1 00:00:10,640 --> 00:00:13,280 Speaker 1: We like to think we know the difference between fantasy 2 00:00:13,720 --> 00:00:18,400 Speaker 1: and reality. Perhaps one evening we might find ourselves alone 3 00:00:18,440 --> 00:00:21,920 Speaker 1: at home. Then we hear a noise or see something odd. 4 00:00:23,200 --> 00:00:26,520 Speaker 1: Maybe it's a cupboard door left slightly ajar, a door 5 00:00:26,560 --> 00:00:31,280 Speaker 1: that we could have sworn was closed before. Slowly we 6 00:00:31,360 --> 00:00:35,560 Speaker 1: might begin to feel the creeping sense of fear that 7 00:00:35,800 --> 00:00:39,839 Speaker 1: perhaps someone somewhere is watching us, that we aren't alone 8 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:47,400 Speaker 1: after all. Fear, it would seem, is a powerful primal emotion, 9 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 1: so potent that it can even make us afraid of 10 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:55,960 Speaker 1: something that may not exist. But then again, just because 11 00:00:55,960 --> 00:01:03,000 Speaker 1: we can't see something doesn't mean it isn't there. In 12 00:01:03,040 --> 00:01:06,320 Speaker 1: a physiological sense, at least, most people would feel confident 13 00:01:06,360 --> 00:01:09,679 Speaker 1: if asked to locate and identify the human heart, or 14 00:01:09,720 --> 00:01:13,280 Speaker 1: indeed the brain. But if someone were to ask where 15 00:01:13,280 --> 00:01:16,760 Speaker 1: exactly does consciousness preside, we might find the answer a 16 00:01:16,760 --> 00:01:20,360 Speaker 1: little harder to come by. It is a question that 17 00:01:20,400 --> 00:01:24,480 Speaker 1: has profound consequences, particularly if you're inclined to believe that 18 00:01:24,520 --> 00:01:31,360 Speaker 1: the mind might also exist outside the body. You're listening 19 00:01:31,360 --> 00:01:48,160 Speaker 1: to Unexplained And I'm Richard McClain Smith on one cold 20 00:01:48,240 --> 00:01:51,559 Speaker 1: January evening in nineteen twenty four, a young woman named 21 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:55,280 Speaker 1: Doris was giving birth at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead, London. 22 00:01:56,200 --> 00:01:59,720 Speaker 1: The attending obstatrician, Lady Florence Barrett, had made a successful 23 00:01:59,760 --> 00:02:01,800 Speaker 1: to live free when things took a turn for the worse. 24 00:02:02,680 --> 00:02:05,320 Speaker 1: Just as the baby was being born, Doris suffered a 25 00:02:05,360 --> 00:02:09,639 Speaker 1: sudden heart attack from which she would not recover. As 26 00:02:09,639 --> 00:02:13,040 Speaker 1: she lay dying, she grabbed Lady Barrett's hand. Don't let 27 00:02:13,040 --> 00:02:16,720 Speaker 1: it get dark, she said, It's getting darker and darker. 28 00:02:17,880 --> 00:02:22,600 Speaker 1: But then something extraordinary happened. An ecstatic smile played across 29 00:02:22,639 --> 00:02:27,160 Speaker 1: Doris's face. What is it, inquired Lady Barrett. Father is here, 30 00:02:27,360 --> 00:02:33,000 Speaker 1: she said, and so too my sister Vida. The sudden 31 00:02:33,000 --> 00:02:36,519 Speaker 1: appearance of Vida was especially remarkable, considering she had died 32 00:02:36,639 --> 00:02:39,200 Speaker 1: two weeks earlier and Doris had not yet been informed 33 00:02:39,240 --> 00:02:43,280 Speaker 1: of her death. For the next hour, Doris continued to 34 00:02:43,320 --> 00:02:46,080 Speaker 1: talk to Lady Barrett, but