"...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

Monday, October 17, 2022

James Arthur Flowerdew, the Man From Petra

The "Treasury" at Petra, via Wikipedia



Once there was a boy in Norfolk, England, who boasted the quintessentially English name of “James Arthur Flowerdew.”  His was a perfectly normal early 20th century childhood, until he reached the age of 12, when some odd and unsettling things began happening to him.  He began having unusually vivid dreams where he saw a large desert city.  These visions left him greatly agitated, although he could not understand why.  As his dreams of this mysterious city went on, they became increasingly detailed.  He saw a temple, a large volcano-shaped rock, streets, lanes, and various military and civilian structures.  So clear were Flowerdew’s tours of the city, he became convinced he was actually there.

One day when he was visiting the seashore, Flowerdew idly picked up some pink and orange pebbles.  As he toyed with them, the image of his desert city suddenly came into his mind.  From then on, whenever he would go to the beach and play with the orange and pink pebbles, he was instantly mentally transported to the city.  He realized that the pebbles were similar in color to the stones of the ancient metropolis.  Such visions were so common, he accepted them as a normal part of his life.  As time went on, flashes of his life in the city began to come to him.  Flowerdew believed that he had been a soldier, who was killed with a spear in or near the temple.

Aside from these strange visions--which he appears to have largely kept to himself--Flowerdew’s life went on in a modest, unremarkable way.  One day, the now-elderly retired Army officer casually happened to watch a BBC documentary about the ancient Jordan city of Petra.  As soon as he saw the ruins, he was stunned.  He immediately recognized it as the place that had haunted his dreams for so many years.

Flowerdew was so thrilled to finally be able to identify the city he had come to know so well, he contacted the BBC.  Perhaps surprisingly, he was taken seriously.  The BBC filmed a short segment about him, after which he was questioned by an archaeologist who was an expert on Petra.  The archaeologist came away perplexed by the depth of Flowerdew’s knowledge of the city--knowledge that Flowerdew could not have gotten without serious archaeological research.  And there was nothing to indicate that this relatively uneducated old man was lying when he insisted that he had never even seen a book about Petra.

Word of Flowerdew’s strange story reached the ears of the Jordanian government, who invited him to see Petra in person for the first time.  (Or for the first time in a very long while, depending on your views of such matters.)  Flowerdew appeared to be right at home, easily navigating the city unaided.  He commented in detail on the various landmarks, and even identified sites that had yet to be excavated.  When shown certain items and structures that were puzzling archaeologists, Flowerdew immediately gave plausible explanations for what they were.  When he went into a military barrack, he pointed out the location of the guardroom, and explained how the check-in system for the guards had worked--something that was unknown even to the experts.  He even showed the place where an enemy had murdered him in the first century B.C.

Throughout his visit, Flowerdew displayed such an intimate knowledge of Petra that the archaeologists, unable to catch him in the slightest error, were baffled.  He even politely corrected the experts when he believed they had wrong information.  One archaeologist commented, “He’s filled in details and a lot of it is very consistent with known archaeological and historical facts, and it would require a mind very different from his to be able to sustain a fabric of deception on the scale of his memories--at least those he’s reported to me.  I don’t think he’s a fraud.  I don’t think he has the capacity to be a fraud on this scale.”

Flowerdew died at the age of 95 in 2002, leaving everyone to wonder if this unassuming old man had somehow pulled off an incredibly challenging hoax, or if he had, as he insisted, once been a soldier in ancient Petra.

Friday, October 14, 2022

Weekend Link Dump

 

"The Witches' Cove," Follower of Jan Mandijn

This week's Link Dump is hosted by another of our Halloween Cats!


How the hell did King Tut die?

A cursed cruise ship.

The first time American military pilots encountered UFOs.

Newly-found evidence suggesting that Geoffrey Chaucer may not have been a rapist, after all.

Buffalo Bill in Paris.

Some unlikely military victories.

The 17th century Ladies Charity School House in Highgate.

The saga of Lord Uxbridge's leg.

The funeral of King Edward IV.

Some Mayan sacrifice victims had blue string in their teeth, and people have questions.

An early 14th century abduction and rape.

The speculation that extraterrestrials visited ancient Sumer.

The corpse in the train car.

The last African slave to be brought to America.

The shooting at Greenwood Park Mall.

