1 00:00:10,800 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 1: You're listening to the second and final part of Unexplained, 2 00:00:14,480 --> 00:00:26,880 Speaker 1: Season seven, episode five. Jumping Jack's Thomas Martin didn't want 3 00:00:26,920 --> 00:00:30,280 Speaker 1: to believe it and begged his wife Anne to stop 4 00:00:30,360 --> 00:00:35,720 Speaker 1: saying it. About ten months before, in May eighteen twenty seven, 5 00:00:36,080 --> 00:00:40,159 Speaker 1: Thomas's twenty six year old daughter Maria left their modest 6 00:00:40,159 --> 00:00:43,919 Speaker 1: home in Polstead, a small village in southeast England, with 7 00:00:43,960 --> 00:00:48,720 Speaker 1: her boyfriend William Carder, a local farmer, but Thomas had 8 00:00:48,760 --> 00:00:52,680 Speaker 1: not heard from her since. There'd been letters from the 9 00:00:52,720 --> 00:00:56,160 Speaker 1: twenty four year old William insisting that all was well. 10 00:00:56,920 --> 00:01:01,240 Speaker 1: He'd even visited them occasionally to pass on Maria's best wishes, 11 00:01:02,040 --> 00:01:06,319 Speaker 1: but something was off. The union had been shaky from 12 00:01:06,360 --> 00:01:11,199 Speaker 1: the start, but Maria seemed smitten. William had a history 13 00:01:11,240 --> 00:01:15,240 Speaker 1: of dodgy dealings and was non committal at best until 14 00:01:15,319 --> 00:01:20,080 Speaker 1: Maria fell pregnant. When the baby tragically died soon after, 15 00:01:20,560 --> 00:01:26,520 Speaker 1: Thomas assumed the feckless William would soon disappear. To his surprise, however, 16 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:32,600 Speaker 1: William instead announced his intentions to marry Maria. Then one 17 00:01:32,640 --> 00:01:35,840 Speaker 1: morning he arrived at the Martin's home in a flurry, 18 00:01:36,360 --> 00:01:40,039 Speaker 1: bearing the troubling news that a local police officer had 19 00:01:40,120 --> 00:01:43,560 Speaker 1: ordered a warrant to arrest Maria for having children out 20 00:01:43,600 --> 00:01:47,200 Speaker 1: of wedlock. William had come to urge her to run 21 00:01:47,240 --> 00:01:50,280 Speaker 1: away with him to nearby Ipswich so they could be 22 00:01:50,320 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: married and live the rest of their lives in peace together. 23 00:01:54,440 --> 00:01:57,320 Speaker 1: He told her to meet him at the Red Barn, 24 00:01:58,040 --> 00:02:01,200 Speaker 1: a farm building that his family rented in the fields 25 00:02:01,240 --> 00:02:05,520 Speaker 1: about half a mile east of Maria's home. With seemingly 26 00:02:05,600 --> 00:02:08,280 Speaker 1: no other choice but to go along with it, Maria 27 00:02:08,560 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 1: left the house later that day, dressed in men's clothing 28 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:15,320 Speaker 1: as a disguise in an effort to evade capture, and 29 00:02:15,480 --> 00:02:19,840 Speaker 1: cautiously made her way to the barn. As William explained 30 00:02:19,840 --> 00:02:23,520 Speaker 1: it later, he said she waited there for him until nightfall, 31 00:02:24,240 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 1: until he was able to come and pick her up. 32 00:02:27,760 --> 00:02:31,840 Speaker 1: After Maria then changed into her normal clothes, the pair 33 00:02:32,200 --> 00:02:37,800 Speaker 1: eloped into the night. A week later, William Carder returned 34 00:02:37,840 --> 00:02:42,880 Speaker 1: alone to the Merton's home. He explained to Maria's father, Thomas, 35 00:02:43,160 --> 00:02:46,640 Speaker 1: that there'd been some complications with the marriage license and 36 00:02:46,760 --> 00:02:50,480 Speaker 1: it would take a few weeks to rectify. In the meantime, 37 00:02:51,040 --> 00:02:54,280 Speaker 1: Maria was being looked after some one hundred and eighty 38 00:02:54,320 --> 00:02:57,560 Speaker 1: miles away in Yarmouth, on the south coast of England, 39 00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:01,400 Speaker 1: by the sister of a friend of his called Miss Rowland. 40 00:03:02,280 --> 00:03:05,840 Speaker 1: Once the issue was resolved, he insisted he and Maria 41 00:03:05,919 --> 00:03:09,800 Speaker 1: would be married as planned. In the months that followed, 42 00:03:10,440 --> 00:03:14,600 Speaker 1: with the pair presumably then married. Although William continued to 43 00:03:14,680 --> 00:03:19,520 Speaker 1: update Thomas on his daughter's whereabouts, Maria herself had not 44 00:03:19,600 --> 00:03:26,040 Speaker 1: been heard from. Ten months later, Thomas's wife, Anne, Maria's stepmother, 45 00:03:26,639 --> 00:03:29,720 Speaker 1: was insisting that she let him tell her just one 46 00:03:29,760 --> 00:03:41,840 Speaker 1: more time about the disturbing dreams she'd been having. They'd 47 00:03:41,880 --> 00:03:46,080 Speaker 1: started some time before Christmas. Each time it had been 48 00:03:46,120 --> 00:03:49,760 Speaker 1: the same. Anne would find