Lore - Episode 11: Black Stockings
Episode Date: July 25, 2015Humans have a history of making up stories to explain the unexplainable. Sometimes we use those stories to teach our children a moral lesson, or entertain our friends. Sometimes, though, those stories... get taken seriously, and the results have been unspeakable. ———————————————— Lore Resources: Episode Music: lorepodcast.com/music Episode Sources: lorepodcast.com/sources Lore News: www.theworldoflore.com/now Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com Access premium content!: https://www.lorepodcast.com/support See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Most of us have had the joy of being sick once or twice in our lives.
It's a part of the human experience, I suppose.
We get sick, and then we get better.
At least that's how it's supposed to work.
One thing I'm constantly thankful for is the fact that we live in such a modern, enlightened
age of medicine.
We no longer use urine as an antiseptic, and we don't diagnose illness based on our
astrological signs.
But that wasn't always the case.
Gone are the days of bleeding ourselves with leeches, or trying to balance our humors
to make sure that our sanguine fluids aren't overpowering our melancholic fluids.
And I'm probably not the only one who's happy that we no longer treat sick people with
enemas administered with metal syringes filled with borbile.
Yes, bile from a borb.
I could not make this stuff up.
Our ancestors didn't know why certain things happened, but they sure did their best to
try.
Stories were created, myths were told, and superstitions took root.
All of them were designed to explain why things happened, and these reasons, even if they were
pure fabrications, somehow helped people deal with the realities of life.
Why was my child born deformed?
Why did my husband's personality change overnight?
Why did my entire family die from a plague last year?
These questions haunted people in ways we can't understand today, and they grasped for anything
that would help them cope.
They found answers in their common folklore.
Among the countless tales and stories told, there's one superstition from Ireland that
saw more usage than most.
You see, when something didn't seem right, when things went wrong and people suffered,
there was only one explanation in the minds of the Irish that covered it all.
They blamed it on changelings.
I'm Aaron Mankey, and this is Lore.
A changeline, according to the folklore of Europe, is a kind of fairy.
These of them can be found in Germany, Ireland, England, Scandinavia, Spain, and many other
European countries.
In all those cultures, changelings have the same methodology.
They are a substitute for a kidnapped human being.
Either out of jealousy or great need, fairies were said to enter our world and make a trade
without our knowledge.
They would leave one of their own behind and return to the fairy realm, where the kidnapped
human would live a happy, joyful life in paradise.
We have a great summary of changelings thanks to the Irish poet William Butler Yates.
They steal children, he wrote, and leave a withered fairy, one thousand or maybe two
thousand years old, instead.
At times, full grown men and women have been taken.
Near the village of Colony lives an old woman who was taken in her youth.
When she came back at the end of seven years, she had no toes, for she had danced them
all off.
Changelings, according to the legends, can actually take one of three forms.
The first is the kind Yates wrote about, the senile and ancient fairy who is disguised
as a child.
Another type of changeline was an actual fairy child.
The third type was simply an inanimate object, such as a block of wood or a carved log.
This third type is sometimes known as a stock.
The logic, at least to someone in medieval Europe, was simple.
If a child was born with birth defects, was sickly or ill-tempered, they were often thought
to be the fairy substitute left behind when their real child was taken from their home.
If an adult went missing or was later found mysteriously dead, people would often assume
that the body was really a bundle of sticks that had merely been enchanted to resemble
their loved one.
Folklore blossomed on the subject.
Wives' tales and legend taught new generations how to spot a changeline, instantly providing
them with both one more reason to fear every little change in a person's life, but also
some safety and hope that they could cling to.
Even the overall well-being of a family could hinge on these creatures.
Changelines, you see, were said to drain all the luck away from a home.
And by doing so, they would leave a family curse to struggle with poverty and misfortune,
all while trying to care for a child they saw as a curse more and more every day.
When the stories focused on men and women who had been swapped out for a fairy, the symptoms
were more psychological in nature.
Signs of an adult changeline included mood swings, becoming argumentative, and losing
interest in friends and family.
Changelines were said to have enormous appetites, eating everything they were given, and then
asking for more.
It was said that if your infant preferred food from the larder rather than being nursed,
there was a chance they weren't really your child at all.
While most changeline infants died in early childhood, those that survived were said to
become dim-witted adults.
Men and women who survived this long were sometimes called ufa, which is where we get
the word oaf.
Thankfully, though, there were ways to test people to see if they were, in fact, a changeline.
One method involved putting a shoe in a bowl of soup.
If the baby saw this and laughed, it was seen as proof that the child was a changeline.
Another method involved making a tiny loaf of bread inside half an eggshell, again meant
to make the fairy laugh.
And once discovered, a fairy changeline could be driven from the house in a variety of ways,
in which case the kidnapped human child or adult would be returned unharmed.