A visit to Old St. Pancras Churchyard.

A very odd case of "criminal conversation."  You don't see too many of those where the dissection of human bodies pops up in the evidence.

Mystic fictions and lawless fantasies.

The world's tallest natural arch.

Stories from the files of M15.

Art as a Tudor political tool.

The ancient Narmer Palette.

A Yorkshire coven.

So, a guy is buried alive, only to have his grave robbed, and he comes to while being dissected by anatomists.  Bad day.

Analyzing Amelia Earhart's hands.

The Witch of Moorgate.

Arson on Easter Island.

Murder in the Vale of Tempe.

Belle Starr, American outlaw.

Queen Elizabeth II's recipe for drop scones.

The wrecking of HMS Sceptre.

Using eggs to predict the future.

An acrobatic spider.

Why you can't tickle yourself.

The mystery of Royston Cave.

Vintage photos of London at night.

Some Liverpool poisoners.

Some interesting modern headstones.

It turns out that Guy Fawkes is everywhere except the British Museum.

A spiritualist killed himself in order to prove that there is life after death.  Didn't go according to plan.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at an intriguing case of alleged reincarnation.  In the meantime, here's the Baltimore Consort:


Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



I always enjoy a good “anomalous falls from the sky” story, and this is one of the goofier examples I’ve found.  The “Tampa Bay Times,” September 3, 1969:

PUNTA GORDA - It rained golf balls Monday night. 

Well, not really, but it seemed that way to the Punta Gorda Police Department and the Charlotte County Sheriff's Department. 

The night began innocently enough; it was raining and had been raining but that's nothing new. Policemen are a hardy breed and are used to anything, almost, that is. 

But not golf balls, dozens and dozens and dozens of them, were in the gutters, on the street, along the sidewalks and at Punta Gorda Isles. 

Lt. Clarence Walter of the police department tried to convince people that it rained golf balls, not simply five inches, as he began to pick up golf balls.

Patrolman Wade Saurs and John Hause picked up golf balls and then more golf balls. Bill Moore of the security patrol brought in a satchel full and said he was tired of picking them up. 

A check of the country clubs turned up nothing, except more golf balls, but these were supposed to be there. 

So sheriff's department night dispatcher Coleman Naughton found himself staring at a basket full. Punta Gorda Policewoman Bonnie Zimmerman yesterday kept a basket full company. 

The mystery remains.

Monday, October 10, 2022

The Brother's Return; Or, Some Hatreds Never Die




Poltergeist events are irritating, disruptive, even terrifying events.  However, they are not usually dangerous, or even obviously malevolent.  One notable exception to this general paranormal rule was related by one “W.K.B” in the “Occult Review” for July 1908.  It stands out as one of the most sinister polt cases I’ve ever come across.

The site for our little tale was a modest house in Cavnakirk, a “townland” (a small geographical division of land) in the North of Ireland.  The cottage was occupied by a farmer named George Wilson and his sister, whose name was not given in the narrative.  They had a younger brother, but after feuding with his sister over some unrecorded matter, he moved permanently to Canada, ceasing all contact with his siblings.

One June evening, George came home from a long day of working his few acres of land.  He tied his two or three cows in their byre [cowshed] just behind his house.  On his way to the kitchen, he passed by his sister, who was heading to the byre to do the milking.  As George sat eating his supper, he could see his sister as she sat milking.  It was a pleasant, peaceful scene in the summer twilight.  He could hear her singing as the soft hisses of milk filled the pail.  Then, out of the corner of his eye he thought he saw a dark, indistinct figure dart across the yard.  It left his sight before he could determine its size or shape.  A second later, George heard his sister scream.  As he dashed into the yard, he heard her struggling and panting.

When George reached the byre, he was stunned to see his sister slumped against the wall.  Her face was black, her eyes were bulging, and her hands were at her throat, desperately clawing at some invisible force that was choking the life from her.  As George entered the byre, the pressure on her throat suddenly eased, leaving her gasping for breath.  It wasn’t until an hour later that she recovered enough to be able to speak.