also with the spirits of 35 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:48,800 Speaker 1: her father and sister, who she believed had come to 36 00:02:48,840 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 1: take her to the other side. A short time later, 37 00:02:53,360 --> 00:03:01,440 Speaker 1: Doris passed away. When Lady Barrett returned home, she relayed 38 00:03:01,440 --> 00:03:05,160 Speaker 1: the incredible story to her husband, Sir William Barrett. For 39 00:03:05,320 --> 00:03:08,520 Speaker 1: Sir William, an eminent physicist and fellow of the Royal Society, 40 00:03:08,680 --> 00:03:12,320 Speaker 1: it was an astonishing revelation, a revelation that was to 41 00:03:12,360 --> 00:03:15,040 Speaker 1: mark a significant turning point in the research he had 42 00:03:15,040 --> 00:03:18,600 Speaker 1: been conducting for the last fifty years, research into the 43 00:03:18,600 --> 00:03:25,520 Speaker 1: possible existence of poltergeist's. The word poltergeist is derived from 44 00:03:25,520 --> 00:03:29,240 Speaker 1: the German for a ghost that knocks. For some, they 45 00:03:29,240 --> 00:03:31,840 Speaker 1: are believed to be malevolent spirits that can interact and 46 00:03:31,880 --> 00:03:36,760 Speaker 1: communicate with our physical world. Sir William, however, had a 47 00:03:36,800 --> 00:03:40,560 Speaker 1: different theory. Rather than being the mechanations of an evil spirit, 48 00:03:40,880 --> 00:03:44,080 Speaker 1: he believed the reported effects of poltergeists were actually caused 49 00:03:44,120 --> 00:03:47,840 Speaker 1: by as yet unknown powers of the mind. He believed 50 00:03:47,880 --> 00:03:50,360 Speaker 1: this right up until Lady Barrett told him the tragic 51 00:03:50,400 --> 00:03:54,760 Speaker 1: story about her patient Doris. Suddenly it had become clear. 52 00:03:55,520 --> 00:03:58,360 Speaker 1: Could it be he thought that the poltergeist was a spirit? 53 00:03:58,480 --> 00:04:02,880 Speaker 1: After all, that, unlike the spirit of Lady Barrett's patient had, 54 00:04:02,920 --> 00:04:05,200 Speaker 1: for reasons perhaps linked to the manner of their death, 55 00:04:05,440 --> 00:04:09,720 Speaker 1: not being collected by loved ones while waiting at death's door. Instead, 56 00:04:09,880 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 1: they had become trapped forever, destined to exist in the 57 00:04:13,200 --> 00:04:20,719 Speaker 1: horror of a disembodied limbo. For author and paranormal enthusiast 58 00:04:20,800 --> 00:04:23,520 Speaker 1: Colin Wilson, his feet were firmly in the former camp. 59 00:04:24,240 --> 00:04:27,240 Speaker 1: He believed the habit caused by so called poltergeists was 60 00:04:27,279 --> 00:04:30,040 Speaker 1: in fact linked to the chemically charged process of puberty 61 00:04:30,080 --> 00:04:34,560 Speaker 1: and adolescence, or at least he believed that until something 62 00:04:34,560 --> 00:04:39,919 Speaker 1: extraordinary occurred that would change his mind as well. Just 63 00:04:40,120 --> 00:04:42,840 Speaker 1: what exactly took place in a small West Yorkshire town 64 00:04:42,920 --> 00:04:46,400 Speaker 1: between nineteen sixty six and nineteen seventy has never been 65 00:04:46,400 --> 00:04:50,400 Speaker 1: fully accounted for. Often described as the most violent haunting 66 00:04:50,440 --> 00:04:53,120 Speaker 1: in Europe, it is a mystery that remains to this 67 00:04:53,200 --> 00:05:07,880 Speaker 1: day unexplained. Located on a Roman road part way between 68 