herself in the middle of 49 00:03:49,800 --> 00:03:53,760 Speaker 1: a field under a starless sky, staring up at the 50 00:03:53,840 --> 00:03:58,160 Speaker 1: large double doors of the red barn. The next thing 51 00:03:58,280 --> 00:04:04,280 Speaker 1: she knew, she was opening them up and entering the building. Inside, 52 00:04:04,640 --> 00:04:07,800 Speaker 1: the barn was empty save for a light carpeting of 53 00:04:07,880 --> 00:04:12,480 Speaker 1: straw strewn across the dirt floor. Then she would see it, 54 00:04:13,520 --> 00:04:17,160 Speaker 1: the small mount of dirt that seemed glaringly out of place, 55 00:04:18,640 --> 00:04:25,200 Speaker 1: and buried underneath it was Maria's body. For months, Thomas 56 00:04:25,279 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 1: tried to ignore it, telling his wife to keep the 57 00:04:28,480 --> 00:04:33,119 Speaker 1: dreams to herself. It was nothing but superstitious nonsense, he said, 58 00:04:34,279 --> 00:04:37,719 Speaker 1: until finally, having heard nothing from his daughter for the 59 00:04:37,760 --> 00:04:40,640 Speaker 1: best part of a year, he agreed to take a 60 00:04:40,680 --> 00:04:45,440 Speaker 1: look for himself. It was a balmy spring morning when 61 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:49,200 Speaker 1: Thomas set out, arriving after a short walk to find 62 00:04:49,240 --> 00:04:54,120 Speaker 1: the place deserted. He stared up at the large double doors, 63 00:04:54,920 --> 00:04:57,640 Speaker 1: then took off his hat and wiped the sweat from 64 00:04:57,680 --> 00:05:02,760 Speaker 1: his brow. Barowed its name to the small red tiled 65 00:05:02,880 --> 00:05:05,840 Speaker 1: roof that lay over the front left section of it. 66 00:05:06,680 --> 00:05:09,279 Speaker 1: There were a few other sheds dotted about, and a 67 00:05:09,400 --> 00:05:13,400 Speaker 1: yard out the front. A soft breeze blew through the 68 00:05:13,440 --> 00:05:17,880 Speaker 1: surrounding fields of wheat, while swallows whipped about in the 69 00:05:17,920 --> 00:05:23,520 Speaker 1: sky above, gorging on flies. Thomas looked back toward his 70 00:05:23,640 --> 00:05:27,320 Speaker 1: home and imagined the walk his daughter had taken there 71 00:05:27,920 --> 00:05:33,080 Speaker 1: all those months ago before running off with William. Then 72 00:05:33,160 --> 00:05:37,240 Speaker 1: he looked back to the barn. Though he hadn't believed 73 00:05:37,279 --> 00:05:41,120 Speaker 1: a word of his wife's supposed visions, it was impossible 74 00:05:41,200 --> 00:05:44,680 Speaker 1: to escape the creeping sense of dread as he unlatched 75 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:50,080 Speaker 1: the doors and pushed inside. The ground was covered with straw, 76 00:05:50,760 --> 00:05:54,440 Speaker 1: but there was nothing else of note. Thomas grabbed a 77 00:05:54,560 --> 00:05:58,599 Speaker 1: rake and began to steadily turn the straw over when 78 00:05:58,600 --> 00:06:02,120 Speaker 1: he uncovered a mound of lea stirred that looked oddly 79 00:06:02,200 --> 00:06:06,160 Speaker 1: out of place. Prodding at it with the handle of 80 00:06:06,200 --> 00:06:10,120 Speaker 1: the upturned rake, he found there was something solid underneath it. 81 00:06:11,320 --> 00:06:14,599 Speaker 1: Thomas got down on his knees and scraped away the 82 00:06:14,680 --> 00:06:19,760 Speaker 1: earth to reveal a black sackcloth, and inside that he 83 00:06:19,880 --> 00:06:24,599 Speaker 1: found the decaying remains of a body. Wound tightly around 84 00:06:24,640 --> 00:06:29,320 Speaker 1: its neck was a green striped handkerchief, which Thomas recognized 85 00:06:29,320 --> 00:06:43,560 Speaker 1: instantly was his daughter, Marias Maria Martin was shot, stabbed, 86 00:06:43,600 --> 00:06:48,320 Speaker 1: and strangled to death by William Cordo. Her senseless killing, 87 00:06:48,920 --> 00:06:51,960 Speaker 1: known today as the Red Barn murder, is one of 88 00:06:52,040 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 1: the most infamous in recent British history, owing to its 89 00:06:55,880 --> 00:06:59,560 Speaker 1: striking title as much as anything else. It was also 90 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:05,000 Speaker 1: the case that made Officer James Lee's name. At the time, 91 00:07:05,600 --> 00:07:09,120 Speaker 1: Lee was a young police assistant who succeeded in tracking 92 00:07:09,160 --> 00:07:13,480 Speaker 1: William Corder down and bringing him to justice. He was 93 00:07:13,560 --> 00:07:18,320 Speaker 1: hung for his crime in August eighteen, twenty eight. Ten 94 00:07:18,400 --> 00:07:21,840 Speaker 1: years later, Lee was given the task of hunting down 95 00:07:22,080 --> 00:07:26,080 Speaker 1: another violent man that was said to be terrorizing mostly 96 00:07:26,120 --> 00:07:30,280 Speaker 1: women in London and the south of England. Rumours about 97 00:07:30,280 --> 00:07:34,400 Speaker 1: a mysterious, cloaked and sprightly figure that would eventually become 98 00:07:34,440 --> 00:07:37,960 Speaker 1: known as springheel Jack who could leap ten feet in 99 00:07:38,000 --> 00:07:42,600 Speaker 1: the air, had been steadily growing throughout the eighteen thirties. Then, 100 00:07:43,000 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 1: on the night of February eighteen thirty eight, he was 101 00:07:46,360 --> 00:07:49,720 Speaker 1: said to have attacked eighteen year old Jane Olsop on 102 00:07:49,800 --> 00:07:53,440 Speaker 1: her front doorstep in old Ford, just east of London. 