Lore - Episode 129: Digging Deep
Episode Date: November 11, 2019The longer humans stay in one place, the more progress and community we seem to create. But at the same time, we bring our darkness with us, and over time it begins to stain a place with shadows of pa...in and tragedy. And the older the city, the darker the mark. ———————————— Show 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The construction was called to a stop the moment they found the bones.
The work crew was preparing a building site along one of London's many ancient streets
when they uncovered what appeared to be a body, or at least the remains of one.
It was clearly old, given that nothing but bones could be seen beneath the dirt.
So a team of archaeologists was brought in to preserve and study the remains.
In the end, they determined that the bones belonged to a teenage girl who had lived
in London over 1600 years ago.
A Roman girl.
It's not the last time something like that has happened in the city.
During some development work near Spiddlefield's market in the 1990s, a work crew uncovered
what turned out to be an entire Roman cemetery.
Among the finds was a perfectly preserved lead coffin, its lid covered in beautiful artwork
that had been hammered right into the surface, still visible all these centuries later.
And that's the way history tends to work.
Time will bury it beneath new and current events, but if we dig deep enough and brush
away the soil, we can come face to face with it all over again.
In the past, never truly goes away, after all.
It's there, waiting to be discovered, so that we can study it and relearn the stories
it contains.
Oftentimes though, the things that leave the deepest marks tend to be the most tragic
and painful.
Events that rattled people to their core and left a shadow on the history of a place that
no amount of sunlight could ever chase away.
In the older the city, the more common those shadows tend to be.
Which is why I want to take you on a tour of one of the oldest, because while the past
is always nearby in our modern world, few places allow it to dwell so close to the present
as the city of London.
Its past is both the treasury of historical significance and a crypt full of the darkest
tragedies we could ever imagine.
Because in a city filled with so much light, there's bound to be some shadows.
I'm Aaron Mankey, and this is Lore.
London is ancient.
There's really no other way to say it.
Most Americans live in a community that's less than 200 years old.
If you're in New England or one of the other places with roots in pre-colonial America,
perhaps those locations go back a bit further.
But London's history makes all of those seem brand new by comparison.
Archaeological work in London can place humans in the area as far back as 4,500 BC.
But if we're looking for a major settlement where it stands today, that didn't happen
until 47 AD, when the Romans arrived and set up a community there that they called Londonium.
Although from what we can tell, it didn't last long, all thanks to a woman named Boudica.
As far as historians know, Boudica was the wife of King Prositagus, who ruled over an
eastern British tribe known as the Isini.
When the Romans arrived in their territory in 43 AD, they came to an arrangement with
Prositagus, allowing him to maintain control of his kingdom.
When he died 17 years later, though, the Romans refused to acknowledge his widow as the new
ruler and instead invaded them to take the land for themselves.
But they misjudged Boudica, assuming she was a quiet woman incapable of ruling anything.
Instead, she rallied a massive army of close to 100,000 warriors and then led them on a
campaign against the Romans all over Britain.
In 61 AD, her army rolled over Londonium like a Sherman tank, burning the entire settlement
to the ground.
In fact, her campaign against them was so fierce and unstoppable that the Romans nearly
left Britain altogether.
But those who survived managed to rebuild, and within a handful of decades, it had grown
large enough to become the capital of the entire province.
For the years, the city continued to expand and mature, and even though the Romans left
toward the beginning of the 5th century, the community there refused to die.
By the 7th century, London had earned a reputation as a major trade center, which brought in a
steady flow of wealth and goods, and also turned the city into a political powerhouse.
Of course, power and wealth has a way of making a community a target for others, and London
was no exception.
In 1066, William the Conqueror sailed across the English Channel and earned his nickname
by taking control of the entire kingdom and making it his own, and of course, special
attention was paid to London.
Within two decades, the population of the city had reached nearly 15,000, and by the
1300s, that had multiplied to over 80,000.