One trick involved holding the suspected child over a fire, while another recommended forcing
the suspect to drink tea brewed with foxglove, a poisonous flower.
It was thought that as the person's body expelled the toxin through vomiting and diarrhea, the
changeline would be forced to return to the fairy realm.
It sounds crazy to think that people would believe such stories.
Even centuries ago, surely no one actually performed these tests or administered these
treatments, especially to their own family, right?
Unfortunately, history teaches us that desperate people are capable of just about anything.
In July of 1826, a woman named Anne Roche from Tralee County, Cary in southwest Ireland
was caring for a four-year-old boy named Michael Leahy.
According to her own testimony, the boy was unable to walk, stand, or speak.
Convinced that he was, in fact, a fairy changeline, she bathed him in icy waters three times to
force the fairy out.
The boy drowned.
She was tried by court, and they found her not guilty.
In 1845, a woman suspected of being a changeline was placed in a large basket filled with wood
shavings and then hung over the kitchen fire until the contents of the basket ignited.
In 1851, a man in Ireland literally roasted his child to death because he believed the
boy to be a fairy.
Three children were suspected of being fairies in 1857, they were bathed in a solution of
foxglove and then forced to drink it.
Sometimes babies were left in or near bodies of water as a way of forcing the changelings
to leave.
In 1869, an exorcism was attempted by dipping a child three times in a lake in Ireland.
Another woman actually left her infant on the shore of a lake and walked away, expecting
the fairies to come and make the swap.
Thankfully, she returned later to reclaim her child.
Sometimes neighbors stepped in when the parents of an obvious changeline would do nothing.
In 1884, while the mother of three-year-old Philip Dillon was out of the house, Alan Cushion
and Anastasia Roark snuck inside.
Philip, you see, could not use his arms and legs and these neighbors saw that as proof
enough of his condition.
One of the neighbors stripped the boy naked while the others stoked fire.
Then when everything was ready, they placed him on a large shovel and held it over the
flames.
Little Philip survived, but he was severely burned by the incident.
We hate what we fear, you see, but rather than fade away as the 19th century moved on,
the fears and superstitions around changelings only seemed to grow in Ireland.
And as hard as it might be to believe, things were about to get worse.
In the late 19th century, one of the governing bodies in Ireland was the Board of Guardians
in each district.
They were tasked with dispensing public aid, and one of the ways they did that was by building
laborer cottages, homes built to provide housing for rural agricultural workers.
Many farmers had lost their land in the recent famine, and this was one way of helping alleviate
some of the homelessness and poverty that had become so common in the country.
One cottage was constructed in Ballyvadle, a small community of just 9 homes and 31 people
in County Tipperie.
The family who was awarded the cottage moved in, but there was a problem.
It seems that the house had been built on a raft, a low earthen ring.
And while archaeologists know them to simply be remnants of an Iron Age fort, some of the
Irish still thought of them as fairy rings, the portals into another realm.
After the family moved in, odd things began to happen, cries in the night, noises that
couldn't be identified, and a feeling of dread.
Almost as soon as the tenants had moved in, they were leaving.
In their stead, the cottage was given to an old retired laborer named Patrick Boland who
moved in with his adult daughter and her husband.
His daughter, Bridget, was unusual.
In 1895, it was the men who controlled the family.
They were the breadwinner and the sole provider.
But even though her husband Michael did well as a cooper, someone who makes and repairs
barrels, a business that has always done well in Ireland, Bridget wasn't dependent on him.
She had her own business making dresses and keeping hens, and the income from those jobs
was more than enough to meet her needs.
She was also said to be clever, flirtatious, and highly independent.
You can imagine how she must have annoyed her husband and caught the ire of the neighbors,
and then there were the rumors of the affair she was having with another man.
David Cleary was a self-made, self-possessed woman, and everyone else was bothered by that.
I tell you all that because stories have layers.
There's the meaning you glean from the initial telling, and then there's the rest of the
story.
The deeper you dive, the more things begin to make sense.
And believe me when I tell you, there's a lot about this story that fails to make sense.
On March 4, 1895, Bridget left home on an errand.
She had eggs to deliver to the house of her father's cousin, Jack Dunn.
It was a short enough distance that she decided to walk, but the weather turned sour while
she was out.
She spent the next day in bed complaining of a raging pain in her head.
She had chills and shivered constantly.
Dunn came by the little cottage to visit a few days later and found Bridget still in
bed.
He took one look at her and declared, that's not Bridget.
According to him, she was a changeling.
Thankfully, no one believed him.
Yet.
On March 9, five days after Bridget's walk in the cold, her father walked four miles
to the nearest doctor and asked him to come help.
Two days later, there was still no sign of the doctor, and so her husband Michael made
the journey.
After yet two more days of waiting, the doctor had still not come, and so Michael went again,
this time making sure that he brought along the summons from the local health authority.
