Morbid - Episode 218: Who Put Bella In The Wych Elm?
Episode Date: March 19, 2021Who put Bella in the Wych Elm? This is an episode we covered in our earlier days brought to you by Alaina, but she kept up with it and ended up finding so much more information that she wante...d to redo it for ya! Here’s our second take on the episode with some new insight, maybe we’ll finally close this chapter. Here are the books mentioned in the episode! Very recommended reads for this case! Who Put Bella In The Wych Elm Volume 1 Who Put Bella In The Wych Elm Volume 2 Another really great podcast that did a goosebumps inducing narration of this case is The Unexplained Podcast. Here are the two parts of his show on the subject, just for some extra spooky listening! Whispers In The Trees Part 1 Whispers In The Trees Part 2 As always, thank you to our sponsors! HelloFresh Go to HelloFresh dot com slash morbid12 and use code morbid12 for 12 free meals, including free shipping! Squarespace Check out Squarespace.com/MORBID for a free trial and when you’re ready to launch, use the offer code MORBID to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain ThredUp For Morbid listeners, here’s an exclusive offer just for you: Get an extra 30% off your first order at thredUP.com/MORBID. Terms apply. PrettyLitter Your cat deserves the best. Your cat deserves The World’s Smartest kitty litter! Do what I did and make the switch to PrettyLitter TODAY by visiting PrettyLitter.com and use promo code morbid for 20% off your first order. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Discussion (0)
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Hey weirdos, I'm Alena.
I'm Ash.
And this is morbid. I'm sorry. In the morning.
In the morning.
In the morning.
In the air.
I feel like it's just become customary at this point to tell you what time it is and
what day it is.
So it is.
Just so you get the feel.
Okay, so I should probably know what day it is before I inform you.
It's Thursday, right?
It is Thursday. It is Thursday, right? It is Thursday.
It is Thursday, the end of the week,
which doesn't mean anything anymore.
So there's all the weeks are the same.
But we don't really have a whole lot to chat about beforehand.
Mainly, I just want to let you know that you might have seen the title of this
and then like, wait a second.
Did they already do that?
Why did they do that again?
So we're covering today who put Bella in the witch elm.
And we did cover this a long time ago.
This was our early underwater school.
Very early.
And this was also when we were doing actual mini morbids
where they were like short.
Yeah, this episode was like half hour.
I looked back on, so I've been looking,
like I've mentioned in other episodes,
I've been looking back on the research
and like the quality, the sound quality,
the episode's just a remaster, some.
And I looked at this one and I was like,
there's like four pages of research on this
and I was like, that's not enough.
So I just happened to start,
I was like, I'm gonna start looking into it
because I do like this case a lot.
And there was new stuff that had come up
and there was all kinds of things
that I just hadn't touched upon
and the original ones was like, you know what?
We were still getting our research.
I can do this better.
Pat's on.
I can do this better.
And with the new stuff that has come out
and I think it's important to update it.
Hell yeah.
So instead of just putting a little update,
we figured scrap it, do the episode over again
because I can do it better.
Let's do it.
Always improving.
So without further ado, we're going to talk about who put Bella in the witch and-
To be honest, I only remember small details from this.
So remember a tree.
Remember a witchel?
A witchel?
A witchel?
And I remember little kids finding her, yeah?
Well, like teens.
Yeah, teens. So yeah. So little kids, yeah? Well, like teens. Yeah, teens.
So yeah.
So little kids, yeah.
Yeah, sounds exactly the same thing.
So this takes place on April 18th, 1943.
Four local boys named Robert Hart, Thomas Willett,
Bob Farmer, and Fred Payne were poaching rabbits
and trying to catch birds in haggly wood.
Alrighty.
And this is located in Worcestershire, England.
Worcestershire sauce.
Worcestershire sauce.
Worcestershire.
Worcestershire.
So this place was part of the haggly estate belonging
to Lord Cobham near Wichbury Hill.
Hell yeah.
You know the place, right?
I've been there actually.
We're Americans, we don't know anything about this,
but I hope I'm saying it all right. I bet you are
When they came across this crazy-looking tree which is referred to as a witch-elm
Right. The tree itself is like, I will post a photo of it because it's definitely like an odd tree
Or at least odd to me. It's like got a big bulbous bottom to it
And then it's got all these like crazy spikes coming out of it because it's cursed It looks like a a big bulbous bottom to it, and then it's got all these crazy spikes coming out of it.
Because it's cursed.
It looks like a witch elm.
It looks like that's what it would be called.
Yeah, like a witch tree.
It's a spooky tree.
It's definitely spooky.
Now Thomas Willetts was 17.
Bob Farmer and Robert Hart were 15,
and Fred Payne was 14.
Yeah, see, 15-14 equals little kid.
Are you sure?
13s.
Either way. Either way. Either kid. Sure, 13s.
Either way.
Either way.
Now, before I get really into this, I just want to mention there are two books on this
that I originally did not know about when I first did my research like long ago.
Alena didn't know about a book?
I know, it's insane.
And there are two books, their volume one and two called Who Put Bella in the Witch Elm.
They're the author's Alex Merrill,
and actually it's a father-son team
who did these two books.
And Alex Merrill is his 15-year-old son,
who helped him write this book
and do all the investigation,
but he put his name on the book.
Which I think is so cool.
That is cool.
That's adorable.
And they're really cool, so I recommend. That is cool. That is a door.
And they're really cool.
So I recommend you go check it out because they went back.
One of the things we'll see with this case is that a lot of the original documents are
very difficult to find.
Things have been lost.
Things were misinterpreted.
There's just a lot of shit going on here.
The forties.
But they went back and really investigated this.
They looked at all the old autopsy reports in the book itself.
They have the actual text of the autopsy reports and all the inquests, all the reporting,
all the investigations.
So it's really interesting and there's a ton of detail that I'm not going to put in here
that I think you should check out those books and see.
So these kids were actually on their way home when they had passed Hagleywood and they were when they saw it they were like I bet there's some stuff because I guess bird poaching is like taking eggs
and poaching out of like nests like stealing. Yeah there's different like things about what they
were actually doing. I think they were up to Noka.
Yeah, they were doing something that they apparently is illegal to do unlike, you know,
Sırr, I brought land and stuff.
They were kidnapping birds.
They were being teens.
That's fuked.
So, when they walked by this, they were like, oh, I bet there's a lot of stuff to do in
there, so they got to try.
So one of them, I believe it was Bob Farmer by all accounts, he saw
Blackbird leave this big hole in a tree. And he followed because he was like, oh, what's
in there? It's got to be an est in there. So he followed and when he looked, he said, you know
what, I'm going to look in here, but it's like dark in here. So he said, you guys go look
in these other trees that are nearby and see if you see anything.
So Robert Hart looked into an old Elm tree and he said immediately he looked into this big hole
in the tree and he said he thought he's an animal skull, but he couldn't get a good look at it.
