1 00:00:10,039 --> 00:00:14,320 Speaker 1: Welcome to Unexplained Extra with me Richard McClane Smith, where 2 00:00:14,360 --> 00:00:16,640 Speaker 1: for the weeks in between episodes, we look at stories 3 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:19,120 Speaker 1: and ideas that, for one reason or other, didn't make 4 00:00:19,120 --> 00:00:23,080 Speaker 1: it into the previous show. In last week's episode, Somewhere 5 00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:26,479 Speaker 1: to See, one family in Savannah, Georgia got a little 6 00:00:26,520 --> 00:00:29,320 Speaker 1: more than they bargained for after they bought an antique 7 00:00:29,360 --> 00:00:33,640 Speaker 1: bed and, according to them, simultaneously acquired the ghost of 8 00:00:33,640 --> 00:00:37,400 Speaker 1: a young boy who was attached to it. It certainly 9 00:00:37,440 --> 00:00:40,440 Speaker 1: stands to reason that should you believe in such things, 10 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:44,280 Speaker 1: a bed would be such a fertile receptacle. After all, 11 00:00:44,800 --> 00:00:47,479 Speaker 1: since we each spend on average roughly a third of 12 00:00:47,479 --> 00:00:50,519 Speaker 1: our lifetimes asleep, if we were going to leave some 13 00:00:50,600 --> 00:00:54,320 Speaker 1: ghostly residue of ourselves anywhere, it would most likely be 14 00:00:54,400 --> 00:00:58,480 Speaker 1: our beds. In fact, I came across so many haunted 15 00:00:58,520 --> 00:01:01,440 Speaker 1: bed stories when researching the episode, I was a little 16 00:01:01,440 --> 00:01:04,479 Speaker 1: spoiled for choice in deciding exactly which one to cover. 17 00:01:05,600 --> 00:01:09,560 Speaker 1: One story printed in the Charlotte Observer of North Carolina 18 00:01:09,680 --> 00:01:14,360 Speaker 1: back in nineteen twenty seven, was especially chilling, as recounted 19 00:01:14,400 --> 00:01:17,360 Speaker 1: to the writer Arthur Conan Doyle, who later recorded it 20 00:01:17,400 --> 00:01:21,200 Speaker 1: for posterity. The story involved a woman named Anne Eden, 21 00:01:21,600 --> 00:01:24,479 Speaker 1: a friend of Conan Doyle's, who'd been visiting her sister 22 00:01:24,640 --> 00:01:27,119 Speaker 1: at her country estate in the north of England when 23 00:01:27,160 --> 00:01:31,039 Speaker 1: it began. After a long night of partying, Anne was 24 00:01:31,120 --> 00:01:33,959 Speaker 1: taking her breakfast in bed the following morning when she 25 00:01:34,040 --> 00:01:37,839 Speaker 1: sensed someone else in the bed with her. Turning round, 26 00:01:38,319 --> 00:01:41,040 Speaker 1: she was horrified to see the ghostly head of a large, 27 00:01:41,040 --> 00:01:44,039 Speaker 1: burly man appear suddenly on the pillow next to her, 28 00:01:44,480 --> 00:01:48,240 Speaker 1: only for it to vanish moments later. It was some 29 00:01:48,360 --> 00:01:51,360 Speaker 1: years after that, when visiting her sister again, that she 30 00:01:51,440 --> 00:01:53,760 Speaker 1: found herself back in the same bed for the night. 31 00:01:55,040 --> 00:01:57,760 Speaker 1: Anne was just on the precipice of sleep when a 32 00:01:57,880 --> 00:02:01,720 Speaker 1: terrible clattering drew her attention to a half opened window 33 00:02:01,760 --> 00:02:05,680 Speaker 1: through which a huge, shapeless body appeared to be crawling. 34 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:10,239 Speaker 1: Paralyzed with fear, she could only watch as the thing 35 00:02:10,480 --> 00:02:14,120 Speaker 1: slithered onto the floor and proceeded to drag itself painfully 36 00:02:14,200 --> 00:02:17,760 Speaker 1: on all fours toward the bed, before flinging itself down 37 00:02:17,960 --> 00:02:21,400 Speaker 1: next to her. It was only later that she found 38 00:02:21,400 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: out the bed that had been bought at a fire 39 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:27,320 Speaker 1: sail had once belonged to a deeply troubled man, much 40 00:02:27,400 --> 00:02:30,680 Speaker 1: loathed