While her husband was out looking for the doctor, the doctor arrived unexpectedly.
He did his typical house call checkup, prescribes some medicine, and then left.
Still frustrated, the family called upon a priest to come by and give her last rights.
Just in case.
Things weren't looking up for Bridget Clary.
This was March 13, a full nine days since taking ill, and so later that evening, neighbors
and relatives gathered at the cottage to help administer fairy medicine in the form of herbs.
Bridget refused the treatment, and they held a red hot poker in her face until she complied.
Things got worse the following day.
Then Jack Dunn had begun to spread word that Bridget had been taken by the fairies and replaced
by a changeling.
At his urging, a man named Dennis Ganey was called to the house.
Ganey was known in the community as a fairy doctor, and was well versed in treating cases
such as these.
His treatments wouldn't necessarily fit into modern medical textbooks, mind you.
They included the use of the hot poker, forcing the changeling to drink first milk from a
cow that had just given birth, dousing the person in urine, and exposing them to flames.
Bridget was slapped and held in front of the fireplace while her husband demanded that
she state before God and family that she was indeed Bridget Clary.
Even though she answered yes, the gathered crowd didn't believe her.
Now before I continue, there's something you need to understand about Michael Clary's
state of mind.
While his mother had died when he was young, his father had just passed away hours before.
He and Bridget were childless, and they lived with her father in a spare room in the 19th
century equivalent of public housing.
His own wife was rumored to be cheating on him, and she didn't even need him to support
her.
Michael Clary was adrift.
He had come undone, and maybe that's what drove him to the edge of sanity.
The treatments continued late into the night.
Friends and family began to ask to leave, but Michael was said to have yelled that no one
was leaving until Bridget came home.
He locked the door and placed the key in his pocket.
If they could just get this right, he told them, if they could just drive the ferry out
and be done with it.
His Bridget would come home.
Again, she was asked to declare her identity, and Bridget refused.
Now historians don't know why.
Maybe she was just afraid.
Maybe her independent, stubborn nature prevented her from handing over authority to her husband.
Whatever the reason, her silence infuriated Michael.
He stripped her to her undergarments and pushed her to the floor.
Come home, Bridget, in the name of God, someone was said to have cried as she lay near the
fire.
She's not my wife, Michael replied.
You'll soon see her go up the chimney.
And with that, he doused her with lamp oil and grabbed a log from the burning fireplace,
which he used to ignite the oil.
Bridget Clary burned to death on the hearth of her own kitchen fireplace in front of
her husband and father, cousins and friends.
She was 26 years old.
We haven't always known as much about the world as we do now.
Compared to the centuries before our own, we live in a veritable golden age of knowledge
and understanding.
Ignorance has eradicated much of the ignorance that once plagued us.
And while I'm a fan of mystery and unanswered questions, it's not necessarily a bad thing.
Ignorance has been used as a justification for the barbaric, inhumane treatment of other
people to fuel our hatred of those who aren't like us.
That kind of fear often becomes the agent of a dark transformation.
For the influence of fear, humans have a history of mutation or changing into something grotesque
and dangerous.
We become monsters.
Fear drove Michael Clary and the others to kill his wife.
Fear of illness and disease, of mental and medical mysteries, the fear of the loss that
seemed to be creeping ever closer to his household.
Blinded by that fear, Michael Clary lashed out with the only tool he had, superstition.
In many ways, it's beyond ironic that his fear turned him into someone else.
In the end, perhaps, he was the changeling.
After forcing one of Bridget's cousins by knife point to help wrap her body in a sheet,
it carried her to a nearby field and buried her in a shallow grave.
A short time later, some of the neighbors told the local priest that Bridget Clary had
gone missing.
They said, in whispered tones, that it had been a fairy exorcism.
When the priest found Michael Clary praying in the church the next day, he brought up
the man's wife.
Is your wife all right?
The priest asked.
I heard she'd been sick.
I had a very bad night, Father.
Michael told him with a wild look in his eye.
When I woke up, my wife was gone.
I think the fairies have taken her.
He was convinced she would return.
He had plans to visit a nearby fairy ring and wait for her.
She would arrive, he said, in a white gown on a pale horse, and he would cut her bindings
with a blackened knife.
His Bridget would come home.
The priest, to his credit, didn't believe a single word.
He called the police, and a massive search was undertaken.
On March 22, two constables found her body in the shallow grave her husband had dug
just days before.
She had been badly burned and lay in the fetal position, their knees against her chest, arms
wrapped tightly around them.
Because her face had escaped the fire, a cloth sack had been placed over her head.
All that remained of the little clothing she had been wearing was a pair of black stockings.
Bridget Clary would never come home.
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This episode of lore was researched, written, and produced by me, Aaron Mankey.
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