But he was like, oh cool, there's an animal skull in there, I want to see it. So he got the
other boys to help him and they ended up using a stick
to somehow kind of like lift it up, like stick it into the eyeball of the skull and then
just like lift it up. And this cavity was pretty deep, it was like three feet deep. So
after moving it a bit, they could see that this was clearly not an animal skull. This was a human
skull. So they were able to tell this one because you know the
look of a human skull, but two, it had a big, it had a clump of human hair on one side of it.
Oh my god, that freaks me the full. And it had very human teeth, like a full set of human.
Because teeth take a while to, to go away, to disintegrate, right? They don't go away.
Yeah, right. Never stay in your head. Huh. Yeah.
But it had a full set of two, and you know it's a huge human piece.
I don't think it's human piece.
You know it's human piece.
They're just what they're made of.
That's so cool.
Yeah.
Because like your bones, you know, that would be a long, long, long, long, long, long time
for anything to happen to them.
Yeah.
Fossils, man.
Buh.
Wow.
AM ash.
So he realized that he had found a full human skull.
So they put the skull back into the tree and then they ran into Wallace's goat into
town and ran into Donald's pain who was Fred's older brother.
And when they ran into him, they dragged him back into the Hagleywood and they showed him
the tree.
This is like some stand by me shit.
It certainly is.
They were like, because they were like what they ran into ace in his squad.
Because one of the issues was they were like, we're not supposed to be in here.
Like, and we're doing shit that we're going to get in trouble for.
So like, what do we do?
We just found something really bad, but like, do we tell anyone?
Like, older brother, please help.
Exactly.
So they brought Donald's back.
Donald said he looked into the tree. He saw what they Exactly. So they brought Donald's back. Donald said he looked
into the tree. He saw what they saw. He also saw a green bottle. He saw shoes and he saw more
bones inside the cavity. But again, they were on this land illegally. So they were like, what do we
do? So farmer put the skull back into the tree again and all of them returned home without mentioning
anything to anything. I would be so scared that I would be like cursed from like picking up the skull.
Well, Thomas Willetz was on your vibe because it didn't take him long before he felt very guilty about leaving that.
Yeah. And he immediately told his parents that night about it.
He was like, I need to tell you what I did and what I saw.
Because if not, like who's to say that that lady's spirit didn like if you're trying in your fingers and haunt you?
It's like you picked it up.
Yeah, it she, you got it.
Well, you got it.
And so his parents were like, okay, Thomas.
Looks for that.
Let's bring you.
So they brought him to the lie police station
where they told Sergeant Charles Lamborn
about this entire ordeal.
So they made a plan to go the next day to go through it
because this was at night and this was late at night
and the police were like,
which is kind of funny that the police are like,
yeah, we can't really see in there.
Like, you don't have a flash light.
We'll just go tomorrow.
Like, what if somebody gets rid of it?
Like, what if somebody was watching us?
So these kids discover this and then goes back
and retrieves all that and it's gone.
The forties.
But you know what, at least they didn't.
I guess so there's that.
So when they did go back, they also had with them Sergeant Richard Scarrett, Constable
Jack Pound, and Sergeant Jack Wheeler.
Lots of jacks.
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Download the app today. So the pathologist that was on scene was Professor James Webster.
And he was like apparently very well known in the book that I read.
Like there's a whole chapter on him and like his whole life and all his, you know,
accolades and all that. He's an impressive character.
Get it, child.
They also had detective superintendentsney in a night, I believe.
And he was the senior investigating officer that was in charge of the body, the scene,
and the investigation.
So when Webster retired, actually, like just speaking about how amazing he was, the pathologist,
he was described as quote, the greatest detective of them all.
His evidence sent more murders to the scaffold than any other pathologist in Britain.
Wow.
And they said that he was one
of the most brilliant pathologists in Britain.
What an honor.
So they had like top notch.
That's like a pretty big deal,
just to be like,
oh hey, you were the best detective we never had.
Yeah, it literally was.
It's pretty big.
It's pretty big.
Yeah.
One would say,
one would say it's great. It's pretty big, Brinds pretty big. Yeah. One would say. One would say it's great.
It's pretty big.
It's great.
So.
But police checked the trunk of the tree and they found an almost complete skeleton, almost,
not totally.
The teeth were definitely still there.
They were there.
As Ash is really focusing on these teeth.
And don't worry, we're going to talk about the teeth because there is like some interesting
things at the teeth.
I thought so.
Yeah, it's not like very interesting, but it's a unique thing.
There was also a shoe in the tree trunk with her and a gold wedding ring and some fragments
of clothing. And according to Professor Webster, he said, quote, it would appear probable
that the pair of shoes, because they found another of shoe, like going with that pair, a little ways away from the tree. Oh wow. So he said, it would
appear probable that the pair of shoes, one recovered from the bowl of the tree and the other at
some distance, are connected with this body. As we'll see later, well not as we'll see later, but like
if you read certain sources, people question that a lot, whether these shoes were actually connected to her, because when we get to it, like she is like
pretty old, right? Like, she'd been in the tree a while? Ah, yeah. No, no. Yeah, she,
I mean, they think so. They're not positive. Yeah. But I feel like it would be weird that
like one of her shoes was in the tree and then one was far away and like stayed far away for a little bit
You know like it just seems kind of weird. Yeah, I mean it could have been that the the shoe was in the tree with her and then like an animal
Moved it that's why and then you know things can stay in a wooded area something can stay just like chilling for a long time
Yeah, you know
But I think there there's a couple of things that point to it being like a little strange that
these are her shoes.
The body was then sent for forensic examination by James Webster and he said that he knew
without a doubt that this was a woman, this female, or this female, the skeleton.
He knew that this woman was a female.
This was a female skeleton by all accounts.
And when he went through the aging and everything
like that and time of death and cause of death,
that was when things became a little hairier.
Well, I would assume like back then,
I'm sure that was pretty hard to do.
Yeah, and what he said that he was comfortable
saying that she had been dead
and in that tree somewhere between 18 months and three years.
Yes, so that's like a pretty big stretch.
Big stretch, but he was like, I literally can't narrow it down
any further than that.
Like that's...
I mean, it's a big stretch and it's not.
You know what I mean?
Like, for back then, that was pretty good.
And honestly, they do that today.
Right.
It's just, bones can only tell you so much.
Like, they're great for. Right. It's just bones can only tell you so much.
They're great for telling you very minute details
and some things that you definitely need to help with that.
But when it comes to this kind of thing,
it's like, one for inside.
One for inside.
One for inside.
It's like, hey, day here.
Yeah, in the elements.
And then the trunk of the tree that she was in,
because I'll talk about how small it was and everything, it created its own environment in that tree where it's warm and it can definitely
hasten the whole thing.
But he said that the time of death was in or before October 1941.
That's all he could really say.
He said that he thought she was probably around 35 years old.
They used a ton of different parts of her skeleton to really tell what the age was.
They used cranial sutures, teeth, pelvic bones, and others to determine this.
And what Dr. Webster said was, quote, you can discard anyone, completely anyone under
the age of 25.