by local residents. The man was said to have 41 00:02:30,760 --> 00:02:34,040 Speaker 1: kept a terrifying and drunken rain over his servants, and 42 00:02:34,120 --> 00:02:37,919 Speaker 1: had eventually succumbed to a form of drunken delirium, dying 43 00:02:37,919 --> 00:02:41,800 Speaker 1: alone in that same bed in a hallucinatory, tortured fit 44 00:02:42,160 --> 00:02:47,200 Speaker 1: of specter. Haunted mania, The idea of an object harboring 45 00:02:47,240 --> 00:02:50,000 Speaker 1: ghosts or some residue of those who have come into 46 00:02:50,040 --> 00:02:52,680 Speaker 1: contact with it in the past is a common one 47 00:02:52,800 --> 00:02:56,600 Speaker 1: found in most cultures throughout the world. Though objects of 48 00:02:56,680 --> 00:02:59,840 Speaker 1: any age can be considered haunted, it certainly helps to 49 00:03:00,080 --> 00:03:02,680 Speaker 1: spied the imagination if they are a little more on 50 00:03:02,760 --> 00:03:06,200 Speaker 1: the ancient side, as a number of staff working at 51 00:03:06,200 --> 00:03:17,519 Speaker 1: the British Museum in London have testified footsteps echoed down 52 00:03:17,600 --> 00:03:21,680 Speaker 1: the cavernous corridor. As the security guard continued on his rounds. 53 00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:26,880 Speaker 1: Stepping down into the basement, he eventually found himself staring 54 00:03:26,919 --> 00:03:31,040 Speaker 1: at a peculiar and terrifying looking ornament made of a 55 00:03:31,120 --> 00:03:35,320 Speaker 1: dark stained wood. It comprised two dogs, as if standing 56 00:03:35,360 --> 00:03:38,000 Speaker 1: back to back from the waist, with four legs and 57 00:03:38,080 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: two heads, each bearing an impressive array of sharp teeth 58 00:03:43,080 --> 00:03:46,520 Speaker 1: all over its body. Was covered in nails and sharp 59 00:03:46,600 --> 00:03:50,200 Speaker 1: iron blades that had long ago been hammered into its skin. 60 00:03:51,880 --> 00:03:55,160 Speaker 1: The piece, made at some point in the nineteenth century. 61 00:03:55,440 --> 00:03:58,280 Speaker 1: In the Congo region of Africa, is what's known as 62 00:03:58,280 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 1: a fetish, a protect dive magical figure often used to 63 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:06,200 Speaker 1: cure illness or ward off an evil spirit or in 64 00:04:06,240 --> 00:04:09,720 Speaker 1: the case of this type of fetish known as an enchisi, 65 00:04:09,880 --> 00:04:13,400 Speaker 1: it was also used to hunt down and punish adversaries. 66 00:04:14,920 --> 00:04:18,039 Speaker 1: In some Congo cultures, an encisi was one of the 67 00:04:18,120 --> 00:04:21,760 Speaker 1: many tools of the nganga, ritual specialists who would be 68 00:04:21,839 --> 00:04:25,520 Speaker 1: called on by individuals and communities to assist in dealing 69 00:04:25,560 --> 00:04:28,200 Speaker 1: with the many elements of life that were otherwise beyond 70 00:04:28,279 --> 00:04:32,520 Speaker 1: their control. Encissi were often given the form of dogs 71 00:04:32,800 --> 00:04:36,599 Speaker 1: due to their association with death. Since the community's dogs 72 00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:39,440 Speaker 1: were often buried away from the village, they gained the 73 00:04:39,440 --> 00:04:42,479 Speaker 1: status of a creature that could mediate between the living 74 00:04:42,520 --> 00:04:46,000 Speaker 1: and the dead. When the nganga was called on to 75 00:04:46,040 --> 00:04:50,080 Speaker 1: cast a spell, they would concoct the requisite medicine, binding 76 00:04:50,080 --> 00:04:52,599 Speaker 1: it in resin before rubbing it into the back of 77 00:04:52,640 --> 00:04:56,880 Speaker 1: the encisi. Each invocation would then be sealed with the 78 00:04:56,920 --> 00:04:59,960 Speaker 1: hammering of a nail or blade into the totem's body. 79 00:05:00,839 --> 00:05:03,080 Speaker 1: That they were close to a hundred or so blades 80 00:05:03,080 --> 00:05:05,800 