103 00:07:54,960 --> 00:07:59,000 Speaker 1: Alsop claimed the man or whatever he was, had clawed 104 00:07:59,000 --> 00:08:03,040 Speaker 1: at her with sharp metal talons and spat blue flames 105 00:08:03,080 --> 00:08:06,560 Speaker 1: into her face before her sister was able to pull 106 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:11,280 Speaker 1: her back inside their house. Though many questioned Orsop's account, 107 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:15,840 Speaker 1: Officer Lee was inclined to believe it, perhaps not the 108 00:08:15,920 --> 00:08:19,920 Speaker 1: more fantastical elements, but certainly that a man would be 109 00:08:20,000 --> 00:08:24,560 Speaker 1: more than capable of carrying out such an attack. When 110 00:08:24,560 --> 00:08:28,400 Speaker 1: a large dark coat was found just outside the Orsops 111 00:08:28,440 --> 00:08:32,560 Speaker 1: front gate, along with a single candle the one Jane 112 00:08:32,559 --> 00:08:35,040 Speaker 1: said she'd brought out to the attacker on the night 113 00:08:35,120 --> 00:08:39,520 Speaker 1: in question, there was little doubting that something had genuinely 114 00:08:39,600 --> 00:08:44,920 Speaker 1: taken place. Officer Lee began his investigation as soon as 115 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:49,040 Speaker 1: Jane reported the crime to the local police. Working through 116 00:08:49,080 --> 00:08:52,360 Speaker 1: the night, he issued his report the very next morning, 117 00:08:52,720 --> 00:08:55,240 Speaker 1: stating that he was in no doubt that the person 118 00:08:55,280 --> 00:08:58,720 Speaker 1: who'd committed the outrage had been hanging round the neighborhood 119 00:08:58,760 --> 00:09:03,320 Speaker 1: for the past month. A tall, thin man wrapped in 120 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:07,840 Speaker 1: a large Spanish cloak had been seen frequently wandering the 121 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:13,000 Speaker 1: local lanes, sometimes carrying a small lantern, frightening passers by. 122 00:09:14,400 --> 00:09:18,880 Speaker 1: On one occasion, after partially revealing a bazaar and grotesque 123 00:09:19,000 --> 00:09:23,880 Speaker 1: costume under his coat, the mysterious figure escaped pursuit by 124 00:09:23,920 --> 00:09:29,360 Speaker 1: what witnesses described as extraordinary feats of agility. One theory 125 00:09:29,520 --> 00:09:34,000 Speaker 1: was that Henry Beresford, Marquess of Waterford, was the culprit 126 00:09:34,720 --> 00:09:38,200 Speaker 1: as it transpired. Although he may well have carried out 127 00:09:38,240 --> 00:09:41,640 Speaker 1: his own spree of late night attacks on women, the 128 00:09:41,679 --> 00:09:46,040 Speaker 1: so called mad Marquess supposedly had a solid alibi for 129 00:09:46,120 --> 00:09:50,679 Speaker 1: the night that Jane Alsop was assaulted, so Officer Lee 130 00:09:51,080 --> 00:10:05,520 Speaker 1: turned his attentions elsewhere. Alongside a mister Young, another London 131 00:10:05,559 --> 00:10:11,119 Speaker 1: based police superintendent, the relentless Officer Lee interviewed several witnesses 132 00:10:11,320 --> 00:10:14,199 Speaker 1: who'd been in bare Bind Lane at the time of 133 00:10:14,240 --> 00:10:17,760 Speaker 1: the assault. The street on which the Orsop family lived. 134 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:24,000 Speaker 1: Two suspects quickly emerged, a local bricklayer named Paine and 135 00:10:24,080 --> 00:10:29,120 Speaker 1: a carpenter named Millbank. One witness testified to seeing Pain 136 00:10:29,240 --> 00:10:34,000 Speaker 1: and Millbank walking along bear Bindlane away from the Orsop's cottage, 137 00:10:34,360 --> 00:10:38,120 Speaker 1: as the family's cries for help rang out behind them. 138 00:10:38,640 --> 00:10:41,760 Speaker 1: Millbank was also said to have been wearing a white 139 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:46,400 Speaker 1: shooting jacket under a large coat at the time. To 140 00:10:46,520 --> 00:10:50,079 Speaker 1: Officer Lee, it sounded a lot like the tightly fitting 141 00:10:50,320 --> 00:10:53,920 Speaker 1: white oil skin outfit that the attacker had worn under 142 00:10:53,920 --> 00:10:58,840 Speaker 1: his coat, as Jane Orsop described it. Shortly after the attack, 143 00:10:59,240 --> 00:11:02,560 Speaker 1: Pain and Millbank were then spotted in a dark lane 144 00:11:02,960 --> 00:11:08,319 Speaker 1: outside a nearby