00:05:07,960 --> 00:05:11,240 Speaker 1: Leeds and Doncaster, the town of Pontefract has a rich 69 00:05:11,320 --> 00:05:14,719 Speaker 1: and bloody history. For John Betchaman, it was home to 70 00:05:14,760 --> 00:05:17,240 Speaker 1: the licorice fields, where his love and he did meet. 71 00:05:17,920 --> 00:05:20,679 Speaker 1: For Shakespeare, the town's castle was the place of Richard 72 00:05:20,720 --> 00:05:24,040 Speaker 1: the Second's brutal murder, hacked to death within the guilty 73 00:05:24,040 --> 00:05:27,760 Speaker 1: closure of its walls, and some have even claimed Pontefract 74 00:05:27,800 --> 00:05:30,839 Speaker 1: as the death place of Robin Hood. But for the 75 00:05:30,880 --> 00:05:34,159 Speaker 1: Pritchard family of number thirty East drive. It will forever 76 00:05:34,200 --> 00:05:37,800 Speaker 1: be associated with the terrifying events that began one swelteringly 77 00:05:37,839 --> 00:05:44,080 Speaker 1: hot day in August nineteen sixty six. For Jeane and 78 00:05:44,160 --> 00:05:46,839 Speaker 1: Joe Pritchard and their twelve year old daughter, Diane, the 79 00:05:46,880 --> 00:05:49,520 Speaker 1: August Bank holiday weekend was a chance to relax after 80 00:05:49,560 --> 00:05:52,320 Speaker 1: the recent move into their new home. For Jean and 81 00:05:52,400 --> 00:05:54,760 Speaker 1: Joe's son, Philip, however, it was a chance to have 82 00:05:54,839 --> 00:05:57,799 Speaker 1: some time to himself. Having fallen out with his father, 83 00:05:58,000 --> 00:06:00,520 Speaker 1: Philip had elected to stay behind, but since he was 84 00:06:00,560 --> 00:06:03,680 Speaker 1: only fifteen, it was arranged that his grandmother, Sarah would 85 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:09,240 Speaker 1: stay to look after him. After seeing the rest of 86 00:06:09,279 --> 00:06:11,600 Speaker 1: the family off, Philip went to the garden to read, 87 00:06:11,800 --> 00:06:16,280 Speaker 1: leaving his grandmother knitting inside the house. A few hours later, 88 00:06:16,320 --> 00:06:18,640 Speaker 1: a large gust of wind tore through the living room, 89 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:22,400 Speaker 1: slamming the back door shut. A surprised Philip ran into 90 00:06:22,400 --> 00:06:24,839 Speaker 1: the house to see if everything was all right. Sarah 91 00:06:24,920 --> 00:06:27,400 Speaker 1: had assumed it to be the wind, but as Philip remarked, 92 00:06:27,680 --> 00:06:32,360 Speaker 1: it couldn't have been more calm outside. Shortly after, Philip 93 00:06:32,400 --> 00:06:34,680 Speaker 1: went to put the kettle on. When he returned ten 94 00:06:34,680 --> 00:06:39,159 Speaker 1: minutes later, something strange had occurred. His grandmother still knitting 95 00:06:39,160 --> 00:06:41,520 Speaker 1: on the sofa, had been too engrossed to notice the 96 00:06:41,560 --> 00:06:46,320 Speaker 1: peculiar cloud of fine white dust floating around the room. Instinctively, 97 00:06:46,440 --> 00:06:48,640 Speaker 1: they looked to the ceiling, thinking it might be some 98 00:06:48,640 --> 00:06:52,800 Speaker 1: whitewash that had fallen from above. But then Philip noticed 99 00:06:52,880 --> 00:06:57,080 Speaker 1: something incredibly strange. The dust seemed to be falling from 100 00:06:57,120 --> 00:07:00,040 Speaker 1: waist height, as if it had materialized out of a 101 00:07:01,640 --> 00:07:04,840 Speaker 1: Sarah noticed it too when she stood up from the sofa, 102 00:07:05,080 --> 00:07:07,080 Speaker 1: it was as if she had poked her head above 103 00:07:07,120 --> 00:07:11,720 Speaker 1: the clouds. Puzzled by the strange appearance of the dust, 104 00:07:12,040 --> 00:07:14,840 Speaker 1: Sarah called on her other daughter, Marie Kelly, who lived 105 00:07:14,840 --> 00:07:17,520 Speaker 1: in the house opposite. They returned to find the dust 106 00:07:17,640 --> 00:07:20,760 Speaker 1: still falling in the living room, the furnishings now completely 107 00:07:20,760 --> 00:07:23,160 Speaker 1: covered in a thick layer of the chalk like substance. 