She said that as she was milking, she noticed what seemed to be their younger brother moving across the yard.  Before she could react, the figure--now “dim and shadowy”--lunged at her, closing its fingers around her neck.  She could see the shadowy arms, and feel the fingers strangling her, but when she tried grabbing at the figure, her hands felt nothing solid.  When George rushed in, the figure let her go, and glided out the way it had come.  Before the figure left, it turned and gave her a look of pure malevolence.  She was certain it was the face of their younger brother.  The poor woman was, understandably enough, left in a state of terror, but after the night and the following day passed without incident, she had recovered her equilibrium enough to tell herself that what she had experienced was just the product of her imagination.

That evening, George and his sister retired to bed early, hoping for a well-earned restful night.  However, as soon as night fell, they heard a dreadful din coming from the kitchen.  As soon as George rose and lit a candle, the noises ceased, but when he returned to bed, they started up again, not stopping until dawn.

The siblings--now thoroughly convinced something not-of-this-world was going on--shared their problem with neighbors, several of whom offered to spend the night at their house.  As they all sat in the kitchen, all was quiet, so George suggested that they all go to bed.  As soon as they put out the light and closed the door behind them, they heard a terrible crash in the kitchen.  When they investigated, there was no sign of any disturbance.  Once they left the room, there was another violent crash.  Again, the noises kept going until daybreak.

George and his sister were frantic.  Each night, their cottage was filled with a din which made it impossible to get any rest, and nothing they tried seemed able to rid them of this furious and hateful spirit.  Finally, they appealed to one Richard Robinson, a man who was known throughout the region for his complete fearlessness.  He was a believer in the supernatural, but as he was also a deeply religious man, he felt that ghosts and devils and suchlike had no power over him.  When the Wilsons contacted him to do battle with their invisible foe, he was happy to help.  Some time later, Robinson told “W.K.B.” what happened next:

“It was about nine o'clock on a July evening when I started up the hills for Wilson's place. I had taken the precaution of carrying this sword with me”--here he used to display a long blade of Spanish manufacture--"and I was determined should the ghost appear that I would try the temper of the edge on it. When I reached Wilson's, I found the brother and sister there; the girl wanted to leave, but I insisted that she should remain, and about eleven o'clock I proposed that we should lie down. Previous to this I had examined the house inside and out. I had tried the windows, looked under the beds, and now I locked and bolted the door, raked the fire, and followed the Wilsons to the room. Here we sat for some time; but as everything remained quiet, I made the brother and sister lie down on the bed without undressing, and placing a lighted candle on a table I drew up a chair to the bedside and sat down, with my head resting on the bed. Presently I grew sleepy, and turning round I blew out the candle, and I was just dropping asleep when a scream from the girl made me leap to my feet. ‘There he is!' she exclaimed, and at that moment there was a crash as if a heavy weight had been flung across the room. Nothing moved, but a moment later a chair at the foot of the bed was thrown down. I sprang to the place, but there was nothing there, but another scream from the girl made me turn round, and I saw that the bed was heaving as if some person beneath was pressing it upward. Seizing the sword I flung myself on the floor and cut right and left beneath the bed; the heaving and pitching ceased, but a chair at the opposite side of the room was flung down. Then there was silence for a moment and I rose to my feet, and as I did so the chair I had just risen from was thrown against the door, and a moment later the bed began to heave again. Again I cut beneath it and the moving ceased, but the racket with the chairs began again. I moved to the table and lit the candle. Instantly everything was quiet, but a little later the tongs were flung violently across the kitchen. I rushed down, but the place was empty, but another scream from the girl brought me back to the room, and I found her lying trembling with fear, while the cold sweat streamed down her face. In reply to my questions she said that the moment I left the room a shadowy figure leaped on the bed, and made as though it would have gripped her by the throat. Her brother could see nothing, but he felt the pressure on the bed, and at the first gleam of the candle it was gone.

“I placed the candle on the table and sat down again by the bedside. I sat there for nearly an hour, but everything was quiet both in room and kitchen. Again I blew out the light, but the silence was unbroken. I was beginning to think that the ghost or whatever it was had gone, when I felt a sharp blow against my chair, and the next moment I felt the bed rise up under my arm. That there might be no mistake I flung myself face downwards on the bed, then seizing the sword I cut up and down beneath it, but the pressure still continued. I could hear the cracking of wood as the slats beneath were forced out of place, and dropping to the floor I crawled beneath the bed, cutting to right and left, but save when I struck the posts of the bed the sword touched nothing solid. I crawled out again, and instantly the heaving of the bed ceased, but a moment later there was a crash from the kitchen. Sword in hand, I rushed down, but the moon was shining brightly through the window and the place was empty.