I am satisfied about that.
This woman, unfortunately, has not undergone the usual routine joining up of her bones.
But I'm equally certain that the other limit is 40 years of age.
Further, I gave as an estimate probably 35 years of age,
but I cannot be definite as on the other two points.
But my impression is that she is on the 40 side of 35,
rather than on the 30 side of 35.
So I'm supposed to find the mean of all those numbers.
So if you're telling me,
she's younger than 40,
she's older than 25.
I would say she's closer to 40 than she is to 30.
Sure.
So that 35 I think is a pretty good, you know,
compromise.
I love it.
I'm here for it.
I think he did a good job.
Math.
Yeah.
And she had what they described initially
as mousey brown colored hair.
That's rude. Because there was some straight up
rude.
But at one point in an interview,
one of the doctors did say the girl
had ginger hair.
So, oh, she's a ginger.
She could have been a ginger.
And what could have happened was she
could have had ginger hair that kind of
faded into brown.
Over decomposition can definitely like change what hair looks like.
Really? Yeah, so they were, they were kind of, you know, going between those two. And I guess sometimes like brown hair can look a little more ginger during
decom, so it's like, that's interesting. Yeah, so they were wavering a little bit on that. And they believed at first that she was five feet tall. And they thought they thought
that she might have had one pregnancy. And they said they weren't positive about it.
He said he felt comfortable at least like questioning if she had one pregnancy.
How would you be able to tell just through the bones that like I know you get like hips when
you're pregnant. Yeah. Well, the reason you get hips, like after, like all of a sudden,
like I have definitely seen that in action
that all of a sudden I'll put on one of my old pair of pants
and I'm like, oh, okay.
So that's oral, that can still fit in her wedding.
But, or like, or an old dress though
and you go to pull it over your hips
and you're like, those weren't there before.
Yeah.
The hips aren't just like, you know, love handles
or anything, they're literally,
your pelvic bones have spread open. That's so easy. Like to allow that child's room. And you're, you know,
they're sitting on your pelvic bone at one point during pregnancy. So it's like, it spreads
the whole thing wide open. See, I didn't realize that your bones like actually moved when you
figured it out. Yeah, they definitely, and then there's also, I can't remember what the names are,
but there's certain tendons that they believed, especially back then, that would like kind of tear off the pelvic
bone, and they would cause scarring on the bone itself.
They did mention though, like there's certain studies that will say like, you know, things
like horseback riding can cause that to happen though.
Like there's variants that can make it so so it might look like somebody had a child,
but they may not have.
So that's cool.
I think that's where he was back then.
He was like, oh, like it was,
she could have read a lot of my story.
So I don't know.
One of the other things that Ash will be excited to hear
is that she had very unique teeth.
So in Don't Worry, we'll get into it.
So like we said, the skull had a
lot of good evidence attached to it teeth hair. It's good, like that's good. And she was missing
a couple teeth, but they said two of the teeth that were missing had to come out in the tree,
like, or not in the tree, but like after her death. They could determine that.
And one of them was removed through a dental procedure,
like maybe a year before her death.
Oh, okay.
So what he wrote in his report about the skull was,
the skull was in two parts, consisting of the head,
which lay exposed on the floor of the tree bowl,
and the lower jaw, which was in line with the disarticulated vertebrae,
the spine, under the overhang entrance to the hollow bowl and the lower jaw, which was in line with the disarticulated vertebrae, the spine, under the overhang entrance to the hollow bowl.
So her mandible was disarticulated from the rest of her skull.
He also said, and this is very interesting, and this is the thing a lot of people are
like, whoo.
So he said when they got the skull, there was a like big tuft of taffeta fabric that had
been stuffed into her
mouse. Yeah. Yeah. That's telling. So immediately he was like that could be and he said it was
stuffed enough of it and stuffed far enough back that it would have caused suffocation. Oh,
Jesus. So he said quote, tightly pressed over the lower jaw in the cavity of the mouth. I found
part of the khaki or mustard colored dress that the deceased was wearing at the time of her death.
So far as this thrust over the teeth margin, and so firmly adherent to the teeth, was this
part of the apparel that I do not consider it likely, I cannot say impossible that this
came into the mouth accidentally after death.
It appears much more probable that this has been forced into the mouth prior to death.
And if so, this would have been capable
of causing death from asphyxia.
Wow, yeah.
That would be a horrible way to go.
Exactly.
So he's saying, this doesn't look like it just happened
to end up in her mouth after death.
Like it doesn't make sense.
And what it's seeming more and more like
is that that was shoved into her mouth
and then she was stuffed into this tree
and just like a lot.
That's fixated.
Yeah.
Now, there was a portion of the hyoid bone
that they found in the bowl of the tree as well,
but Webster said that it looked like the reason
it was broken was because animals had probably gotten to it.
So he said, because her head had basically after she had decomposed and, you know,
rotted essentially her head kind of just tumbled off the rest of her body.
And they think that's when it kind of broke.
So it doesn't really suggest strangulation.
And we've mentioned in like a recent episode two that doesn't always point to it either way.
So after they kept investigating around the area
after they had found her in the tree,
and they did find the remains of one of her hands,
atibia, and then I believe they found a femur close by.
Well, femur's freaked me out,
but she was missing her right hand,
and they never found it.
Interesting.
From the measurement of the trunk in which the body had been discovered, he said there
was really no way that she would be able to be put into the street after Rigger had
said in.
Yeah.
So, he said she had to have been warm.
It had to have been before Rigger or very much after Rigger had already broken.
Right. Because in he said, this to him said that she was killed very close to the tree or died
in the tree. Because either she was brought there and this person had her, either she was brought
there very quickly and this person had a method to bring her there very quickly like a car. Yeah.
Or she was killed right outside of the tree
or in the tree by stuffing that thing in her mouth.
That's like, that's like very scary.
Because I guess the opening was only 24 inches
by 12 inches.
And then it was, when I looked up,
what 24 inches by 12 inches,
I'm so, it looks like that at like,
it's like a hamster cage.
What?
Yeah, so it's really not that like a big hamster cage.
That's nuts.
I'm like, I'm glad you said that
because I'm so about it.
It's too big.
So I had to, I was like,
I gotta look up exactly like visually what this looks like.
It's very small.
And she had been put in their feet first.
So it's, yeah.
And so he said one thing too,
a lot of people knew about these woods,
haggly woods, and these kind of trees in particular.
So he said he felt like the person was local, because they knew this was an area
that maybe she wouldn't be found for a while in, and in Who Put Bell in the
Whichell, Volume One, they suggest that maybe this was a secondary dump site
and she was moved after decomp had set in.
And this could be true, but it's like,
so there's parts of it that seem like it could be true
that this could be a secondary dump site,
but then parts of the notes of the investigators
mentioned that some of the roots of the tree inside
had like continued to
grow and had like intertwined with some of her decomposed clothing.
Right.
So she was there decomposing for a while.