108 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:27,559 Speaker 1: Marie went to the kitchen to begin cleaning the mess, 109 00:07:27,720 --> 00:07:31,600 Speaker 1: when she suddenly skidded across the floor. She looked down 110 00:07:31,720 --> 00:07:34,520 Speaker 1: to find little pools of water all over the linoleum, 111 00:07:34,760 --> 00:07:37,200 Speaker 1: but when she tried to mop one up, another puddle 112 00:07:37,200 --> 00:07:41,360 Speaker 1: would seem to instantly appear in its place. Assuming it 113 00:07:41,400 --> 00:07:43,200 Speaker 1: to be a leak coming up from under the house, 114 00:07:43,400 --> 00:07:46,000 Speaker 1: Marie pulled up the lino, only to find the concrete 115 00:07:46,080 --> 00:07:51,119 Speaker 1: underneath completely dry. A plumber was called to the house, 116 00:07:51,480 --> 00:07:53,800 Speaker 1: but he too was unable to locate the cause of 117 00:07:53,800 --> 00:07:59,520 Speaker 1: the flood. An hour later, the puddles mysteriously disappeared. What 118 00:07:59,640 --> 00:08:02,160 Speaker 1: they didn't know at the time was that those strange, 119 00:08:02,200 --> 00:08:06,240 Speaker 1: reoccurring puddles are considered a classic sign of a poltergeist. 120 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:12,720 Speaker 1: At about seven o'clock that evening, Philip came through from 121 00:08:12,760 --> 00:08:22,960 Speaker 1: the kitchen. It's happening again, he said. When Sarah followed 122 00:08:22,960 --> 00:08:25,720 Speaker 1: Philip into the kitchen, she found the counter covered in 123 00:08:25,760 --> 00:08:29,320 Speaker 1: sugar and tea leaves. The dispenser was switching itself on 124 00:08:29,400 --> 00:08:34,400 Speaker 1: and off as boiling water cascaded onto the surface top. Suddenly, 125 00:08:34,480 --> 00:08:37,959 Speaker 1: an almighty crash came from out in the hallway. Clearly 126 00:08:38,320 --> 00:08:42,960 Speaker 1: somebody was in the house. Philip and Sarah cautiously approached 127 00:08:43,000 --> 00:08:46,600 Speaker 1: the door and slowly pulled it open, but the hallway 128 00:08:46,679 --> 00:08:50,880 Speaker 1: was empty. Then the light was inexplicably turned on, revealing 129 00:08:50,920 --> 00:08:53,720 Speaker 1: the sauce of the crash. At the bottom of the 130 00:08:53,760 --> 00:08:56,240 Speaker 1: stairs was a plant pot that had been smashed on 131 00:08:56,280 --> 00:08:59,800 Speaker 1: the floor. Then another banging started, this time coming from 132 00:08:59,840 --> 00:09:02,959 Speaker 1: the kitchen. In terror, they ran back to find one 133 00:09:02,960 --> 00:09:06,520 Speaker 1: of the cupboards shaking violently, as if somebody was trapped inside. 134 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:09,880 Speaker 1: In a fit of panic, Philip yanked it open, but 135 00:09:10,000 --> 00:09:15,280 Speaker 1: it was empty. They ran again to get Marie. When 136 00:09:15,320 --> 00:09:18,360 Speaker 1: they returned, all the cupboard doors were now shaking, the 137 00:09:18,440 --> 00:09:23,120 Speaker 1: cutlery and plates rattling violently inside, and then it stopped. 