pub, quietly discussing some kind of rascally act. 145 00:11:09,320 --> 00:11:12,120 Speaker 1: The pair were then said to have stopped talking when 146 00:11:12,160 --> 00:11:17,600 Speaker 1: they spotted someone in earshot. Under questioning, Pain and Millbank 147 00:11:17,800 --> 00:11:22,840 Speaker 1: denied carrying out the assault, although Millbank also admitted to 148 00:11:22,920 --> 00:11:26,280 Speaker 1: being so drunk that evening that he had little recollection 149 00:11:26,440 --> 00:11:31,520 Speaker 1: of anything. Another witness then emerged, stating that he had 150 00:11:31,559 --> 00:11:34,960 Speaker 1: also seen Pain and Millbank near the Allsops that night, 151 00:11:35,600 --> 00:11:39,800 Speaker 1: but also to other possible suspects, a boy and a 152 00:11:39,880 --> 00:11:43,560 Speaker 1: young man in a large cloak who he overheard talking 153 00:11:43,840 --> 00:11:48,840 Speaker 1: about spring heeled jack. The two witness testimonies could not 154 00:11:48,920 --> 00:11:54,520 Speaker 1: be reconciled by magistrates of the two Millbank was formally 155 00:11:54,600 --> 00:11:59,160 Speaker 1: arrested and tried for the crime. Sadly, for Officer Lee, 156 00:11:59,520 --> 00:12:03,560 Speaker 1: he was a quitted of all charges. Further inquiries into 157 00:12:03,600 --> 00:12:06,880 Speaker 1: the incident were called for, but all appeared to have 158 00:12:06,920 --> 00:12:11,800 Speaker 1: come to nothing. All the while, the so called spring 159 00:12:11,880 --> 00:12:16,000 Speaker 1: heeled jack seemed to be cropping up in evermore places. 160 00:12:16,600 --> 00:12:20,320 Speaker 1: In eighteen forty, in Camden, North London, a tall man 161 00:12:20,520 --> 00:12:23,360 Speaker 1: said to be wearing a large blue cloak and dark 162 00:12:23,440 --> 00:12:27,600 Speaker 1: colored glasses, hiding in doorways at night, was reported to 163 00:12:27,679 --> 00:12:31,600 Speaker 1: leap out at women with outstretched arms. As he did so, 164 00:12:32,080 --> 00:12:36,160 Speaker 1: he unfurled a pair of huge dark wings, enveloping his 165 00:12:36,320 --> 00:12:41,440 Speaker 1: victims inside his cloak and then sexually assaulting them. For 166 00:12:41,520 --> 00:12:45,400 Speaker 1: the next thirty years, more spring heeled jack like figures 167 00:12:45,800 --> 00:12:50,200 Speaker 1: was spotted throughout all corners of England, stretching from Sheffield 168 00:12:50,240 --> 00:12:54,000 Speaker 1: in the north to Yarmouth in the south. All the 169 00:12:54,080 --> 00:12:58,360 Speaker 1: key elements were present, a darkly clad figure springing on 170 00:12:58,559 --> 00:13:03,640 Speaker 1: unwary passers by usually women on unlit lanes after dark, 171 00:13:04,640 --> 00:13:08,600 Speaker 1: with blazing red eyes. He was said to make giant leaps, 172 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:13,199 Speaker 1: clearing hedges and gaits, and even male coaches in a 173 00:13:13,240 --> 00:13:24,760 Speaker 1: single bound. There's no doubt that real individuals attacked people 174 00:13:25,040 --> 00:13:28,440 Speaker 1: throughout the decades in which Springheeled Jack is said to 175 00:13:28,440 --> 00:13:33,280 Speaker 1: have been active in ways that seemed to fit his profile. However, 176 00:13:33,360 --> 00:13:36,680 Speaker 1: it's impossible to know what of the stories is true 177 00:13:37,000 --> 00:13:41,720 Speaker 1: and what is hyperbole or exaggeration. What is clear is 178 00:13:41,760 --> 00:13:45,280 Speaker 1: that somewhere between the truth and the swirling maelstrom of 179 00:13:45,559 --> 00:13:51,400 Speaker 1: terrified rumor and supposition, a bizarre, maniacal and almost cartoonish 180 00:13:51,400 --> 00:13:55,080 Speaker 1: figure was in many ways conjured into existence by the 181 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:59,440 Speaker 1: British public imagination, which took the form of what we 182 00:13:59,520 --> 00:14:05,200 Speaker 1: think of today as Springheeled Jack, a character as fantastical 183 00:14:05,640 --> 00:14:10,520 Speaker 1: and darkly curious as any dreamt up by a graphic novelist. 184 00:14:11,200 --> 00:14:14,440 Speaker 1: This character was so ready made for fiction it can't 185 00:14:14,440 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 1: have been to anyone's surprise to see it actually appear 186 00:14:17,720 --> 00:14:21,440 Speaker 1: in fiction, cropping up in books as early as eighteen 187 00:14:21,560 --> 00:14:26,520 Speaker 1: sixty four. Then he was portrayed as a suitably demonic 188 00:14:26,600 --> 00:14:30,800 Speaker 1: figure by eighteen seventy eight. However, in a turn of 189 00:14:30,840 --> 00:14:34,880 Speaker 1: events that seems particularly fitting for our times. He was 190 00:14:34,920 --> 00:14:38,840 Speaker 1: being entirely reimagined as someone who was in fact the 191 00:14:38,920 --> 00:14:42,600 Speaker 1: good guy, who was merely flouting the law to defend 192 00:14:42,640 --> 00:14:47,800 Speaker 1: the weak and punish the wicked. Certainly, it's doubtful whether 193 00:14:47,880 --> 00:14:51,120 Speaker 1: the mostly women who were attacked by him, or others 194 00:14:51,200 --> 00:14:55,280 Speaker 1: presumed to be him in whatever guys that took would 195 00:14:55,280 --> 00:15:00,840 Speaker 1: have recognized this portrayal. By the eighteen seventies, talk of 196 00:15:00,880 --> 00:15:04,960 Speaker 1: the spring heeled Menace eventually died down, but soon re 197 00:15:05,040 --> 00:15:08,560 Speaker 1: emerged midway through that decade with one of the more 198 00:15:08,600 --> 00:15:13,880 Speaker 1: bizarre incidents in the figure's history. It came too as 199 00:15:13,880 --> 00:15:17,360 Speaker 1: if lifted straight from the pages of a superhero comic. 