So it's like, you know, I don't, how many people are going to move a body like while
it's decomposing?
You literally just took the words out of my mouth.
Oh, my next thing when I was thinking about it was like,
if she's fully decomposing, that's not easy to handle.
No, it's not easy to handle.
And it's like, of course, people are gross and terrible
and stuff like possible.
But it's like stuffing her in a tree while she's decomposing.
I know murder is not logical, but I like,
I can't imagine a lot of people wanting to handle
a completely like, putrefying corpse, I know murder is not logical, but I can't imagine a lot of people wanting to handle it completely,
putrefying corpse too far into putrefaction. And then it's also going to be difficult,
because if she's decomposing and you're shoving her into that tiny hole, bits and pieces of her
are going to be embedded into that opening. And they didn't see that, right? You know, so it just doesn't, it doesn't really make a lot of sense to me. No.
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Some more findings around the site was a pelvic bone, a right femur, and a right fibula.
So they were scattered in an area.
But all in all the bones were not all discovered.
She was missing it for you.
Again, records are really weird from back then,
and it's also kind of confusing to understand
if she's decomposing in this trunk for however long she was.
It's weird that no one passing through this wood
would have smelled her decomposing.
I was gonna ask that.
Or seen a massive amount of insect activity
swarming on this tree.
Right.
And this was a place people would walk through,
or be at least around the perimeter of,
and the smell definitely would have permeated
to outside people walking around the woods.
And the records also say that she was just bones and hair.
So her flesh was totally gone.
And the only thing I could think was that this woman
was murdered, allowed to decompose
for a significant amount of time wherever she was, or in a place that was rife with insects
and high temps and things that accelerate D-Comp, and then her skeleton was placed in the
tree.
Yeah.
But that, then you think about the...
You think about the...
Right?
It's like...
So, that's the only thing I can think of.
Her... Her... The roots of the tree were intertwined with her clothing.
I think, yeah.
I think she was in there from the, from the get.
Yeah, it's just a strange, none of it really adds up.
So let's talk about her teeth because I have told you that she had a unique dental pattern.
She'll show me your teeth.
So in the maxilla, which is the top jaw, the left lateral insizer and the second right molar were missing.
But like I said, Dr. Webster said in his records that they were there when she died and must have just fallen out or been like bumped out or something.
They were never found. So there is some speculation that they either fell out
in transport or that the murderer stole them because one, something there could have been like
dental work done in them, which would have identified her or there could have been maybe valuable
material like a gold filling or something like that that he stole from them. They were all in her teeth were in pretty good condition.
There was a couple like one or two that had signs of like a cavity.
Yeah.
The use.
Yeah, but what wasn't taken into account in a lot of the records, which is strange to
a lot of people, especially in the two books I was reading, they are questioning it like
hard, was that her two central insiders,
so her two front teeth, they were, they're very prominent, they are described very big.
And they're very crooked.
Okay.
And when I say crooked, I mean one is almost entirely over the other.
Okay.
It is projected outwards and it's like fully over the other one.
Uh-huh.
So it would be something that people would notice about her.
Yeah, this isn't one of those like,
look, my tooth is crooked and you're like, no, no, it's not.
Like it really was.
When I say it really was, like when you look at the skull,
well, we'll post a picture of the skull.
It's almost entirely overlapping the other tooth and it's projected out. So it would have been something that you would
have noticed the second she's done. It's a distinguishing factor. Yeah, I'm not saying it's a bad
thing. It's just something like you would have been like, oh, like she has that. Right. And if they
were to say that in their records and like really make a point of like this very unique thing
about her two front teeth, people who knew her would definitely remember that about her.
Like they'd be like, Oh, that's unique to her.
That's like so and so.
But they didn't really make a huge thing about that.
They more concentrated on the fact that in her lower jaw,
a couple of her lower teeth were like slightly overlapping each other,
but not even really noticeably.
I don't know why they focused on that part, but not the big part.
Yeah, and I don't know if it doesn't make any sense to me, and it doesn't
doesn't make sense to anybody really when you look back on it, because you're like, you really
should focus. In fact, they posted photos of the teeth in like newspapers and such, and like
in news reports. Yeah. To try to get people to be like, this is what the teeth look like.
Do they like to know somebody whose teeth looks like this?
At one point, they only posted the mandible.
And it's like, that's not the...
Maybe they did it because one of her teeth
had been removed in a dental procedure down there.
Maybe they were trying to point that out.
And the central insiders in the top jar,
the thing that I would have focused on, weird.
But I wasn't working the case.
So you know, things fall by the wayside when I'm not working in 1940's case.
I know that you were alive back then.
I was.
You just pop on over.
I guess I was busy.
I don't really know.
Well, what they did with the teeth was, they started a nationwide search of all dental practices.
And they put out an inquest,
they wrote all the stuff about the teeth,
and they were like, tell us if you've seen anything like this.
Because they said that one of those,
that tooth had been removed probably like a year before her death.
It was pretty close to when she had died.
So that should have been a procedure done
that would be still on record.
Right, right.
And no trace.
No trace of any of these kind of procedures and nothing.
But if she took her own tooth out, like a bad ass.
Maybe she did, I don't know.
There was no evidence to say, I don't know.
If we have any dentists listening,
maybe you can tell by like bone
or anything like if somebody had like dramatically ripped their tooth out like not done it in a
proper way. Right. But I'm not very sure. But again, they didn't mention those central incisors
in the original dental inquest, which is a very strange thing to me. Yeah. Yeah. It's weird.
In terms of the clothing that she was wearing,
she was found, the clothing that was found was in pieces.
Essentially, it was all very decomposed,
but they found pieces of corset,
mustard or khaki colored skirt,
which is what they used to self-cate her, like a piece of it.
There was a slip, which they said was either peach,
or maybe like, I think they said like a fawn colored,
but they couldn't tell because of how decomposed it was.
Yeah.
And a navy blue, what they described
as cheap type of knickers.
That's nice of them.
They're pretty rude in this.
Yeah, for real.
Like, they're just doing her dirty.
But they're like, it's's just like of the time.
Yeah.
And there was also a wool cardigan that matched the skirt.
It had like,
it's actually a really cute outfit.
It was like a, when they look at a bunch of people
have done like mock ups of this outfit,
like a drawing of it, was it cute?
And it looks like a cute 40's outfit.
Yeah, it really did.
But they also said that when it comes to her status in life,
because people were like, all right,
what are we talking about here?
Is this somebody in high society?
Is this somebody who has lived their life in the streets?
Is this somebody in between?
We got to try to narrow this down
because we got to try to find her.
Basically, what they said in their investigation was
She's she doesn't seem like she'd be like crazy high class. She's not like a crazy rich elite person
Money-wise, but like she's also not like you know catching a ride on like a caboose somewhere
You know what I mean like she's she's somewhere she's like middle class problem and what they said was
like she's somewhere, she's like middle class problem. And what they said was she is more over a type of person
who may have been rather neglectful
as to her appearance and habits.