“Soon after this the sounds ceased. There was a crack outside as if a stone had been flung against the byre door, but this was the last, and the rest of the night passed quietly enough.”

When autumn arrived with no sign of this supernatural persecution slowing down, the Wilsons gave up.  They sold off all their effects, and reportedly emigrated to America, where hopefully they managed to elude their spectral tormentor.  The Wilson farm was bought by a neighbor, but the house remained unoccupied.  Some years later, the new owner tried using the cottage as a stable, but the following morning, he found it was empty.  The mare who had been locked up in it overnight was found in a distant field, trembling and covered with a cold sweat.  The owner wisely took the hint and demolished the house.

There is nothing more to add to this story, except that shortly before the Wilsons abandoned their home, they received a letter from Canada, informing them that their brother was dead.  He died on the same day that his apparition very nearly fatally strangled his sister.

Friday, October 7, 2022

Weekend Link Dump

 

"The Witches' Cove," Follower of Jan Mandijn

For this month of October, the Link Dumps will be hosted by our Halloween Cats!



What the hell were the Oakville Blobs?

The dogs who survived the Titanic.

Archaeologists discover an "unusual" building.

The possible rediscovery of an ancient "miracle plant."

The cat mascots of the NYPD Harbor Police, 1904.

The cricketer who became the UK's first black peer.

King Wladyslaw the Elbow-High was not elbow-high.  Glad that's settled.

Unearthing a 1,400-year-old royal hall.

The woman who didn't sleep with Charles II.  As you may have guessed, she was in a pretty exclusive club.

Rennes-le-Chateau's blue apples.

A cursed cruise ship.

The Windham Frog Fight.

Post-houses and stage-houses in the early 19th century.

Contemporary newspaper accounts about the introduction of the Model T.

This week in Russian Weird looks at the Empress who forced her jester to get married in an ice house.

The Hillman Electric Resort.

A haunted vicarage.

Arthur Conan Doyle's psychic bookstore.

1881's Great Ghost Debate.

18th century Oxford sausages.

Allen Dulles' secret war.

The world's oldest known song.

The ax murders of Beaver County.

A family gets burglarized by a ghost.

A brief history of dragons.

A "pest of skolds" in the Anglo-Dutch wars.

Churchill's real "darkest hour."

How we carried babies 10,000 years ago.

Ancient megalithic monuments that are not Stonehenge.

A tale from African folklore.

British spying in the Napoleonic Era.

The career of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough.

A dog who had quite a maternal instinct.

The Walton-Matthews tragedy.

And, finally: sing along with Pablo the Goat!

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at a particularly creepy poltergeist story.  In the meantime, here's what happens when Bach meets Celtic folk:


Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



The following case is an example of what--for blogging purposes--I call “mini-mysteries”: crimes that are particularly unusual or baffling, but where there simply isn’t enough information for a regular blog post.  I remember reading about this chilling murder when it happened, and it put me off rest stops for life.  The “Herald-Palladium,” May 16, 1989:


ESCANABA, Mich. (AP) - Jane Snow's sons found her body 10 years ago this week in a restroom along a northern Lower Peninsula freeway. Since then, rest stop security has been beefed up and the killing remains unsolved. 

"We've never been able to determine a motive. There was no robbery, there was no sexual assault," said Trooper Ken Burr of the Michigan State Police post at Gaylord, who was on duty when Snow’s body was discovered was found May 15, 1979.

"The biggest problem with this case is that there was very little hard evidence,'' Burr said. "There were no vehicle tracks, no fingerprints."

Snow was 31, recently divorced and headed from Grand Rapids, where she had worked as a nurse, to a new life in Escanaba with her sons Eric, then 9, and Mark, then 7. 

That life, however, ended 200 miles short of Snow's hometown inside the women's restroom at the Loon Lake Rest Stop along northbound Interstate 75.

Her sons had waited for her before going inside and finding her body, stabbed more than 20 times, in front of a row of sinks. 

"The kids saw no one," Burr said. "There's a little lake connected with that rest stop. After they went to the (men's) bathroom they went to the lake and were throwing rocks at frogs, just monkeying around. They got tired or whatever and decided, 'Where's Mama?’” the trooper said. "When they found her they had enough presence to go through her purse to get money for the pay phone, but the phone didn't work. Very shortly after, another car came into the rest area and took the kids to the post." 