200 00:15:18,720 --> 00:15:23,080 Speaker 1: It began just after midnight on a chilly, moonless mid 201 00:15:23,160 --> 00:15:27,720 Speaker 1: March night in eighteen seventy five, at the perimeter of 202 00:15:27,760 --> 00:15:31,920 Speaker 1: a giant army barracks in Aldershot, in the countryside just 203 00:15:32,040 --> 00:15:36,760 Speaker 1: southwest of London. The barracks housed the headquarters of the 204 00:15:36,800 --> 00:15:40,760 Speaker 1: British Army, with around ten thousand troops billeted there at 205 00:15:40,800 --> 00:15:44,760 Speaker 1: any given time, and was guarded night and day by 206 00:15:44,880 --> 00:15:50,320 Speaker 1: armed sentries. That night, the guard stationed at the sentry 207 00:15:50,320 --> 00:15:53,000 Speaker 1: box on the north side of the camp was busy 208 00:15:53,080 --> 00:15:56,520 Speaker 1: trying to keep warm. He stamped his feet and slapped 209 00:15:56,520 --> 00:15:59,480 Speaker 1: his arms across his body as he kept watch over 210 00:15:59,520 --> 00:16:03,840 Speaker 1: the silence road and fields before him. There was a 211 00:16:03,880 --> 00:16:07,760 Speaker 1: boring shift. Rarely did anyone arrive to be challenged or 212 00:16:07,920 --> 00:16:12,040 Speaker 1: checked into camp that late in the night. At least, 213 00:16:12,120 --> 00:16:14,560 Speaker 1: with only two hours to go, he'd be in a 214 00:16:14,600 --> 00:16:19,240 Speaker 1: warmish bed soon enough. After another sweep of the empty 215 00:16:19,280 --> 00:16:22,560 Speaker 1: fields in front of him, the guard turned to head 216 00:16:22,560 --> 00:16:25,920 Speaker 1: back to the sentry box. When he stopped and shivered. 217 00:16:27,000 --> 00:16:29,960 Speaker 1: It was as if something cool and damp had just 218 00:16:30,160 --> 00:16:34,520 Speaker 1: passed in front of him. Thinking he was just being stupid, 219 00:16:34,960 --> 00:16:38,000 Speaker 1: he shook out the adrenaline and was about to carry 220 00:16:38,040 --> 00:16:42,560 Speaker 1: on his way when it happened again. This time it 221 00:16:42,800 --> 00:16:46,520 Speaker 1: was as if a deathly cold and clammy hand had 222 00:16:46,560 --> 00:16:57,640 Speaker 1: brushed across his face. Who goes there? Shouted the startled guard. 223 00:16:58,760 --> 00:17:01,920 Speaker 1: There was the slightest hint of movement in the shadows 224 00:17:01,960 --> 00:17:06,560 Speaker 1: above the sentry box. As the guard's eyes adjusted, he 225 00:17:06,640 --> 00:17:09,880 Speaker 1: was just quick enough to see a figure leap down 226 00:17:09,960 --> 00:17:13,239 Speaker 1: to the ground from the box and land silently as 227 00:17:13,280 --> 00:17:18,879 Speaker 1: a cat, before disappearing into the darkness behind. The guard 228 00:17:18,960 --> 00:17:22,480 Speaker 1: rushed to the box and picked up his rifle. Hearing 229 00:17:22,480 --> 00:17:26,240 Speaker 1: the faintest scratch of footfall on gravel off to his right, 230 00:17:26,760 --> 00:17:29,800 Speaker 1: he swung the rifle around and let off a shot. 231 00:17:31,160 --> 00:17:34,520 Speaker 1: But the man, if it were indeed a man, was 232 00:17:34,600 --> 00:17:38,080 Speaker 1: moving at such astonishing speed that no sooner had the 233 00:17:38,200 --> 00:17:42,400 Speaker 1: rifle blast finished echoing into the night, than the shadowy 234 00:17:42,440 --> 00:17:48,119 Speaker 1: figure emerged again, way over to the guard's left. There 235 00:17:48,200 --> 00:17:51,520 Speaker 1: he saw the figure briefly once more in the middle distance, 236 00:17:52,040 --> 00:17:55,000 Speaker 1: before it ran off again into the dark with what 237 00:17:55,160 --> 00:17:58,919 Speaker 1: the guard could have sworn was a faint, gleeful laugh. 