And they said this carious tooth,
so the one with the cavity that was like kind of rotten,
which she had caused her considerable pain
and must have given her a nasty taste in her mouth.
Oh.
So it's like, okay, so she had a tooth rotting.
Yeah.
But maybe she was scared of the dentist.
Yeah.
I mean, obviously she, if they're saying she was in pain,
like, but again, you could take some pills.
Fobies.
Yeah.
Like maybe you're just scared of the dentist.
Or maybe she was in the middle class somewhere,
somewhere floating around the middle.
But still couldn't afford the dentist.
You know, like maybe it was just, I don't know.
It's hard to discern that kind of. Yeah, you can say she did a glectful because she's got one crappy too.
Come on.
She's got one crappy too.
She's like, come on.
Fuck off.
Come on. Don't judge your buyer one shitty too.
Yeah, we've had a shitty tooth once or twice.
You ever had a shitty tooth before?
That's a couple of shitty teeth. That's why I'm using bite aligners.
Why is that so funny?
Sponsor us.
So going back to the shoes, because the shoes were big,
at first they were like, this is a big find.
It's going to help us narrow shit down,
but a lot of the weird stuff came from the shoes.
So Dr. John Lund was another doctor who was given the clothing to examine.
And Detective Inspector Tom Williams was the guy who was specifically given the charge
of the shoes to go investigate this.
There are photos of the shoes in that book that I mentioned, the two books.
There's photos of them.
You can also look it up online.
The shoes were actually dark blue in color, although they had originally looked black
and they thought that they were black.
They were worn out quite a bit.
They were a size 5.5 English standard, and she was only believed to be 5 feet tall, and
they actually later found out that she was probably more like 4-9.
Oh wow.
Yeah, she was very small.
She was very small.
And this would be considered a very big shoe for someone that size.
Okay.
So what was weird to them was they said, you know, these were very well worn out, but there
was no sign that there was any kind of thing like padding in the shoe.
Like if she wore these shoes, they would be huge on her.
Yeah.
So they were like, and they were worn out.
So she was, whoever wore these wore them a lot.
Right.
But there's nothing that would keep these on her foot.
Like these would be a very uncomfortable thing to wear.
It's very strange.
So according to the volume one book, on May 1st,
they were able to identify the make and model
of the actual shoe.
And they were able to trace it back to the manufacturer.
It was Clarence Bray Limited, was the manufacturer.
And their records show that this shoe in particular
was quote, a blue semi-crumbs side Gibson shoe
with three rows of pin punching on quarter and vamp.
It was made on a 97 last with leather through Crape soul and fair stitch four part and crape heel. I would never know what that is,
but if you look at the picture, you're like, yeah, sure. There's like you are
speaking gibberish. There it is. It was made between April and June 1940. That's
when it was manufactured. Okay. And they were able to track these shoes to the
actual stores in the area that they were sold to. And they were able to track these shoes to the actual stores in the area that they were sold to.
And they were even able to further narrow it down because they were able to see who sold that size shoe.
Right. Right. So, C-A-L in limited of Bilston Stafford's year, they got six pairs of those shoes.
Mezzers Ambrose Wilson Limited limited of London, got 72 pairs.
They liked them.
They liked them.
And Mezzers, Darnell and Son in Shoreditch, London,
received 54 of those pairs.
Also liked them.
So not a crazy amount to look for.
Like one of them only got six.
So they could do that in like a day.
Yeah, so they went around and they started talking
to these shop owners and they were
getting a better understanding of how popular these shoes were.
And they found that locally these shoes were definitely a quick sell.
So they were going to sell out pretty quick.
And they likely would have sold out right when they got them.
So they were like fashionable shoes.
They were just like, they were cute shoes and they were also just like,
I think, comfortable, they were fairly priced and they were, you know, you could wear them for a while.
I think they were just good shoes, essentially. So the investigators now think that they likely
were bought around the date of June 1940 and that's when they were made in sentender stores.
But remember, they said there's a good of mountainware
of wear and tear on these shoes.
And what they estimated about six months of good hardware
was on these shoes.
So the earliest shoe was in that tree was June.
And likely closer to December 1940.
And that would put her a little over two years dead
before being found in that tree.
Okay.
Because they were trying to use the shoes and the six months of wear on those shoes and
when the shoes would have arrived in the stores to kind of estimate when she would
have bought them, the six months of wearing them and then her end to the dead.
But because we're not positive these are her shoes. It really can, it makes you think
a little bit. But again, they weren't proven to not be her shoes either. It's so weird
like talking about the shoes because, and like talking about her, like buying them and
being alive and like putting so much wear into them, and then they were found in a tree.
Yeah. Like, there's something so creepy about that. There is. There's a lot of creepiness
in that. Yeah, there definitely is so
Now that they have all of this information and really from like Dr. Webster's like really comprehensive look and all the inspectors working on this
They really tried to like they didn't have a lot to work with they really did they really didn't they're given it their best shot
I feel them trying I feel them giving it the old college try. So they cobbled together a description of her,
what she was wearing, where they think she was in life,
like her shitty tooth everything.
And the Worcestershire Constabulary
got together a campaign to spread the word
to try to coax out her identity.
They were like, someone's got to know who she is.
Right.
They asked anyone to come forward, any witnesses,
anyone who could know her, but no one came.
Now one person, they looked through 3,000 missing persons
reports around the country, nothing.
What?
Couldn't find anything that went with it.
And it was actually a year, it wasn't until a year after
her discovery on March 28th, 1944.
This is when the who put Bella in the witchelm thing became a thing.
So at first they put all this stuff out, they asked for anything, nothing happened.
Right. It was just kind of like, what do we do?
That's crazy to me.
But then a year later, a man named Wilford White saw writing on the wall near his home.
Spooky.
And it was in shock.
It's a poof.
And it was handwritten, and it said,
Hagley Wood Bella.
That's all it said.
And another one was written on another wall in Birmingham.
And it said, who put Bella down the witch-hound?
Hagley Wood.
This was Banksy.
This was Banksy.
A few days later, on March 30, a guy named James W. Rowley saw another one on a wall on Hayden
Hill.
It said, who put Lou Beller in the witchelm?
Was that mean?
I don't know.
They were all in chalk, and they all had the same or similar handwriting, and the styles
were like weird and similar.
They were able to determine when they looked at the chalk, I guess later, that it was the same chalk and it was the same handwriting.
Weird. And this was put in the paper because people were like, who fuck did this?
But this caused a bunch of like copycats to pop up people were dead everywhere now.
But then on August 1944, on a subway wall, same writing, same chalk. It said, Hagleywood, Lubella, address opposite the
Rosencrown raspberry. What's that mean? So they were like, what the fuck does that mean?
Well, on August 3rd, two days later, on a fence, like this wooden fence, it's really creepy
the picture of it. They found the same writing in chalk and it said address was opposite Rosencrown has very
Hagleywood Lou Bella.
I hate it.
So they're like, what the fuck?