Speaker 1: and nails in the piece the security guard was now 81 00:05:05,839 --> 00:05:09,000 Speaker 1: staring at would suggest to some at least that this 82 00:05:09,160 --> 00:05:12,119 Speaker 1: was a piece imbued with no small amount of dark 83 00:05:12,400 --> 00:05:18,039 Speaker 1: retributive magic. All of that was unknown to the guard, however, 84 00:05:18,400 --> 00:05:21,320 Speaker 1: as he stood before it alone at night in the 85 00:05:21,360 --> 00:05:25,240 Speaker 1: bows of the British Museum, feeling suddenly overwhelmed with the 86 00:05:25,320 --> 00:05:30,720 Speaker 1: unmistakable sense that this peculiar, nail riddled sculpture was possessed 87 00:05:30,839 --> 00:05:36,120 Speaker 1: by a deep mystical power. Just then he was gripped 88 00:05:36,160 --> 00:05:39,680 Speaker 1: by the strange, irresistible urge to raise up his hand 89 00:05:39,920 --> 00:05:43,880 Speaker 1: and point directly at it. But as he did at 90 00:05:43,880 --> 00:05:47,880 Speaker 1: that precise moment, the frantic blare of the museum's fire 91 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:52,839 Speaker 1: alarm burst inexplicably into life, startling the guard and releasing 92 00:05:52,920 --> 00:05:58,640 Speaker 1: him suddenly from his peculiar reverie. Over the next few days, 93 00:05:59,279 --> 00:06:01,719 Speaker 1: clearly some thing of the ornament had got under the 94 00:06:01,720 --> 00:06:05,479 Speaker 1: guard's skin. Unable to shape the feeling that he'd somehow 95 00:06:05,520 --> 00:06:08,960 Speaker 1: connected with something in the object, the guard invited his 96 00:06:09,000 --> 00:06:12,480 Speaker 1: brother to see it a few nights later. Sure enough, 97 00:06:13,200 --> 00:06:16,480 Speaker 1: he too found himself gripped by the sudden urge to 98 00:06:16,560 --> 00:06:20,800 Speaker 1: raise his arm and point toward it, And in that moment, 99 00:06:21,160 --> 00:06:27,359 Speaker 1: once again, the museum fire alarms burst inexplicably into life. 100 00:06:31,600 --> 00:06:33,960 Speaker 1: Rosemary Kent, a woman who lives on the edge of 101 00:06:33,960 --> 00:06:37,160 Speaker 1: the infamous Black Hill's Forest, needs your help to find 102 00:06:37,200 --> 00:06:40,560 Speaker 1: her missing son. But to find him, you must investigate 103 00:06:40,600 --> 00:06:44,000 Speaker 1: the mysterious forest yourself. Will you face down the horror 104 00:06:44,279 --> 00:06:47,279 Speaker 1: of the blair Witch and those who serve her. Blair 105 00:06:47,320 --> 00:06:50,120 Speaker 1: Witch is the new horror subscription game brought to you 106 00:06:50,200 --> 00:06:53,240 Speaker 1: by Hunt a Killer in partnership with Lion's Gate, a 107 00:06:53,360 --> 00:06:57,000 Speaker 1: fully immersive experience in the blair Witch universe, delivered straight 108 00:06:57,000 --> 00:06:59,760 Speaker 1: to your door, and its scari as hell with a 109 00:07:00,000 --> 00:07:03,480 Speaker 1: full season comprising of six boxes or episodes. Each box 110 00:07:03,560 --> 00:07:07,680 Speaker 1: will have you sifting through cryptic documents, discovering audio recordings, 111 00:07:07,800 --> 00:07:11,840 Speaker 1: and solving some disturbing puzzles. 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Head to hunter 120 00:07:38,520 --> 00:07:42,560 Speaker 1: killer dot com slash bw unexplained for twenty percent off 121 00:07:42,680 --> 00:07:45,760 Speaker 1: and to show support for the podcast once again, that's 122 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:49,920 Speaker 1: hunt a killer dot com slash bw unexplained. Will you 123 00:07:49,960 --> 00:07:57,760 Speaker 1: Survive the Curse of the Blair Witch. The story of 124 00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:01,600 Speaker 1: the Inkys was detailed in an Apri twenty article in 125 00:08:01,640 --> 00:08:07,440 Speaker 1: The Economist titled Our Ghosts Haunting the British Museum. The article, 126 00:08:07,680 --> 00:08:11,440 Speaker 1: written by Killian Fox, recounted a series of stories as 127 00:08:11,480 --> 00:08:15,960 