Haunted Stevenage
By Paul Adams
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Paul Adams
Paul was born in Windsor Ontairio Canada 1966. Currently resides in Olds Alberta Canada.
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Haunted Stevenage - Paul Adams
Copyright
FOREWORD
GHOST – what an enigmatic word. For over 2,000 years ghosts have continued to baffle, puzzle and fascinate mankind. Yet in today’s computer- and mobile phone-obsessed world the true nature of those things that go ‘bump in the night’ still evades scientific explanation. The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word ghost as the ‘disembodied soul of a dead person haunting the living’. This description would conveniently fit most people’s idea of the archetypal spook: a white-sheeted phantom which walks or glides the midnight corridors of a stately mansion or a romantic castle, moaning with clanking chains, completely unaware of being observed by the trembling spectator. However, years of research by paranormal investigators have revealed that there are many different types of what we would term a ‘ghost’. They include poltergeists, crisis apparitions, ‘stone tape’ apparitions, atmospheric photographic ghosts, historical ghosts, and the curious enigma of phantasms of the living. All have their own peculiarities and ways of manifesting their presence or energy. If they all have one thing in common it is their rejection by established science as amounting to proof of an afterlife, being looked upon as preternatural phenomena which will eventually be shown, by scientific means, to have a rational and logical explanation.
In 1882, a group of academics and eminent thinkers established the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) with the express purpose of scientifically investigating ghosts, haunted houses and the claims of mediums and psychics to be able to contact the dead. Over one hundred years on, even though our understanding of certain aspects of the paranormal have become clearer, the question still remains, do ghosts exist and if so what are they? Can mediums communicate with those who have passed on? Are poltergeists really spirit ‘entities’, or are the movements of objects and furniture in poltergeist hauntings the manifestation of externalised stress and frustration of adolescents? Is it places or people which are haunted, or is it, as many sceptics would have us believe, all nonsense?
It would appear that the quest and need for answers to a phenomenon which has mystified generations since the first account of a haunted house was described by Pliny the Younger in Greece twenty centuries ago still continues today. Throughout human history paranormal phenomena has been reported from almost every country on earth, by people of every race, creed and colour. Reports of hauntings and poltergeists regularly make the pages of the tabloids, yet despite years of research by dedicated investigators and the accumulation of mountains of compelling evidence, many people continue to scoff at the idea of ghosts. Quantative evidence is acceptable in the disciplines of medicine or physics; yet it does not seem to be satisfactory to many people in regard to the subject of ghosts. Perhaps there is a reason for this.
Today most people’s perception and idea of ghosts stems from the reaction of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century Romantics against the advances made in science and the Age of Rationalism. The Romantics’ response against forward-thinking philosophies, unleashed firstly by the Renaissance and the Reformation, and subsequently by ideas and values which were fuelled by advances in knowledge, was to retreat into the world of the imagination. Education and technology had freed Man’s mind from the tyranny of ignorance, but spiritually had left him with nowhere to go. Rationalism had robbed him of his mystical safe haven, and the needs of a changing world cast him into an industrial hell hole from which the only escape was the mind. As a rebuff to the cold hard reality of science, the writers of the period – such as Horace Walpole, William Beckford, Mathew Lewis and Ann Radcliff – populated their Gothic novels with ghosts, monsters and fantastical creatures which lurked and roamed within ruined abbeys, labyrinthine castles, dripping dungeons and moonlit graveyards. Supernatural fiction was the antidote to the banality of everyday existence and the fear that science would destroy Man’s need for the supernatural. But, of course, the fictional ghost and those things which genuinely do go ‘bump in the night’ are two completely different things.
Ironically, 200 years on from the Romantics’ hatred of science and rejection of the Age of Reason, modern-day scientists have moved that bit closer to establishing that ghosts, far from being romantic delusions or ‘all in the mind’ may well represent evidence of the survival of the human personality, albeit in the form of a psychic recording. If there is any truth to the ‘stone tape’ theory – that physical surroundings can absorb an impression of violent or tragic events and later, under a combination of circumstances or conditions and with the right person present, play back these recordings – one would certainly expect it to apply to many of the paranormal accounts contained in this book. For here the reader will encounter headless ghosts, phantom monks, violent poltergeists, spectral hounds, as well as invisible entities and ghostly children. Some may well be stone tape apparitions; others possibly historical photographic ghosts, atmospheric phantoms or elemental spirits. In some cases the incidents may well be a case of an overactive imagination. Only research and study will eventually help us understand the enigma of ghosts and reveal their true nature, for paranormal investigation is a journey of discovery and I can think of no one better qualified to guide the reader on an exploration of haunted Stevenage than the author of this book, paranormal historian, Paul Adams. I have known Paul for over ten years since we first met at Borley in Essex in September 2003 and to date we have co-authored three books on paranormal subjects together.