On the same day on a wall nearby, they saw the same chalk, same handwriting, Hagleywood
Lou Bella was no pros.
And what that is, because when I saw it, I was like, what, what does that mean?
That is slang for quote unquote prostitute.
That's what I was saying. So they were saying she was sex worker. That's what they were saying.
Which to me is interesting because when we get into theories, I think she might have been a
missing sex worker. Oh, you think so? Yeah. I think that's why she hasn't been identified yet
because I think it just made it. It seems, and I think it seems to fit one,
at least that's what I think.
So now remember, this is around the time
that a little thing called World War II is happening.
Right.
And it ended in 1945.
So this is right when everything's going on.
So the world, when it ended in 1945, the following year,
the world was much more concerned with like
dealing with that and like coming back into terms
with everything and like welcoming these,
you know, getting these soldiers home and like
coming back from all of it,
this small town murder kind of faded into the background.
Which is sad.
Yeah, I got thrust back into the shadows, which sucks.
But then in 1984, in a parking garage,
somebody wrote Who Put Bella in the Witch Elm's book. In
1993 that the phrase Who Put Bella in the Witch Elm was put on the Witchbury
Obolesque in Hadgley, and that's the famous
big Obolesque. It's like, um, the big stone monument.
It's the one that you see in this case,
every time you google it,
it's like that big stone monument
that says who put Bella in the witch home.
Yeah. That's when that happened in 1993.
It gives me like the chills.
Now, what's weird, just a quick, like, really quick update.
November 2020, that, the very famous one on that old list was changed.
Somebody crossed out who enraut hers.
Hers put Bella in the witchelm?
Yes.
Which nobody can really, I guess there is like a graffiti artist called hers.
But nobody, everybody's like what?
What's that makes sense?
But then again, that could have been anybody that like, it could have been anybody. Right. But that's what people like, what? What's that makes sense? But then again, that could have been anybody that like,
it could have been anybody.
Right.
But that's what the people were like, you what?
Yeah, it's just a strange.
And it was in November 2020.
So it wasn't that long ago.
So in 1944, there was a police report
and it was a missing person by the name of Bella.
Uh-huh.
She disappeared three years before 1944.
Hello, which is when?
1941.
Yes.
She was a sex worker who had,
she had apparently worked on Hagley Road.
Mm.
Nothing was ever really found about this.
That's it.
It's in a police report.
They never found her.
Her name is Bella.
Why would Bella be the name that would suddenly come up?
Well, that's the thing.
I mean, obviously people will point to like,
Bella means beautiful and like, beauty and all that.
Like maybe that's what people were doing,
but like, what a weird coincidence
and what a name to pick.
Yeah, that is very strange.
You know, like to just throw Bella out there
and Lou Bella. Right. Like, that is very strange. You know, like to just throw Bella out there and Lou Bella?
Right.
Like, one a lot of times we call unidentified people,
obviously Jane Doe, like why wouldn't we just say
like who put Jane in the witch home?
Yeah.
It's like very, yeah.
It is telling.
To me, it seems like especially back then,
they weren't looking into sex workers disappearing.
No, of course.
You know, like we have trouble, I mean, the Willie picked an episode will show you anything.
We still have issues with that in this world.
And it's like, back then they definitely weren't looking into it.
And it's like, that kind of just went by the wayside.
So we don't, there's no description of her.
There's no, it doesn't seem like she had anybody close to her that they could contact.
And like, it just kind kinda went by the wayside.
But it's like the timing works out,
the location works out, the name works out.
So I mean, that's a lot of things that fit into the puzzle.
And it's like, was it someone who knew her
or someone who's told the story
and decided to put that out there?
Right, right.
Because it's like, it's strange.
Cause in 1944, it's like,
all these who put Bella and the witch
alms were happening. So it makes sense if it was reported in 1944.
It does. It's just strange. There's also a quick little mention of, and I
didn't find anything else about it, that there was a police report around that
time that she was found where like two guards were in Hagleywood
because they were on the Hagleywood estate.
And they were doing like rounds
and they came across like a car late at night
coming into the woods which was weird.
Yeah.
And when they went up and like kind of checked it out.
And asked the window like they knocked on the window
and the guy rolled down the window.
I think he was an officer of some sort.
Or was he just drifts a little more?
He wasn't acting a little strange and they said somebody else was in the car
and it was somebody who was huddled up on the seat and not moving.
Then they assumed she was sleeping so they were like, okay.
And they were like, you just got to get out of here and he was like, okay, weird.
But nothing was ever followed up on that. Right, that's creepy. So it's like, you just got to get out of here and he was like, okay, weird. But nothing was ever followed up on that.
Right, that's creepy.
So it's like, who was that?
Yeah, and like, I'm like,
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping.
I'm like, I'm sleeping. I'm like, I'm sleeping. I'm like, I'm into a couple of like crazy or theories too, and it's like I think it's something pretty simple
I think it's something usually it's always terrible
Terrible nonetheless, but like more simple than like witchcraft or anything like that. I think it's like
Even like when we did the episode with Paul Holes and Billy Jensen and we were talking about the Oklahoma Girl Scout murders and Paul brought up how we were like, it was so weird that they were placed so
far like from the, you know, like, near the road.
And then he was like, well, yeah, like maybe somebody had a getaway car.
Like, yeah, and not the getaway car didn't come.
So they just had to like, like, get away car running late, very simple answer.
Because when we were talking about it, we were like, well, he cleaned up some of the blood
and stuff the sheets down in the sleeping bag.
Why would he do that?
And I was like, they're just gonna find the sheets.
Like, you didn't hide them well.
And he was like, well, they were probably planning
on taking them with them.
And I was like, oh my God, I didn't even think of that.
That's why you're the detective.
And I'm not exactly.
But yeah, it's like, it really is.
It's like, you have to like program your brain to like...
It's just simplify it.
Look at it, what it is.
Not try to like totally overanalyze.
And it's hard to do.
So the human brain, I think, makes things way more complicated.
We do.
Well, we fill in pieces when we don't need to.
Yes.
So in 1945, a woman by the name of Margaret Murray an anthropologist and archaeologist from the University of college
University College London
She actually worked there. She was she was 72 years old by the way that's when she retired. I was like damn
She was known as like a she was a well-known archaeologist and anthropologist
But she was also known to be fascinated and very knowledgeable about the history
and anthropology surrounding witchcraft. In this theory, you became very prevalent, like people
know all about this theory. It's known as the witch-called hypothesis. And it was brought forward. It brought this into a fantastical realm when I think
it didn't need to be because I think this is just so pretty, pretty not like dry murder, but like
we don't need to bring like magic into it. Of course we do. But do you remember, like I said,
that Bella was missing her right hand. Yes. And they did, they were like, what the hell is that?
Well, they did end up finding the bones of her right hand,
partially buried quite a bit away from the end.
That's kind of weird.
And they thought maybe it had been buried
through the elements and the moles.
You know, that's very likely.
Well, Margaret thought that this was purposeful.
This was purposeful.