238 00:18:00,480 --> 00:18:03,240 Speaker 1: Around a month later, at the sentry box on the 239 00:18:03,320 --> 00:18:07,240 Speaker 1: southern side of the barracks, another guard was keeping watch 240 00:18:07,400 --> 00:18:10,560 Speaker 1: late one night when they were stunned to find a 241 00:18:10,640 --> 00:18:15,000 Speaker 1: man hanging over the roof of their sentry box. Before 242 00:18:15,040 --> 00:18:17,800 Speaker 1: the guard could respond, he was slapped in the face 243 00:18:17,880 --> 00:18:23,159 Speaker 1: several times by a cold, damp hand. On this occasion, 244 00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:26,399 Speaker 1: another sentry who had been coming to take over the watch, 245 00:18:26,760 --> 00:18:29,639 Speaker 1: witnessed the attack and managed to catch hold of the 246 00:18:29,680 --> 00:18:33,680 Speaker 1: assailant as he fled. The two men wrestled with each other, 247 00:18:34,119 --> 00:18:37,000 Speaker 1: both falling to the ground as they rained punches on 248 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:41,240 Speaker 1: one another, but the prankster prevailed, managing to rise to 249 00:18:41,280 --> 00:18:45,240 Speaker 1: his feet, then he bounded away in a series of 250 00:18:45,280 --> 00:18:52,199 Speaker 1: astonishingly large leaps. The attacks continued for months. Often the 251 00:18:52,240 --> 00:18:56,520 Speaker 1: mysterious black clad figure would wait until the guard pacing 252 00:18:56,560 --> 00:18:59,800 Speaker 1: his beat was walking away from him, then he would 253 00:19:00,080 --> 00:19:03,439 Speaker 1: bring on to the man's shoulders, grabbing the guard's rifle 254 00:19:03,680 --> 00:19:07,960 Speaker 1: and making off with it. Despite regularly being shot at, 255 00:19:08,359 --> 00:19:13,480 Speaker 1: the culprit somehow managed to evade capture. Newspapers were quick 256 00:19:13,520 --> 00:19:17,240 Speaker 1: to report the attacks. To haunt a place so dangerous 257 00:19:17,320 --> 00:19:22,560 Speaker 1: as Britain's largest army base seemed confirmation, if any were needed, 258 00:19:23,040 --> 00:19:27,280 Speaker 1: that this was no ordinary man. Though it was never 259 00:19:27,359 --> 00:19:32,040 Speaker 1: confirmed who was responsible, many speculated it was in fact 260 00:19:32,080 --> 00:19:37,640 Speaker 1: a soldier stationed at the barracks, a Lieutenant Alfrey, who 261 00:19:37,720 --> 00:19:42,720 Speaker 1: was described as being big, powerful and extraordinarily active, was 262 00:19:42,760 --> 00:19:47,159 Speaker 1: cited by numerous people as the most likely culprit. However, 263 00:19:47,240 --> 00:19:51,120 Speaker 1: Alfrey was never charged and nor did he ever confess 264 00:19:51,600 --> 00:20:06,280 Speaker 1: to being involved. Sightings at Spring Heeled Jack's continued to 265 00:20:06,280 --> 00:20:11,320 Speaker 1: be reported across Britain well into the eighteen eighties. Jack's 266 00:20:11,359 --> 00:20:15,879 Speaker 1: litany of crimes were often vicious, abusive, and criminal, but 267 00:20:16,040 --> 00:20:19,439 Speaker 1: never had they resulted in the death of their victim, 268 00:20:19,920 --> 00:20:23,639 Speaker 1: or that seemed to change when, on the thirty first 269 00:20:23,680 --> 00:20:28,399 Speaker 1: of August eighteen eighty eight, the mutilated body of Mary 270 00:20:28,400 --> 00:20:33,200 Speaker 1: Anne Nichols was found in Whitechapel in East London, murdered 271 00:20:33,200 --> 00:20:37,840 Speaker 1: in an especially brutal fashion by numerous severe knife wounds. 272 00:20:39,160 --> 00:20:42,440 Speaker 1: The butchery of more women would follow in what would 273 00:20:42,480 --> 00:20:45,359 Speaker 1: come to be considered a series of at least five 274 00:20:45,520 --> 00:20:50,800 Speaker 1: murders committed by the same man. The attacks elicited a 275 00:20:50,800 --> 00:20:55,120 Speaker 1: profusion of letter writing to the police and newspapers. Some 276 00:20:55,240 --> 00:20:59,280 Speaker 1: purported to have information about the killer, others claimed to 277 00:20:59,320 --> 00:21:03,000 Speaker 1: come from the kills miller himself. One of the earliest 278 00:21:03,040 --> 00:21:07,960 Speaker 1: letters sent to the Metropolitan Police was signed Springheel Jack 279 00:21:08,520 --> 00:21:14,720 Speaker 1: the Whitechapel murderer, but soon another anonymous letter was received, 280 00:21:14,920 --> 00:21:19,320 Speaker 1: written by a different individual, also claiming to be the killer. 281 00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:25,960 Speaker 1: This letter was signed simply Jack. A letter sent to 282 00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:29,439 Speaker 1: the head of a London news agency shortly after, again 283 00:21:29,720 --> 00:21:34,600 Speaker 1: written by someone claiming responsibility for the crime, was signed 284 00:21:35,040 --> 00:21:40,880 Speaker 1: Jack the Ripper, and the name stuck. Before long, any 285 00:21:40,920 --> 00:21:46,200 Speaker 1: associations between these murders and Jack's older and tamer namesake 286 00:21:46,640 --> 00:21:52,200 Speaker 1: were soon forgotten, perhaps not to be entirely outdone, while 287 00:21:52,240 --> 00:21:55,840 Speaker 1: Londoners endured the terror of a serial killer on the loose. 