrs. Ethel Bramley, whose home has been battered by flying food, said: “It's unreal, weird. If people want to give us food why not wrap it in a parcel and leave it on the doorstep?"

Why not, indeed?  I wasn’t able to find if the mystery of these unorthodox Door Dash deliveries was ever solved.