I suspect the majority of the readers of this book will have no trouble in accepting that the strange and curious incidents and accounts contained within represent genuine paranormal phenomena. There will also be those readers who, with open minds and an enquiring curiosity, will want to know more about the subject, as well as the sceptics who with wry smiles may chance to browse its pages. To all these readers I recommend that you draw the curtains, turn down the lights, check under the bed or behind the sofa, and let Paul Adams introduce you to the spooks, phantoms and ghosts of Haunted Stevenage.
Eddie Brazil
High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
2015
INTRODUCTION
THIS is the first book devoted entirely to the ghosts and hauntings of Stevenage. Stevenage has featured in a number of other previous volumes by various authors concerned with the subject of the paranormal in the County of Hertfordshire but none have interested themselves completely with the accounts of strange and inexplicable happenings – both historic and modern – that have been recorded here over the course of many years. When I was asked to write this book I quickly realised that here was an opportunity to explore an aspect of the paranormal that has interested me personally for a long time, namely that ghosts can appear not only to the inhabitants of traditional locations such as old houses and stately homes, but also to ordinary people in modern dwellings and settings that have no previous history of hauntings or similar phenomena.
Today there has been an enormous surge of interest in the subject of the paranormal, fuelled over the past decade by the popularity of a number of reality television programmes on terrestrial as well as satellite and cable TV. The first of these, Most Haunted, which first aired in May 2002 and initially survived fourteen series over eight years, including several sensational live specials and spin-off programmes, brought the subject of ghost hunting and paranormal investigation to the attention of many ordinary people for the first time. However, despite the popularisation, what remains clear is that many people from all walks of life claim to have had paranormal experiences, often those who have no particular or continuing interest in the subject, the most common and familiar of these being encounters with ghosts and apparitions.
In his foreword, Ed Brazil has touched on some of the categories of ghost and hauntings that over time have become generally accepted by investigators as forming a framework into which many paranormal experiences seem to fall. One of these, the so-called ‘stone tape’, seems to explain why some apparitions appear to behave as though they are some kind of paranormal replay of past events that have somehow become imprinted on their surroundings and can, in the presence of a certain percentage of the population – those with some kind of psychic gift or insight – be seen and experienced again. This kind of haunting is most often associated with buildings or structures of great age, where the cumulative emotions and events of a particular location seem to build up over time.
The Old Town High Street, Stevenage. (Paul Adams)
Stevenage, for the superficial visitor a modern ‘new town’, has a long and enviable connection with significant events in the evolving history of this country. And history and ghosts are in many ways one and the same thing. This goes back to Roman times with the town’s strategic position within a day’s march of the three most important centres created by the occupying Roman forces: Londinium (London), Verulamium (present-day St Albans), and Camulodunum (Colchester). The Romans’ vast north–south highway from the Cripplegate fort in the south passed through the area we now know as Stevenage, joining another Roman road which ran from Verulamium in the south to present-day Baldock. In later times, a Saxon village was established where the church of St Nicholas stands today whose name (derived as has been suggested by historians from the generic phrase ‘At the strong oak’ or ‘strong gate’) was eventually stabilised between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries as ‘Stivenhatch’ and later ‘Stivenach’. The prosperity that Stevenage achieved during the days of stagecoach travel along the Great North Road is evident in the many surviving inns and notable buildings that line the beautiful old High Street. In 1946, Stevenage’s designation as a ‘New Town’ under the County of London Plan drawn up by the then Attlee Government, inaugurated a new era of the town’s history. All of these events have in some way affected the psychic fabric of the region and result in the stories and encounters that you are about to read – researched either from existing records and accounts, or personally told to me by the people who experienced them