But something unexpected was heading their way that would ravage that growing community.
What started as a plague in Western Asia quickly spread to Europe, bringing death and destruction
to every community it touched.
By the time the Black Death had burned itself out, some historians estimate that upwards
of 200 million people were dead.
The people of London lost at least 10,000 lives, most of whom were buried outside the
city walls.
It wouldn't be the last time the city would face tragedy.
In 1664, a fresh outbreak of the plague killed another 100,000 people, and then two years
later in September of 1666, a fire broke out in the house of a baker on Pudding Lane.
It eventually spread west, destroying much of the city as it went.
And while there were only six verified casualties, historians now think the fire burned hot enough
to completely cremate those who were caught in it, making the true death toll anyone's
guess.
So much of London's history was tragic and outside human control.
But there have also been moments along the way that could only be blamed on the people
who lived there.
Jack the Ripper and the murders that took place in 1888 in the Whitechapel district
of the city are always front and center in most people's minds.
But there has been a lot more bloodshed than just those five innocent women.
In fact, a lot of the city's murder and violence could be found higher up the ladder in the
very chambers and homes of the people who held the power and wealth.
It seemed that rather than being immune to the shadows that lingered in the city, even
the powerful could fall under their spell.
Because if there's one thing the nobility of England's past seemed to attract more
than anything else, it was pain and suffering and death.
We don't need to look far to find bloody nobles.
It sometimes feels as though all we have to do is open a history book and flip it to a
random page.
Life at the top was often a cutthroat game, both figuratively and literally, and anyone
who found themselves in the orbit of a king or queen certainly understood that risk.
A great example of how bloodthirsty the English kings could be was Henry VIII.
Henry is known for a lot of things, not all of which are so great in retrospect.
He expanded the power of the crown during his lifetime and based a lot of that on his
belief in the divine right of kings, something that threatened the freedom of his people.
He was greedy and vindictive and had an ego that was only surpassed in size by the codpiece
on his armor.
But if there is one thing that most people remember today about Henry VIII, it's his
many wives.
Henry had six of them, half of whom were named Catherine, which must have made it a lot easier
for him, I'm sure.
Five of those six wives came and went within a single ten-year period in his life, but
not all of those breakups were friendly.
After having his first marriage annulled in 1533 and sparking the English Reformation
and the country's separation from the Catholic Church, Henry married the sister of a former
lover, a woman named Anne Boleyn.
Three years later, he had her executed for treason and adultery, but also possibly fulfilling
to deliver a male heir.
The day after Anne's beheading, Henry proposed to one of her ladies in waiting, Jane Seymour.
They had apparently fallen in love months before, but Jane had managed to hold off Henry's
advances in the name of honor.
Once the queen was dead, though, she was much more agreeable.
They were married ten days later.
From everything I can tell, Henry believed that Jane Seymour was the one.
He viewed her as his perfect queen, and when she gave birth to his first male heir a year
later, he probably sighed with relief.
But complications from the birth put her life at risk, and over the two weeks that followed,
she slowly declined.
In October of 1537, Jane Seymour passed away.
That had taken place at Hampton Court Palace, Henry's favorite London residence.
It was a mixture of a pleasure palace, a theater, and a royal home.
So when Henry brought his next two wives through those doors over the next few years, they were
probably bittersweet moments.
A lot of joy would be possible there, but it would always sit in the shadows of a painful
past.
His fifth wife, Catherine Howard, made a fool of the king by conducting at least one less-than-secret
affair.
After learning about what she had done, Henry had Catherine arrested and thrown in a prison
cell there at the house.
She was only 18 at the time, and I can't imagine the fear and desperation she must
have felt being a prisoner of the most powerful man in the kingdom.
According to the stories, though, Catherine managed to slip away from her guards one day
while being walked through the palace.
She bolted away and ran down one of the long galleries that led to the King's Chapel,
where she knew Henry could be found.