288 00:21:56,240 --> 00:22:00,440 Speaker 1: Springheel Jack was apparently capering around the streets of n Everton, 289 00:22:00,880 --> 00:22:05,240 Speaker 1: just north of Liverpool in the northwest of England in 290 00:22:05,280 --> 00:22:08,399 Speaker 1: the autumn of eighteen eighty eight. He was alleged to 291 00:22:08,480 --> 00:22:11,439 Speaker 1: have been seen there springing from the top of a 292 00:22:11,480 --> 00:22:16,480 Speaker 1: reservoir in high Park Street, jumping over high garden walls 293 00:22:16,800 --> 00:22:20,000 Speaker 1: in the neighborhood of Saint Michael's in the hamlet, and 294 00:22:20,119 --> 00:22:24,640 Speaker 1: dancing across the rooftops of Shore Street. During this period, 295 00:22:24,960 --> 00:22:28,480 Speaker 1: spring hill Jack was even seen in Scotland in cities 296 00:22:28,520 --> 00:22:32,720 Speaker 1: including Aberdeen and Dundee. Like some of the reports from 297 00:22:32,840 --> 00:22:36,360 Speaker 1: south of the border, on more than one occasion, events 298 00:22:36,400 --> 00:22:39,880 Speaker 1: were clearly stirred up by rumor along with a healthy 299 00:22:39,920 --> 00:22:45,160 Speaker 1: dose of massesteria. In Galas Shields in August eighteen ninety one, 300 00:22:45,600 --> 00:22:48,720 Speaker 1: a crowd gathered in the market square to listen to 301 00:22:48,760 --> 00:22:52,440 Speaker 1: the town band spotted what was described as a peculiarly 302 00:22:52,560 --> 00:22:57,119 Speaker 1: dressed female entering the square, whereupon it was reported that 303 00:22:57,240 --> 00:23:00,399 Speaker 1: part of the crowd set upon this person, who, for 304 00:23:00,480 --> 00:23:05,639 Speaker 1: reasons not explained, they decided was spring heeled Jack. The 305 00:23:05,800 --> 00:23:09,840 Speaker 1: unfortunate woman was taken to the local police station for 306 00:23:09,880 --> 00:23:20,240 Speaker 1: her own protection. By the time of Jack's last appearances, 307 00:23:20,680 --> 00:23:24,479 Speaker 1: his jumping abilities had reached new heights, with him often 308 00:23:24,520 --> 00:23:29,040 Speaker 1: portrayed as being able to leap over entire buildings. Back 309 00:23:29,080 --> 00:23:32,960 Speaker 1: in Liverpool, in September nineteen o four, a report in 310 00:23:33,040 --> 00:23:38,280 Speaker 1: the sensational Illustrated Police News stated that hundreds of locals 311 00:23:38,600 --> 00:23:41,960 Speaker 1: watched in awe as Jack leapt up and down a street, 312 00:23:42,280 --> 00:23:45,119 Speaker 1: bounding up onto roofs and then down into the street 313 00:23:45,160 --> 00:23:48,040 Speaker 1: again in a manner it was alleged that would have 314 00:23:48,080 --> 00:23:52,879 Speaker 1: embarrassed an Olympic pole vaulter. He was also reputed to 315 00:23:52,920 --> 00:23:55,879 Speaker 1: have jumped clean over the houses from one street to 316 00:23:55,960 --> 00:23:59,920 Speaker 1: the next one day. At the end of September, Jack 317 00:24:00,240 --> 00:24:03,840 Speaker 1: was again said to have appeared, this time in broad daylight, 318 00:24:04,280 --> 00:24:07,879 Speaker 1: clad as usual in a mask, black cloak and long 319 00:24:08,000 --> 00:24:11,760 Speaker 1: tight boots, springing from side to side along a road 320 00:24:12,240 --> 00:24:15,960 Speaker 1: before hopping a full twenty five feet onto the rooftops, 321 00:24:16,760 --> 00:24:20,800 Speaker 1: turning one last time to utter a mocking laugh before 322 00:24:20,880 --> 00:24:25,200 Speaker 1: vanishing for good. But when the journalists of the day 323 00:24:25,640 --> 00:24:29,719 Speaker 1: attempted to track down victims and eyewitnesses, they found no 324 00:24:29,800 --> 00:24:35,400 Speaker 1: one to interview. Then in nineteen sixty seven an intriguing 325 00:24:35,480 --> 00:24:39,040 Speaker 1: interview was published in the Liverpool Daily Post with a 326 00:24:39,119 --> 00:24:43,240 Speaker 1: Missus Pierpoint, an Everton pensioner who'd lived in the district 327 00:24:43,280 --> 00:24:46,800 Speaker 1: all her life. She'd been a schoolgirl in nineteen o 328 00:24:47,000 --> 00:24:50,280 Speaker 1: four and recounted how that year there had been a 329 00:24:50,400 --> 00:24:54,560 Speaker 1: scare among the locals due to a supposed poltergeist, so 330 00:24:54,720 --> 00:24:58,159 Speaker 1: much so that people would congregate on the street to 331 00:24:58,280 --> 00:25:02,520 Speaker 1: catch sight of the scary phantom. Missus Pierpoint had a 332 00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:06,840 Speaker 1: distinct recollection that the source of the rumors of Liverpool Jack, 333 00:25:07,040 --> 00:25:11,640 Speaker 1: as she called him, was a local man with psychiatric problems, 334 00:25:11,680 --> 00:25:16,119 Speaker 1: including a kind of religious mania. From time to time, 335 00:25:16,200 --> 00:25:19,359 Speaker 1: she said, when this mania was at its peak, he 336 00:25:19,400 --> 00:25:22,600 Speaker 1: would climb up onto the roofs of houses, and when 337 00:25:22,680 --> 00:25:25,479 Speaker 1: the police arrived to get him down, he would simply 338 00:25:25,560 --> 00:25:29,480 Speaker 1: run away, leaping from one roof to the next, crying, 339 00:25:30,080 --> 00:25:40,040 Speaker 1: my wife is the devil. With the sighting of spring 340 00:25:40,080 --> 00:25:44,080 Speaker 1: Hill Jack vanishing over the