See, there's a ritual in dark magic, apparently, called
the Hand of Glory, where bones are scattered to the wind. So she said that this was likely
an occult ritual that was done on Bella, who was a witch. And she said a spell would
be done, and then after they would sacrifice her. And when they sacrifice her, her hand would be removed
from her arm, and it would be left 13 paces away
from her body.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
There are, of course, sources that say
that that hand was buried 13 paces away from the tree. There are other ones that say there's
to be really good detectives unseen like counted the pace. No, I don't.
And that's why, and she also thinks that the choice of tree was very
significant because witchelms play an important part in
black and like the dark arts. And trees also
when it comes to like paganism and like, you know, any kind of thing like that,
trees do have connections to like souls and binding magic and binding spells and stuff, so she really went with that.
There was also a, there was also apparently Beladonna around this area that, which is the ancient name for deadly nightshade.
And that's a plant that's closely associated
with witchcraft.
So she kind of put this all together and was like,
this is obviously an occult ritual that happened.
Yeah, I don't believe that.
I could see, I feel like there is sufficient evidence
to consider it at the very least.
There was also groups and families of travelers in the areas that they wanted to try to blame this on.
That either she was one of them, like part of their family, that something happened and she was murdered and sacrificed,
or that she was an outsider and was attacked.
But no evidence. This is literally just...
There's nothing for a while.
But you'll find it in so many places,
people just conjecturing about this.
Now the occult theory, like the witchcraft theory,
was cranked up a little bit a notch
because on February 14th, 1945,
on very nearby Mian Hill,
there was a man named Charles Walton, who was 74 years old.
I believe he was a farmer and he was murdered.
And it was a strange murder.
So his autopsy showed that he was severely
bludgeoned by his own walking stick.
He had a ton of lacerations on his arms from trying to fight off his attacker.
And then his throat was sliced wide open by a sickle blade.
What?
And it was still in his neck when he was found.
They had left the sickle.
That is terrifying.
And he was discovered skewered to the ground by a pitchfork.
What?
Yes.
Like an actual like pitchfork skewered him into the ground through his chest.
Whoa.
Yeah.
And so of course people were like, this is the work of the devil.
I mean, this is it.
And that's warranted.
And it's unsolved.
What?
So they were assuming that in this area there was some shit going down.
And since these are too strange, because it's like, yeah, finding someone concealed
in the woods is not a, that wouldn't ring any bells
of like this much free.
In a tree.
In a tree is definitely a different feel.
Yeah, I feel, you know, and of course,
it's like calling it the witch element stuff,
it gives it like a whole nother vibe.
But still.
And it's like, of course it is two strange murders
and two strange scenes.
Yeah, that's for sure.
So I can give them that.
I don't think that that bella was killed by occultists.
I just don't.
I have it.
I don't know.
That's me.
And like I say, the people who are blaming the travelers in the area and the families,
I think that was just an easy scapegoat to be like, well, they were in the woods sometimes.
Sorry, but they didn't.
We don't know anything about them.
Like, they must be evil.
Bears are in the woods too sometimes, but I don't think a bear did it.
And again, no evidence of this.
But then in 1953, something interesting happened.
Codils.
A journalist named Wilfred by for Jones,
investigated, he went into this.
And he said in his thing was,
he definitely didn't believe the travel theory
and that the traveler theory was like gaining steam.
Oh.
And I think so, like in steam in the sense that no evidence
was like-
People were like buying into it.
But people were like, must be it.
Right.
And so he was really trying to dispel this
because he was like, I just dangerous.
And he was like, it's dangerous
and we're looking at the wrong thing.
Right.
And he was like, I think he said he was like,
we have to get away from this witchcraft bullshit.
And we have to get away from this traveler theory
because these aren't what happened
and we're not looking at the real case.
Evidence.
Because we're all getting like mystified by this like
crazy or thing.
Right.
So he actually said in an article
he published in the paper,
I do not accept it about the traveler theory.
And he said, every crime is laid at the door of the Romanese.
Mm-hmm. Because he was like, it's true, it's just an easy scape group.
It is. So then he wrote this, he published this whole thing, and then he received at the newspaper
a letter days after publishing this research and thoughts. And what it said, it was by a woman,
it was signed from a woman named Anna and it said finish your articles
The witch-elm crime by all mean on the witch-elm crime by all means they are interesting to your readers
But you will never solve the mystery
The one person who could give the answer is now beyond the jurisdiction of earthly courts
The affair is closed and involves no witches black magic or moonlight rights
Much as I hate having to use nom to plume,
I think you would appreciate it if you knew me.
The only clues I can give you are that the person responsible for the crime
died insane in 1942, and the victim was Dutch,
and arrived illegally in England about 1941.
I have no wish to recall anymore, Anna.
Whoa! So of course, they get this, and they're like, 1941, I have no wish to recall anymore, Anna. Whoa.
So of course, they get this and they're like, okay, so you're telling me that
Bella was Dutch.
Yes.
You're telling me that the person who killed her is dead and died in,
in insane, apparently.
Yeah.
Tell me more, tell me more.
Little tell me I like to she have a car.
So they begged, they were like, Anna, come forward. Please. So they put it
in the paint like, please, Anna, just come forward. Tell us what you know. That could be
anybody writing in. Anna showed up. What? Yeah. Okay. Anna showed up. She showed up
at the police station. She came and she was like, I'll tell you what I know. So her real
name was Una Haynesworth. And she was going by Anna because at first, she was like, I don't know if I want to be part of this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And she told them what she knew.
She said she was formally married to a man named Jack Mossup.
And after he was like fine, everything was good.
They had a young son.
They had gotten married.
Everything was wonderful.
But suddenly he just began like changing.
He was drinking more.
He was hanging out with unsavory characters. He was drinking more. He was hanging out with
unsavory characters. He was staying out late. He would suddenly have money when like they didn't
know where he came from. Yeah. And he was hanging around a man called Van Rolt. And she also
mentioned another man, but I can't find his name. Yeah. They were apparently kind of bad news
bears. Okay. According to her. And they were concerned. So one news spares. Okay, according to her and they were concerned
So one night she said he came home from being out very late with Van Roltz and
he confessed to her that he and
This Van Rolt character had put a woman in a tree
Okay, imagine if John came home to you and he says to you. He says I
Put a lady in a tree.
I'd be like, well, you should walk right back the way that you came in and never
come back again.
I feel you should stick your own acid a tree right now, because that's where I'm
going to put you.
Like I have a true crime podcast.
I can't know this information.
Thank you, and a tree.
So Mossup and Van Ralt had apparently gone.
Some people, some versions of this have another man involved
I think there was some, it seems likely that there was another person
They had gone for a drink at the little sin arms, which was in haggly. It's like a pub
um
Apparently this woman who he referred to as the Dutch woman
Was with them and later that night they're driving back and her husband Jack was driving Van Rolt's
car.
And this Dutch woman, according to him, was in between the two men in the back seat.