Her goal was probably to beg for forgiveness, to ask for mercy, and to plead for her life.
But the guards caught up to her before that could happen, and her screams of terror were
the only thing to reach him.
Catherine Howard was beheaded a short while later, and Henry moved on to a new wife, also
named Catherine.
But just because those former wives were gone doesn't mean they were forgotten.
In fact, if the stories are true, they might have stuck around to serve as a cruel reminder.
It's said that even today, visitors to that long gallery in the palace have heard echoes
of a woman screaming, a desperate, panicked cry that chills them to the bones.
Others have heard the quick rhythm of footsteps as if someone were running down the hallway,
and in 1999, according to one source, two different tourists fainted in the gallery
at different times on the very same day.
Elsewhere in Hampton Court Palace, other shadows have stuck around as well, in a room at the
top of the staircase known as the Silver Stick Stairs.
Multiple visitors have claimed to have seen the figure of a pale woman.
She stands silently, hovering slightly above the floor, with a mournful expression and
vacant eyes.
For those who have witnessed it, the specter has been both calming and terrifying.
Whether or not the visions are real, though, it's fascinating to look at the true history
of that room.
Because while it has been used for countless purposes over the last few centuries, one
specific resident stands out above all the others.
It was in this room, you see, that Henry VIII's only male heir was born to his true love,
Jane Seymour.
And it was there, just two weeks later, that she passed away.
The old home, located on Berkeley Square, is a townhouse, just one of many in a long
row of similar facades.
But as far back as the mid-nineteenth century, it was different enough to stand out from
all the others.
But before I continue with the legends, let me be clear that not a lot is known about
the house's origins, and a lot of stories have yet to be completely verified.
Still, we know enough to make this a journey worth taking, so let's get started.
The majority of the tales begin with the man who owned the house back in the 1860s.
Thomas Meyer wasn't the first to live there, but he was certainly the most infamous.
It's said that he had once been engaged to be married, but his fiancé eventually changed
her mind and ended their relationship.
Broken and distraught, he retreated into his house and was rarely ever seen again.
Neighbors claim that the house would be dead during the day, only to come alive at night.
It was as if Thomas had traded in the sunlight for the shadows, living the rest of his life
during those moments when most of the world was asleep.
And it might very well be whispers of the house all lit up at night that first gave
birth to the rumor that it was haunted, but it could also have been what happened next.
Sometime around 1872, the house sold to a new family, and they moved in to clean up
the home and make it their own.
The couple had two daughters, both in their late teens, and they were precious few years
left for the parents to enjoy life as a family in this new setting before they became empty
nesters.
In the weeks that followed, though, the future crept in.
The oldest of the two daughters became engaged to a young officer named Captain Kentfield,
and conversation became filled with talk of wedding plans and guest lists.
And at some point in their engagement, Captain Kentfield planned a visit, so the family set
about preparing the attic bedroom for his arrival.
According to the story, what happened next is still shrouded in mystery.
The family maid was sent up to put the final touches on the fiancé's room, and while
she was up there, the family heard her scream.
At once, everyone in the house rushed upstairs to see what had happened, only to find her
lying on the floor, an expression of complete horror painted across her face.
More mysterious yet was that she couldn't seem to put a complete sentence together,
and was unable to answer any of the questions the family asked her.
All the maid was able to do was mutter a low cryptic refrain, don't let it touch me, don't
let it touch me.
The maid was immediately taken to the hospital to recover, where I imagined someone observed
her and did their best to treat her rattled nerves, but other than that, there was little
they could do.
Sleep, they assumed, would be the best medicine.
The following morning, though, she was found dead in her room.
The fiancé arrived the next day, and after hearing the stories of the maid's unexpected
death, he decided to check the room out for himself.
Maybe he was playing the brave soldier in front of his future in-laws in an effort to
impress them, or perhaps his fiancé needed some reassurance and he wanted to comb her
nerves.