138 00:09:24,960 --> 00:09:28,560 Speaker 1: Marie's husband, Vic, although skeptical, suggested they speak to their neighbor, 139 00:09:28,640 --> 00:09:31,240 Speaker 1: mister o'donald, who was thought to have experience dealing with 140 00:09:31,320 --> 00:09:34,960 Speaker 1: such things. Despite the lateness of the hour, mister o'donald 141 00:09:35,000 --> 00:09:38,760 Speaker 1: was more than happy to oblige. On returning to number thirty, 142 00:09:38,960 --> 00:09:42,439 Speaker 1: they found the place to be exceptionally cold. However, after 143 00:09:42,480 --> 00:09:44,960 Speaker 1: waiting for almost two hours, they found no sign of 144 00:09:44,960 --> 00:09:48,880 Speaker 1: anything else untoward. But as three were exiting the house, 145 00:09:48,960 --> 00:09:52,599 Speaker 1: a loud crash was heard from inside. Marie sweeched on 146 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:54,680 Speaker 1: the light to find that two paintings had been thrown 147 00:09:54,720 --> 00:09:58,760 Speaker 1: to the floor, their glass frames completely shattered, and further 148 00:09:58,800 --> 00:10:02,120 Speaker 1: down the hall lay another a broken frame. Marie turned 149 00:10:02,120 --> 00:10:05,000 Speaker 1: it over and gasped it was a photo of Jean 150 00:10:05,080 --> 00:10:08,200 Speaker 1: and Joe Pritchard on their wedding day. It had been 151 00:10:08,240 --> 00:10:16,560 Speaker 1: slashed right across their faces. Are you always taking care 152 00:10:16,559 --> 00:10:19,120 Speaker 1: of your family? Do you often take care of others 153 00:10:19,120 --> 00:10:22,480 Speaker 1: and not yourself? Now it's time to take care of yourself, 154 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:26,640 Speaker 1: to make time for you you deserve it. Teledoc gives 155 00:10:26,640 --> 00:10:29,440 Speaker 1: you access to a licensed therapist to help you get 156 00:10:29,440 --> 00:10:32,680 Speaker 1: back to feeling your best to feeling like yourself again. 157 00:10:33,360 --> 00:10:36,360 Speaker 1: With tele adoc, you can speak to a licensed therapist 158 00:10:36,440 --> 00:10:40,160 Speaker 1: by phone or video. Therapy appointments are available seven days 159 00:10:40,160 --> 00:10:43,120 Speaker 1: a week from seven am to nine pm local time. 160 00:10:43,640 --> 00:10:48,160 Speaker 1: If you feel overwhelmed sometimes maybe you feel stressed or anxious, 161 00:10:48,480 --> 00:10:51,480 Speaker 1: depressed or lonely, or you might be struggling with a 162 00:10:51,559 --> 00:10:56,240 Speaker 1: personal or family issue, teledoc can help. Teledoc is committed 163 00:10:56,280 --> 00:10:59,920 Speaker 1: to facilitating great therapeutic matches, so they make it easy 164 00:11:00,080 --> 00:11:04,360 Speaker 1: to change counselors if needed. For free. Teledoc therapy is 165 00:11:04,400 --> 00:11:08,559 Speaker 1: available through most insurance or employers. Download the app or 166 00:11:08,679 --> 00:11:13,000 Speaker 1: visit teledoc dot com forward slash Unexplained podcast today to 167 00:11:13,040 --> 00:11:25,560 Speaker 1: get started. That's teladoc dot com slash Unexplained Podcast. When 168 00:11:25,600 --> 00:11:28,319 Speaker 1: the rest of the family returned two days later, they 169 00:11:28,320 --> 00:11:31,160 Speaker 1: struggled to believe the accounts of Marie, Sarah, and Philip, 170 00:11:31,400 --> 00:11:33,360 Speaker 1: and that appeared to be the end of the incident. 