Speaker 1: told to artist and storyteller Noah Angel, who'd collected over 128 00:08:16,040 --> 00:08:19,240 Speaker 1: fifty different accounts of strange goings on at the museum 129 00:08:19,560 --> 00:08:24,240 Speaker 1: since twenty sixteen. Perhaps one of the more compelling was 130 00:08:24,280 --> 00:08:27,480 Speaker 1: that told by another security guard who'd been locking down 131 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:31,400 Speaker 1: the Sutton Who Gallery at the time. The gallery contains 132 00:08:31,480 --> 00:08:34,680 Speaker 1: articles found buried in the ground at Sutton Who in 133 00:08:34,760 --> 00:08:37,880 Speaker 1: Suffolk in the southeast of England, the site of a 134 00:08:37,960 --> 00:08:41,800 Speaker 1: series of Anglo Saxon burial mounds, including one thought to 135 00:08:41,840 --> 00:08:45,160 Speaker 1: be that of King Radwald of East Anglia, buried within 136 00:08:45,200 --> 00:08:48,360 Speaker 1: a ship surrounded by treasure to take to the next world. 137 00:08:49,800 --> 00:08:53,000 Speaker 1: The centerpiece of the exhibition is the Sutton who Helmet, 138 00:08:53,679 --> 00:08:57,840 Speaker 1: dated to round six hundred CE. It sits prominently perched 139 00:08:57,920 --> 00:08:59,959 Speaker 1: on a small pole in the middle of the gallery, 140 00:09:00,480 --> 00:09:03,559 Speaker 1: staring back at visitors through a pair of black, hollowed 141 00:09:03,600 --> 00:09:09,439 Speaker 1: eyes where once other eyes had been. After inspecting the area, 142 00:09:09,520 --> 00:09:12,960 Speaker 1: the guard pulled shut the room's large wooden doors and 143 00:09:13,080 --> 00:09:16,880 Speaker 1: bolted them securely to the floor before continuing on his rounds. 144 00:09:17,960 --> 00:09:20,440 Speaker 1: So it was with some surprise when the voice of 145 00:09:20,440 --> 00:09:24,160 Speaker 1: the museum's Cecy TV operator burst out of his walkie 146 00:09:24,160 --> 00:09:29,640 Speaker 1: talkie moments later. The doors, it appeared, were now open again. 147 00:09:30,920 --> 00:09:34,160 Speaker 1: When footage of the gallery was reviewed afterwards, it showed 148 00:09:34,200 --> 00:09:37,440 Speaker 1: the doors appearing to open of their own volition, shortly 149 00:09:37,480 --> 00:09:42,080 Speaker 1: after the guard had locked them down. Another story involved 150 00:09:42,200 --> 00:09:45,400 Speaker 1: orbs of white light seen moving about on Cecy TV 151 00:09:45,760 --> 00:09:47,960 Speaker 1: in the early hours of the morning at the top 152 00:09:48,000 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 1: of a staircase in the museum's main hall. Staff on 153 00:09:52,200 --> 00:09:55,480 Speaker 1: duty at the time speculated that perhaps they had something 154 00:09:55,520 --> 00:09:58,880 Speaker 1: to do with a newly installed exhibition that included a 155 00:09:58,920 --> 00:10:01,800 Speaker 1: wrought iron gate that had once stood at the front 156 00:10:01,800 --> 00:10:06,320 Speaker 1: of the infamous Boukenvald concentration camp. The orbs were said 157 00:10:06,360 --> 00:10:09,080 Speaker 1: to have appeared in the same place every night until 158 00:10:09,120 --> 00:10:20,840 Speaker 1: the exhibition and the gates departed. Regardless of what you believe, 159 00:10:21,360 --> 00:10:24,199 Speaker 1: it isn't hard to sympathize with the notion that ancient 160 00:10:24,280 --> 00:10:28,280 Speaker 1: historical objects might retain some kind of residual power or 161 00:10:28,360 --> 00:10:32,079 Speaker 1: presence of the past. That so many stories would spring 162 00:10:32,160 --> 00:10:34,560 Speaker 1: up from within the vast halls and corridors of the 163 00:10:34,600 --> 00:10:38,439 Speaker 1: British Museum is perhaps even less surprising, given not only 164 00:10:38,480 --> 00:10:42,480 Speaker 1: the array of items kept inside around eight million in total, 165 00:10:42,880 --> 00:10:45,600 Speaker 1: but also the dubious manner in which many of them 166 00:10:45,640 --> 00:10:50,439 Speaker 1: were procured. Located on Great Russell Street