And she said the woman was drunk or acting very strange.
She referred to it as was acting awkward, which I was like, same.
So I was like in awkward situation.
And she just suddenly passed out while driving, like,
like, flocked over onto one of them.
Now, one story says that Van Rolt thought this was like,
oh, I have a funny thing we can do because she passed out.
And he was like, let's put her in the hollow of the tree.
And she'll wake up in the morning and be like frightened and changing her, her
waist. Oh, okay.
Cause who are you?
Which changed your damn waist.
What?
That one doesn't seem as likely.
But I think it was him trying to make it less, yeah, make it, put them, quote,
innocent.
The other one says that while they were driving Van Rolt told Jack that this Dutch woman, he was like, she's dead.
She slumped over and he was like, did she pass out and he was like, now she's dead.
Which is like, did he poison her?
And he's having something.
And he told him, drive to Hagleywood.
Like he immediately was like, drive there.
And then he forced Jack to help them stuff her into the tree.
Oh man. Now he also was apparently so upset about this that he was sure he had just had a nightmare.
He was like this wasn't real, this didn't happen. So he went back to the tree the next night
and she was still there. So he had originally thought she was a German spy.
Like this is like spy theories that was during World War II.
Well, in one, I'm not going to go into the one that a lot of people talk about because
it's been proven false. So this is just literally no reason to go into it. But the spy stuff
just makes it even weirder. Yeah, I just think it's crazy. So he started, according
to her, after he told her this, things got bad, obviously, because she was like, what's
happening? He started acting stranger and stranger,
more and more erratic and volatile,
so she left him.
She took her son and she was like, bye.
Well, it's probably eating away at him.
Well, he later told her after,
so they divorced, and they still talked a little
because he was having a lot of trouble
with the care about him.
And he was saying that he was losing his mind because he kept having a lot of trouble with the care about him. And he was saying that he was losing his mind
because he kept having a recurring nightmare
of a woman staring out at him from a tree.
And when the police wanted to talk,
yeah, fuck you.
And he said, I'm having it every single night,
I can't, every time I close my eyes,
I see this woman leering at me from a hollow of a tree.
Why did you say it again?
Learing at me from a hollow of a tree. That spooky. Just staring at me from a hollow of a tree. Why did you say it again? Learing at me from a hollow of a tree.
That spooky.
Just staring at me from a hollow of a tree.
That's like the telltale chart.
Yes, it is.
But like the same thing, but like more scary.
But like a woman in a tree.
So it's like the same thing.
That's so terrifying.
So the police, when she tells them all this,
they're like, hey, can we talk to Jack?
Yeah, we're dead, right?
Well, at this point, they didn't know that.
They were like, what?
They didn't know if she was telling the truth about that.
Sure.
And they were like, where's Jack?
And she was like, well, he was committed
to the Stafford Mental Hospital because of this.
He couldn't, with those recurring nightmares,
he was literally like losing his mind.
And he died at 29 years old in the hospital.
What?
And it was before the body in the witch helmet was found.
So he knew she was there and she hadn't been found
and that was making him go crazy.
Look at my arm.
Yes.
Because honestly, and this is record.
It's record that he died in this hospital.
Yeah, yeah.
It's record that he was complaining about these dreams. And if she had been found, I don't think that would have been the way
it because I think he was having these because no one found her. Right. No one was like,
I think he probably would have felt some sort of relief if someone found her, but he was
losing his mind because he knew she was there. No one knew. He was the only one who could tell someone, man. He got to.
Too late.
Yeah.
So on record, the way that Anna or Anna, I always say Anna because of Frozen.
Or is it Una?
Well, yeah.
But she had originally said Anna, but yeah, it's Una.
She had written about this.
She said, I had no knowledge whatsoever of the haggly murder until an article appeared in the express and star newspaper.
Neither had I read anything before which I could in any way be connected with the incident I've told you about.
I have not discussed the matter with anyone, and it was not until I was reading the details,
embearing in mind the possible date when the woman met her death, that I in any way
connected with my husband's statement to me in March or April, 1941,
and because of the articles referring to witchcraft, et cetera,
I decided in the first place to write a letter and sign it on her.
So she was saying, because the witchcraft stuff was coming out,
and she was like learning the details about this woman being found,
she was connecting it with her husband, and then she was like,
I have to stop them from going further into this witchcraft bullshit.
Yeah. Because it's just not true. Right.
She wrote, I put sufficient clues in the letter which would have helped them identify me.
And it was only because of a subsequent appeal in the newspaper. And because I felt I ought to say,
what I know of this matter that I decided to arrange to meet you. So she was like, I sent it,
thinking I'm not going to say anything else, but when you guys asked me to come forward,
I felt like that.
How can I not?
Which to me is pretty like, it's pretty awesome, I mean.
Yeah.
So bringing us forward, because nothing really came of this,
he's dead.
They couldn't find Van Roltz.
It's just, so it all just kinda went,
anyway, since though.
Well, in February 2018, a woman named Caroline Wilkinson was asked to recreate Bella's face based on her skull.
She actually had rebuilt Richard III's face after they had found his remains under a parking garage in England. Oh my God. And apparently she was like amazing at this.
She was a professor of craniofacial identification
at Dundee University had to use photographs to do this.
Why did they have to use photographs to do this?
Because they lost her skull.
How do you know that?
They lost Bella's skull.
What?
How do people lose these things?
Seriously, come on.
It makes me crazy.
Look, where do you misplace a human skull?
They lost the skull.
That's nuts.
She, in Birmingham, counselor, Peter Douglas Osborne,
who is like very invested in the belly case
and it's like considered an expert on it,
said searches have been conducted by the police museum volunteers, and they have
confirmed that we hold no exhibits and can find no documentation that may
relate to the case at either at either of the West Midlands police
museums. Wow. But like, where did it go, bro? I don't know when that makes me
insane. But not. Caroline Wilkinson was asked to do this facial reconstruction by the authors of the book
I mentioned.
Oh.
And they were the ones to publish the facial reconstruction in the book.
And it's crazy to look at.
You're like, whoa.
Because it's like the teeth and everything.
You're like, that's her.
Yeah.
So, we'll post photos, but like definitely check out those two books.
I highly, highly recommend.
Because they have so many cool, like, just features of the investigation in them. post photos, but like definitely check out those two books I highly highly recommend,
because they have so many cool, like, just features of the investigation in them. I'll post them in the show notes, but that's where we are. We do not know who put Belle in the witch home, but I am
guessing it was Jack Moss up in Van Rolt. Yeah, I think that we know. Yeah. Wow. I'm glad that we
really did that one, because I definitely feel like I learned a lot more this time., yeah, there was much more in this one than I feel better about it. Good job
Thank you
You're welcome. I hope you guys feel that way too
And we also hope you keep listening and we hope you keep it
But that's where you get your own concepts of any of which I'll even though you're not sure if you poison them or not
You'd like if they just started yeah, don't put anybody in tree. Don't do it. That's the moral of the story.
Don't do it.
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