171 00:11:35,200 --> 00:11:38,160 Speaker 1: Two years later, as the August Bank holiday came round again, 172 00:11:38,559 --> 00:11:40,920 Speaker 1: Jean's mother, Sarah, couldn't help but be reminded of the 173 00:11:40,960 --> 00:11:45,360 Speaker 1: events of nineteen sixty six. She started to hear noises again, 174 00:11:45,840 --> 00:11:49,000 Speaker 1: a low thud at first, shortly followed by a familiar 175 00:11:49,040 --> 00:11:53,640 Speaker 1: loud bang. She asked her daughter if she'd heard them too. Jean, 176 00:11:53,760 --> 00:11:56,280 Speaker 1: who had spent most of the day redecorating, had little 177 00:11:56,280 --> 00:11:58,760 Speaker 1: patience for her mother's nonsense and told her so in 178 00:11:58,800 --> 00:12:04,120 Speaker 1: no uncertain terms. Seconds later, however, there was a tremendous crash. 179 00:12:05,400 --> 00:12:07,720 Speaker 1: At the bottom of the stairs was Jean's bed pane. 180 00:12:08,160 --> 00:12:10,240 Speaker 1: She picked it up and started carrying it back to 181 00:12:10,280 --> 00:12:13,880 Speaker 1: her bedroom when they heard a second crash. Racing back 182 00:12:13,880 --> 00:12:16,560 Speaker 1: to the landing, they found that three plants had been 183 00:12:16,559 --> 00:12:19,880 Speaker 1: thrown and smashed from their pots. It would appear the 184 00:12:19,960 --> 00:12:27,520 Speaker 1: poltergeist was back. That evening, Jean, unable to sleep, headed 185 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:29,440 Speaker 1: to the kitchen to get a drink, but when she 186 00:12:29,520 --> 00:12:33,040 Speaker 1: walked into the hall, she froze in fear. A strip 187 00:12:33,080 --> 00:12:36,600 Speaker 1: of wallpaper was moving on its own accord, and then 188 00:12:36,880 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 1: the brushes she had been decorating with earlier were pulled 189 00:12:39,640 --> 00:12:42,320 Speaker 1: into the air, and one after the other launched at 190 00:12:42,320 --> 00:12:45,559 Speaker 1: her head. She scrambled back to the room, screaming for 191 00:12:45,640 --> 00:12:48,480 Speaker 1: Joe to wake up. Joe and Jean rushed back to 192 00:12:48,520 --> 00:12:51,040 Speaker 1: the hall, where Diana and Philip now stood, woken by 193 00:12:51,120 --> 00:12:54,680 Speaker 1: Jean's screens. All around, more objects were pulled into the 194 00:12:54,679 --> 00:12:57,760 Speaker 1: air and flung at the terrified family. Together, they fled 195 00:12:57,800 --> 00:13:00,240 Speaker 1: to the safety of Joe and Jean's bedroom and the 196 00:13:00,280 --> 00:13:05,560 Speaker 1: door shut. At this point, it might be reasonable to 197 00:13:05,600 --> 00:13:08,640 Speaker 1: ask why the Pritchards didn't move, but they argued the 198 00:13:08,679 --> 00:13:11,960 Speaker 1: event had brought out an innate territorial nature. This was 199 00:13:12,000 --> 00:13:14,439 Speaker 1: their home and they weren't about to allow themselves to 200 00:13:14,480 --> 00:13:17,880 Speaker 1: be bullied out of it. For the next few years, 201 00:13:18,040 --> 00:13:20,840 Speaker 1: they endured a number of strange events, from loud bangs 202 00:13:20,920 --> 00:13:23,800 Speaker 1: to severe drops in temperature, as well as the intermittent 203 00:13:23,800 --> 00:13:27,559 Speaker 1: battles with flying objects. They had even given the poltergeist 204 00:13:27,600 --> 00:13:31,480 Speaker 1: a name, calling him Fred. At one point, a local 205 00:13:31,520 --> 00:13:34,360 Speaker 1: reverend