in London and 167 00:10:50,600 --> 00:10:54,120 Speaker 1: first opened in seventeen fifty nine, the museum as widely 168 00:10:54,160 --> 00:10:57,840 Speaker 1: regarded to be among the finest collections of historical relics 169 00:10:57,840 --> 00:11:01,680 Speaker 1: and antiquities in the world. In recent years, however, the 170 00:11:01,800 --> 00:11:06,600 Speaker 1: museum's function has come under increasing scrutiny. From the vast 171 00:11:06,640 --> 00:11:10,440 Speaker 1: and ancient stone headed sculptures of the Assyrian Galleries to 172 00:11:10,520 --> 00:11:14,319 Speaker 1: the Elizabethans scrying mirror that once belonged to John Dee 173 00:11:14,520 --> 00:11:17,280 Speaker 1: to the more than six thousand human remains that are 174 00:11:17,360 --> 00:11:20,640 Speaker 1: kept there, Each and every piece could be considered to 175 00:11:20,679 --> 00:11:24,080 Speaker 1: carry something of the peoples and cultures from which they originated, 176 00:11:25,240 --> 00:11:29,240 Speaker 1: and though not every piece was acquired under questionable circumstances, 177 00:11:29,280 --> 00:11:32,760 Speaker 1: certainly for many of them, often plundered and stolen during 178 00:11:32,760 --> 00:11:36,640 Speaker 1: colonial times or in the aftermath of war, or traded 179 00:11:36,760 --> 00:11:39,320 Speaker 1: unilaterally by people who never quite owned them in the 180 00:11:39,360 --> 00:11:42,920 Speaker 1: first place. Most famously in the case of the Elgin Marbles, 181 00:11:43,600 --> 00:11:46,480 Speaker 1: there are compelling arguments to suggest they are not where 182 00:11:46,480 --> 00:11:51,400 Speaker 1: they belong, As no Angle suggested, perhaps what the museum's 183 00:11:51,400 --> 00:11:54,240 Speaker 1: staff have been experiencing is not just a result of 184 00:11:54,320 --> 00:11:58,960 Speaker 1: spirits trapped within these objects, but that the objects themselves 185 00:11:59,040 --> 00:12:05,080 Speaker 1: are restless to return to their rightful place. If you 186 00:12:05,160 --> 00:12:07,920 Speaker 1: enjoy Unexplained and would like to help supporters, you can 187 00:12:07,960 --> 00:12:11,240 Speaker 1: now do so via Patreon. To receive access to add 188 00:12:11,280 --> 00:12:14,800 Speaker 1: three episodes, just go to patron dot com, forward Slash 189 00:12:14,920 --> 00:12:18,000 Speaker 1: Unexplained Pod to sign up, or if you'd like to 190 00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:20,839 Speaker 1: make a one time donation, you can go to Unexplained 191 00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:25,320 Speaker 1: podcast dot com. Forward Slash Support. All donations, no matter 192 00:12:25,360 --> 00:12:29,520 Speaker 1: how large or small, are greatly appreciated. Unexplained, the book 193 00:12:29,600 --> 00:12:33,080 Speaker 1: and audiobook, featuring ten stories that have never before been 194 00:12:33,120 --> 00:12:36,560 Speaker 1: covered on the show, is now available to buy worldwide. 195 00:12:36,840 --> 00:12:40,240 Speaker 1: You can purchase through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Waterstones, 196 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:45,400 Speaker 1: among other bookstores. All elements of Unexplained, including the show's music, 197 00:12:45,520 --> 00:12:49,040 Speaker 1: are produced by me Richard McClain smith. Please subscribe and 198 00:12:49,120 --> 00:12:51,960 Speaker 1: rate the show wherever you listen to podcasts, and feel 199 00:12:52,000 --> 00:12:54,439 Speaker 1: free to get in touch with any thoughts or ideas 200 00:12:54,440 --> 00:12:57,440 Speaker 1: regarding the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps you 201 00:12:57,480 --> 00:12:59,560 Speaker 1: have an explanation of your own you'd like to share. 202 00:13:00,080 --> 00:13:03,520 Speaker 1: You can reach us online at Unexplained podcast dot com 203 00:13:03,679 --> 00:13:08,200 Speaker 1: or Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot 204 00:13:08,200 --> 00:13:11,280 Speaker 1: com Orward Slash Unexplained Podcast