Whatever the reason, he climbed the stairs to the attic bedroom and declared that he
would keep watch throughout the night.
In the darkest hours of the morning, though, a gunshot pulled everyone from sleep, their
hearts racing at the sound of it.
Everyone climbed out of bed, threw on their nightcoats, and then rushed up to see what
had happened.
What they found, according to the legend, was the young captain dead on the floor of his
room, a victim of his own pistol.
In 1907, author Charles Harper wrote about the house in a book, and it was there that
he declared it to be, the very picture of misery.
After the events that were said to have taken place there, it's easy to wonder if the misery
was in the structure or the lives who lived there.
Either way, the stories we've heard so far shed a bright light on one more tale that
Harper added to the legend.
According to him, the next family to own the house moved in fully aware of the tragedies
of the past.
The owner was an older gentleman who was said to be practical and not prone to stories of
the supernatural.
Still, he understood the power of suggestion a creepy old house with a dark past might
have over him, so he set some rules for everyone to follow.
After settling in with his family, he told them all that he would ring his bell to tell
them if he ever truly needed help.
If it was a moment of fright, he would only ring it once, which they were all instructed
to ignore.
But if matters were more pressing and he truly needed help, he would ring it twice, a signal
that they were to immediately come to his room.
Everyone went to bed at the end of the evening, and while the night began peacefully, the
quiet was broken around midnight by the loud chime of the old man's bell.
Not once, but twice, which sent everyone rushing to see what might be the matter.
What they found, though, weren't answers.
The old man was writhing in his bed, his face twisted by panic and fear.
Just like the housemaid all those years before, he too couldn't answer the questions that
the others around him asked.
He could only mutter and shake with horror at something no one else could see.
After doing their best to help him, they calmed him enough to let him sleep, and everyone
wandered back to their own rooms.
They left his bell on the table beside his bed, hoping that he would remember how to
use it if he needed them.
But the remainder of the night was one long stretch of unbroken silence.
In the morning, they discovered why.
After visiting the old man's bedroom to check on him, one of his family members gently pushed
the door open and peered inside.
The shape in the bed was unmoving, and so they approached to wake him and see how he
felt.
But like those in the house before him, he too had passed away.
A random coincidence of natural causes, or a demonstration of the power of fear.
There's a lot about London that seems to echo the atmosphere of the house at 50 Berkeley
Square.
It's a city painted in shadows, but it's unclear if that darkness was always there,
or if we imported it over the centuries.
What's clear is that almost from the start, tragedy and suffering has been a resident
of this ancient city.
Right back to the invasion of Boudicca, nearly 2,000 years ago, and up to its most modern
challenges, the city of London has had to suffer through quite a bit, and that has a
way of leaving a mark.
Over the centuries though, the city has always found ways to move on.
New layers are added all the time, building the present on top of the past, and slowly
burying one dark moment beneath another.
Which is probably why London is one of those places where new construction always seems
to bump into ancient things.
If you dig deep enough, you're guaranteed to find something.
And look, London is a massive city, and while I did my best to cover some of its larger
and more powerful stories, there are hundreds more that I had to leave untouched.
Honestly, if you want to visit a haunted location in the city, just visit a local pub, like
the Ten Bells, or the Flask, or the Spaniard Inn.
If the stories are true, you'll find a lot more than a pint of ale waiting for you inside.
But if there's one mark on the pages of London's history that is bigger than most, it's hard
to deny the power of the plague.
If you remember, when the wave of disease washed over the city in 1665, it took two
years to run its course, and in the process it claimed the lives of nearly 100,000 people.
And that was a lot of tragedy to deal with, on the personal and the public level.
The biggest problem seemed to be what to do with all those corpses.
We've all seen films like Monty Python and the Holy Grail, and can all remember lines
like Bring Out You're Dead, and from what we can tell, that's pretty close to how it
actually would have been, a steady, daily flow of bodies out of the city, away from
the places where people lived in the hope that it would stop the spread of the disease.