was consulted, which seemed to act as a catalyst 206 00:13:34,440 --> 00:13:38,200 Speaker 1: to a sinister turn of events. The reverend, mister Davy, 207 00:13:38,400 --> 00:13:42,240 Speaker 1: was convinced there was something evil inside the house, something 208 00:13:42,440 --> 00:13:53,240 Speaker 1: that later seemed to fix its attention on Diane. One night, 209 00:13:53,320 --> 00:13:58,160 Speaker 1: after getting into bed, Diane felt a presence in her room. Suddenly, 210 00:13:58,320 --> 00:14:00,600 Speaker 1: the covers were yanked from the bed and the mattress 211 00:14:00,600 --> 00:14:03,520 Speaker 1: wrenched up from underneath, throwing her violently to the floor. 212 00:14:04,760 --> 00:14:07,360 Speaker 1: Another time, a crucifix was flung across the room that 213 00:14:07,480 --> 00:14:10,520 Speaker 1: stuck to Diane's back like a magnet. When it was 214 00:14:10,559 --> 00:14:13,319 Speaker 1: finally pulled off, a red cross shaped mark could be 215 00:14:13,360 --> 00:14:17,480 Speaker 1: seen on her back for the next few days. Perhaps 216 00:14:17,559 --> 00:14:20,360 Speaker 1: the most terrifying event happened one night when Diane was 217 00:14:20,400 --> 00:14:24,080 Speaker 1: making coffee. As the kettle boiled, the power was suddenly 218 00:14:24,080 --> 00:14:27,600 Speaker 1: cut off. As Jean stumbled to find a torch, Diane 219 00:14:27,680 --> 00:14:31,320 Speaker 1: let out a blood curdling screen. When Jean ran into 220 00:14:31,360 --> 00:14:34,200 Speaker 1: the hall, she found Diane being dragged up the stairs 221 00:14:34,240 --> 00:14:37,680 Speaker 1: by an unknown force, her cardigan stretched out behind her 222 00:14:37,720 --> 00:14:41,000 Speaker 1: as if being pulled, and an invisible hand seemingly at 223 00:14:41,000 --> 00:14:44,960 Speaker 1: her throat. When Diane was finally released, her neck was 224 00:14:45,040 --> 00:14:58,040 Speaker 1: covered in finger marks. The events finally came to an 225 00:14:58,120 --> 00:15:00,520 Speaker 1: end after a family friend alerted them to an old 226 00:15:00,520 --> 00:15:05,120 Speaker 1: Scottish tradition many years ago. Superstitious crofters would hang garlic 227 00:15:05,200 --> 00:15:08,800 Speaker 1: to ward off evil spirits. The Pritchards gave it a go, 228 00:15:09,080 --> 00:15:17,440 Speaker 1: and sure enough it did the trick Fred had gone. 229 00:15:17,520 --> 00:15:21,080 Speaker 1: Ten years later, local historian Tom Cuniff began to wander 230 00:15:21,120 --> 00:15:23,040 Speaker 1: if the haunting might have something to do with the 231 00:15:23,080 --> 00:15:26,400 Speaker 1: Pontefract Priory. The priory had been built to house a 232 00:15:26,480 --> 00:15:29,400 Speaker 1: number of Cluniac monks before being dissolved by Henry the 233 00:15:29,440 --> 00:15:33,560 Speaker 1: Eighth in fifteen thirty nine. The story gained credence when 234 00:15:33,600 --> 00:15:35,280 Speaker 1: a neighbor of the family found a book in the 235 00:15:35,280 --> 00:15:38,920 Speaker 1: town's library detailing the case of an unsavory Cluniac monk. 236 00:15:39,800 --> 00:15:42,160 Speaker 1: The monk had been sentenced to hang for the rape 237 00:15:42,200 --> 00:15:44,440 Speaker 1: and murder of a young girl during the time of 238 00:15:44,480 --> 00:15:47,400 Speaker 1: Henry the Eighth. It was also believed that the monk 239 00:15:47,480 --> 00:15:51,680 Speaker 1: had strangled his victim. After a little more research, Tom 240 00:15:51,680 --> 00:15:56,440 Speaker 1: made an unnerving discovery. The Pritchard's house was built almost 241 00:15:56,440 --> 00:15:59,360 Speaker 1: directly on top of where the old gallows would have stood. 