Liverpool rooftops in nineteen o four, 341 00:25:44,560 --> 00:25:48,960 Speaker 1: reports of his activities largely came to an end, but 342 00:25:49,080 --> 00:25:52,600 Speaker 1: Victorian Britain was not the only home of stories of 343 00:25:52,680 --> 00:25:57,320 Speaker 1: leaping and jumping men. During World War II, an elusive 344 00:25:57,400 --> 00:26:02,040 Speaker 1: figure known as Perak, Man of Prague, was said to 345 00:26:02,080 --> 00:26:05,639 Speaker 1: prow the blacked out streets of that city, possessing all 346 00:26:05,680 --> 00:26:11,119 Speaker 1: the supernatural leaping abilities of spring heeled Jack. No written 347 00:26:11,160 --> 00:26:14,919 Speaker 1: records of his activities have ever been found, but like 348 00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:19,280 Speaker 1: his British predecessor, Perak went on to become a fictional 349 00:26:19,359 --> 00:26:24,159 Speaker 1: folklore hero, in his case fighting the German Army and 350 00:26:24,280 --> 00:26:32,040 Speaker 1: several animated superhero cartoons. So who, if anyone was springhield Jack? 351 00:26:32,800 --> 00:26:36,159 Speaker 1: Were the people ascribed to that moniker throughout the Victorian 352 00:26:36,200 --> 00:26:41,120 Speaker 1: era highly athletic individuals whose ability to vault over hedges 353 00:26:41,160 --> 00:26:46,440 Speaker 1: and walls were simply exaggerated in the public imagination, or 354 00:26:46,480 --> 00:26:51,040 Speaker 1: were spring assisted boots ever part of their disguise. There 355 00:26:51,080 --> 00:26:54,960 Speaker 1: are reports that the German Army experimented with this exact 356 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:59,439 Speaker 1: idea with its paratroopers during the Second World War. However, 357 00:26:59,560 --> 00:27:03,919 Speaker 1: tests were supposedly halted after an eighty five percent incidence 358 00:27:04,000 --> 00:27:09,160 Speaker 1: of broken ankles. Our boots equipped with iron springs would 359 00:27:09,200 --> 00:27:13,400 Speaker 1: have performed on the rough terrain of early Victorian country lanes, 360 00:27:14,160 --> 00:27:18,119 Speaker 1: or while crossing the rough common land around Aldershot is 361 00:27:18,200 --> 00:27:22,800 Speaker 1: anyone's guess. What is very likely is that the combined 362 00:27:22,840 --> 00:27:27,680 Speaker 1: elements of a vengeful anti hero, perhaps a wronged aristocrat 363 00:27:28,200 --> 00:27:32,119 Speaker 1: wearing a costume with apparently bat like wings and the 364 00:27:32,160 --> 00:27:36,240 Speaker 1: ability to leap to great heights, was a direct precursor 365 00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:41,919 Speaker 1: of comic book superheroes like Batman. Was the Marquess of Waterford, 366 00:27:42,200 --> 00:27:46,399 Speaker 1: despite his apparent alibi, the real instigator of the attacks 367 00:27:46,480 --> 00:27:50,080 Speaker 1: in the late eighteen thirties all along and were the 368 00:27:50,160 --> 00:27:54,960 Speaker 1: other errant and youthful members of the Victorian aristocracy also 369 00:27:55,080 --> 00:27:58,199 Speaker 1: up to no good? Or was it all just the 370 00:27:58,200 --> 00:28:03,000 Speaker 1: product of the highly amaged British public of Victorian Britain. 371 00:28:04,760 --> 00:28:08,840 Speaker 1: These and many other questions that swirl around the strange 372 00:28:08,880 --> 00:28:17,199 Speaker 1: and unusual story of Spring Heeled Jack remain unexplained. This 373 00:28:17,359 --> 00:28:21,040 Speaker 1: episode was written by Diane Hope and Richard McClain Smith 374 00:28:23,680 --> 00:28:27,960 Speaker 1: Unexplained as an Avy Club Productions podcast created by Richard 375 00:28:28,000 --> 00:28:32,119 Speaker 1: McClain Smith. All other elements of the podcast, including the music, 376 00:28:32,560 --> 00:28:37,080 Speaker 1: are also produced by me Richard mclin Smith, Unexplained. The 377 00:28:37,080 --> 00:28:40,800 Speaker 1: book and audiobook, with stories never before featured on the show, 378 00:28:41,240 --> 00:28:44,760 Speaker 1: is now available to buy worldwide. You can purchase from 379 00:28:44,840 --> 00:28:50,280 Speaker 1: Amazon Barnes and Noble, Waterstones, and other bookstores. Please subscribe 380 00:28:50,320 --> 00:28:53,320 Speaker 1: to and rate the show wherever you get your podcasts, 381 00:28:53,600 --> 00:28:55,920 Speaker 1: and feel free to get in touch with any thoughts 382 00:28:56,000 --> 00:28:59,160 Speaker 1: or ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. 383 00:28:59,440 --> 00:29:01,920 Speaker 1: Perhaps you have an explanation of your own you'd like 384 00:29:01,960 --> 00:29:05,560 Speaker 1: to share. You can find out more at Unexplained podcast 385 00:29:05,680 --> 00:29:09,480 Speaker 1: dot com and reach us online through Twitter at Unexplained 386 00:29:09,520 --> 00:29:14,520 Speaker 1: Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot com, Forward Slash Unexplained 387 00:29:14,560 --> 00:29:28,880 Speaker 1: Podcast h