And most of the bodies were carried outside the city limits.
One such burial location was started by the Earl of Craven, who purchased a parcel of
land west of the city for disposal of plague victims.
And every night, for months on end, carts filled with rotting corpses were wheeled out
onto his land, and then dumped into the pits there.
Over time, the place became known as the Pest House Field, and later it was named Gilding
Close.
But to be honest, few people actually went there.
They were too afraid of what might happen if they got too close to the body of a plague
victim, or heaven forbid, accidentally touch one.
So the burial plot, like so many others around the city, became a sort of no man's land.
For years of waiting, the owners of the land eventually made the decision to use the property
for development.
London was growing, and there would always be a need for a new neighborhood to settle
in.
So it was sold in pieces and developed into homes for the wealthy and elite to move away
from the center of the city.
Gilding Close eventually became known as Golden Square, and today it's a prominent
feature in the Soho area of London.
But even though the name has changed and the landscape around it has been transformed,
the past is still there, lingering in the shadows of modern life.
In fact, more than a few visitors to the park and buildings that surrounded have bumped
into the past in a very real way.
A few have seen the figures of people dressed in old-fashioned clothing slipping through
the square at night, while most have caught the sound of wailing, as if someone were enduring
horrible pain and suffering.
But it's not the specific things people have heard over the years that are the most terrifying
aspect of these stories.
No, it's where they all claim the voices have come from.
The sounds, they say, seem to emanate from right beneath their feet.
A city as old and historic as London is guaranteed to have a library of mysterious shadows and
other worldly experiences, and I hope today's tour has been a satisfying dip into that enormous
pond.
But I'm not done just yet.
There's one more legend from the city that I absolutely love, and if you stick around
through the sponsor break, I plan to tell you all about it.
When you think of London, it's easy to think of money.
As far back as the Roman period of the city, there has been an overt focus on the financial
industry.
In about 240 AD, for example, the Romans constructed a Mithraim, a temple devoted to the god Mithras.
Some of the most common members of the cult of Mithras were merchants, traders, customs
officials, and politicians, all professions that revolved around the flow of money.
But it didn't end with the Romans.
As the centuries ticked by, the people of London found new and better ways to manage
money and build the economy.
In the year 1100, King Henry I instituted a new system of currency that even the most
illiterate and uneducated citizens of his kingdom could understand, the tally stick.
It was essentially a polished wooden rod that had nicks carved into it to denote its value,
and it was then split down the middle.
The king kept one half, while the other was put into circulation in places like the city
markets.
And that's where the system really shined.
If anyone tried to change the value of the public half by adding another nick, it just
needed to be compared to the other half kept safe by the crown.
But at the end of the 17th century, one of the biggest changes to the financial world
of London was born, the Bank of England.
It was created in 1694 to solve a tricky financial problem the government of England faced.
They needed to build a massive navy to defend themselves, but lacked the funds to do it.
So an elaborate system of lending and currency came to the rescue.
A century later, the Bank of England was simply a way of life for the people of London.
It had all the prestige and power you might expect from a government-backed bank, and
had established a reputation for itself that has carried into the 21st century.
But I don't want to give you a tour of the bank's full history.
I just want to tell you about one of their employees, a man named Philip Whitehead.
Whitehead worked in the cashier's office of the Bank of England in 1811.
Everyone around him viewed him as a pillar of the establishment, a hard-working, respectable
man who was charming and delightful with staff and customers alike.
Except that's not all he was.
Philip was also a criminal.
It turns out he had been forging bank documents for months, cheating the bank out of a slow
trickle of money.
And at some point in 1811, his misdeeds were discovered and he was quickly arrested and
sent off to prison.
A few months later in early 1812, Philip Whitehead hanged for his crimes and the bank moved on.
Several weeks after Philip's hanging, though, a woman came into the bank asking for him.