Police picked up a hitchhiker less than half a mile from the rest area about the time Snow's body was found. They also questioned a Gaylord resident, but both were released after laboratory tests proved inconclusive, Burr said. 

While police struggled to solve Snow's slaying, state Transportation Department officials responded by forming a special committee to study rest area security. 

Coincidentally, Jay Bastian, then and still head of design and planning for rest areas stopped at the Loon Lake facility the day after the slaying while traveling north on department business. 

“I noticed it was closed, and we drove in and identified ourselves. It was a terrible thing," he said. "We've had some bad incidents at our rest areas, but nothing like that." 

The department since then has improved lighting at some rest stops and has asked police agencies to patrol more often at Michigan's 83 highway rest areas, 90 parks and 40 scenic turnouts, Bastian said. 

In 1982, the department installed emergency alarms meant to instantly connect two Lower Peninsula rest areas with nearby state police posts. The experiment was abandoned amid vandalism and improper use, he said. 

All rest areas now have telephones at which callers can dial a toll-free number 24 hours a day. 

Snow's survivors, meanwhile, still are trying to cope with her death.

Eric Snow is working to save money to return to college and Mark Snow is completing his first year at Lansing Community College, said the victim's mother, Miriam Baribeau of Escanaba. 

"They are very nice boys, especially considering all they've been through," Baribeau said of her grandsons, who lived with their father after Snow's slaying.

Jane Snow’s murder remains unsolved.

Monday, October 3, 2022

The Fairy Thorn: A Cautionary Tale About Fortean Firewood




This week’s post will demonstrate a vital gardening tip:  Never, ever mess with a tree inhabited by fairies.  The Little Folk have ways of making you regret it.

Our story is set in Fintona, a village in County Tyrone, Ireland.  In late March 1950, the Fintona Golf Club received permission from one Raymond Browne-Lecky to do some landscaping on the golf course on his lands.  Among the changes he OK’d was to remove a thorn hedge that was in the way.  Unfortunately, the gardeners hired to do the job misinterpreted their instructions, and instead used a bulldozer to take down a 300-year-old “fairy thorn”--a tree revered in Ireland for its ancient supernatural associations. Fintonans were incensed at the desecration.  “The people in the village are in a rage over it,” Browne-Lecky told a reporter for the “Northern Whig.  “For my part, however, the hatchet is buried, because it was apparently a mistake.  I was not angry because of possible revenge from the fairies--I’m afraid I don’t believe in them.  But many people do, and that’s why the villagers are upset about it.”

It didn’t take long for the fairies to show their displeasure.  72-year-old pensioner James McAnespie took some of the bulldozed tree to use for firewood.  The “wee folk” evidently saw this as adding insult to injury.  As soon as McAnespie began burning the wood, things started to happen.  Mighty strange things.  He began to hear the sound of tinkling bells in his house.  Tiny figures the size of wasps began flying all around him which were impossible to catch.

On April 16, 1950, McAnespie used up the last of the wood, and--showing an astonishing inability to take a hint--set out to get more.  That night, his neighbors noticed that he had not returned home.  That was unusual, as he was normally in his house by 8 p.m. or so.  After they were unable to find him anywhere, the neighbors went to the police.  A search party was immediately organized.

The searchers went across the countryside, calling McAnespie’s name regularly, but without getting any reply.  Then, at 11:30 p.m., they found the missing man standing motionless on the exact spot where the fairy thorn had stood.  As they approached McAnespie, he came out of his seeming trance, and returned to the village with them.

The story he told was this:  He gathered sticks for firewood around the place where the fairy thorn had been bulldozed.  After tying them into a bundle, he began to go home.  However, when he walked over the spot where the tree had stood, he suddenly became unable to move or speak.  “I couldn’t even let go the rope,” he said.  “It was like as if I was riveted to the ground.”  He stood there helplessly for two hours, hearing bells ringing around his feet.  He saw a ditch all around him, and a big house with lights inside it.  He also saw two fairies--”wee fellows,” he called them.  In short, if Mr. McAnespie did not believe in fairies before, he certainly did now.  

After McAnespie died four years later, Irish papers carried brief death notices commenting that he was still remembered as “the man who was seized by the fairies.”