She said her name was Sarah, but when she asked to speak with Philip Whitehead, she
was simply told that he was out of the office on a business errand.
The woman left disappointed, but promised to be back at another time.
The next time that she returned, she not only told them that her name was Sarah, but that
she was Philip's sister.
She told them of how she had lost touch with her brother many months earlier and that she
had been desperate to find a way to reach him.
And at some point, her story must have plucked at the hard strings of just the right bank
employee because one of the men took her aside and told her the truth.
Her brother was dead.
It wouldn't be Sarah's last visit to the bank, though.
The next time she returned, she was dressed all in black with a black veil that covered
her face.
She stepped into the lobby of the bank and asked to see her brother.
Taking pity on the poor woman, an official at the bank pulled her aside, apologized for
keeping his imprisonment and execution a secret, and offered a small settlement.
It was a payoff, of course, designed to keep her from disturbing the other customers, but
I'm sure he sold it to her more as a salve for her aching heart.
Either way, she accepted the money and then left.
She returned a few days later.
Over and over again, Sarah Whitehead visited the bank, each time dressed in that black
gown and veil.
At first, her voice was nothing more than a whisper, but with each new visit, her question
became louder and more aggressive.
Where is my brother?
She continued to ask.
Each of those visits ended with another small payment from the bank, but they weren't the
charity house and eventually decided that enough was enough.
Following her aside one day, they handed her a massive settlement and told her never to
return.
And to her credit, Sarah Whitehead listened.
She never again set foot inside the bank.
Although it's said she also never wore anything else but that black gown and dark veil.
We don't know how long Sarah lived after that.
Sometimes grief has a way of speeding up a person's decline, while other times it seems
to give them a reason to go on.
But decades later, Sarah passed away, having spent the remainder of her life in a constant
state of mourning for her dead brother.
Legend says that the churchyard she chose for her burial was the one right next door
to the bank.
Maybe she wanted to keep an eye on them from the other world, or perhaps it just happened
to be where she attended church.
I like to think it was the former and that those who still worked at the bank and knew
her story were aware of where she was buried.
It's very poetic whether or not it was actually true.
But her story doesn't end there, of course.
In the years following Sarah Whitehead's death, employees inside the bank began to report
seeing strange things.
Oftentimes it was nothing more than a movement just out of their field of vision, cod in
the corner of their eye, but never there when they turned their head.
Other times it was the fleeting vision of something black and shadowy.
Many who have worked in the bank claim that certain areas give them a feeling of hopelessness
and despair.
And on rare occasions, some claim a mysterious shape has even materialized right before their
eyes.
All of them have described it in the same way, too, giving the old stories new life as the
decades have passed by.
They say the shape is that of a woman.
Each time she appears, her pale skin is framed by a dress as black as coal, a veil that had
once covered her face pulled back to reveal twisted lips, red cheeks, and eyes that seemed
to glow like fire.
But it's the words she speaks that frighten people the most.
After locking eyes with them and washing them in a wave of terror, the woman in black repeats
the same words she had grown so accustomed to in life.
Where, she asks them, is my brother.
This episode of Lore was written and produced by me, Aaron Mankey, with research by Robin
Mineter and music by Chad Lawson.
Lore is much more than just a podcast.
There's a book series available in bookstores and online, and two seasons of the television
show on Amazon Prime Video.
Check them both out if you want more lore in your life.
I also make two other podcasts, Aaron Mankey's Cabinet of Curiosities, and Unobscured, and
I Think You'd Enjoy Both.
Each one explores areas of our dark history, ranging from bite-sized episodes to season-long
dives into a single topic.
You can learn more about both of those shows and everything else going on over in one central
place, theworldoflore.com slash now.
And you can also follow the show on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
Just search for Lore podcast, all one word, and then click that follow button.
And when you do, say hi.
I like it when people say hi.
And as always, thanks for listening.