242 00:16:02,600 --> 00:16:05,080 Speaker 1: In truth, we will never know exactly what happened in 243 00:16:05,120 --> 00:16:08,520 Speaker 1: those four years, but after a careful study of the records, 244 00:16:08,720 --> 00:16:10,880 Speaker 1: it would appear that no monk had been executed in 245 00:16:10,920 --> 00:16:14,800 Speaker 1: the area after all. Certainly, the debate as to what 246 00:16:14,960 --> 00:16:18,120 Speaker 1: might explain the strange series of events remains wide open. 247 00:16:26,640 --> 00:16:29,360 Speaker 1: A few years after the Pontefract haunting came to an end, 248 00:16:29,640 --> 00:16:33,600 Speaker 1: a group of Canadian scientists, intrigued by poltergeist phenomena, carried 249 00:16:33,600 --> 00:16:36,480 Speaker 1: out an extraordinary experiment that they hoped might settle the 250 00:16:36,560 --> 00:16:41,440 Speaker 1: debate once and for all. The experiment, created by Canadian 251 00:16:41,480 --> 00:16:45,400 Speaker 1: mathematician doctor George Owen and overseen by psychologist Joel Witten 252 00:16:45,520 --> 00:16:48,640 Speaker 1: of the University of Toronto, took place in nineteen seventy 253 00:16:48,640 --> 00:16:54,000 Speaker 1: two and has become known as the Philip Experiment. Together 254 00:16:54,120 --> 00:16:56,880 Speaker 1: with the test group of individuals of extremely high IQ, 255 00:16:57,040 --> 00:17:00,320 Speaker 1: including doctor Owen's wife, Iris Owen, a former chair person 256 00:17:00,360 --> 00:17:04,000 Speaker 1: of MENSA Canada, the scientists claimed, under test conditions to 257 00:17:04,119 --> 00:17:08,399 Speaker 1: have contacted a spirit known as Philip. The spirit was 258 00:17:08,480 --> 00:17:11,680 Speaker 1: even captured on video, seemingly conversing with the group through 259 00:17:11,760 --> 00:17:14,280 Speaker 1: knox on a table and at one point even moving 260 00:17:14,280 --> 00:17:17,920 Speaker 1: the table around the room. The only thing was Philip 261 00:17:18,040 --> 00:17:22,480 Speaker 1: didn't exist. A few months earlier, the group had been 262 00:17:22,480 --> 00:17:25,320 Speaker 1: tasked with creating a fictitious individual with whom they might 263 00:17:25,440 --> 00:17:29,159 Speaker 1: later try to contact. The group settled on a character 264 00:17:29,200 --> 00:17:33,000 Speaker 1: that they named Philip Aylesford born in sixteen twenty four. 265 00:17:33,280 --> 00:17:36,439 Speaker 1: Philip was given an entire backstory, including links to a 266 00:17:36,520 --> 00:17:39,960 Speaker 1: young Charles the Second. It was also decided that Philip's 267 00:17:40,000 --> 00:17:42,959 Speaker 1: life had come to a tragic end, committing suicide at 268 00:17:42,960 --> 00:17:45,399 Speaker 1: the age of thirty after his girlfriend was accused of 269 00:17:45,440 --> 00:17:50,120 Speaker 1: witchcraft and later burnt at the stake. Having sufficiently plotted 270 00:17:50,119 --> 00:17:52,560 Speaker 1: out the story of Philip's life, the group began trying 271 00:17:52,600 --> 00:17:56,919 Speaker 1: to contact his spirit. After a number of months, the 272 00:17:56,960 --> 00:18:01,199 Speaker 1: experiment failed to yield any meaningful results. However, when they 273 00:18:01,200 --> 00:18:04,960 Speaker 1: adopted a different approach, this time recreating the atmospheric setting 274 00:18:04,960 --> 00:18:09,240 Speaker 1: of as seance, the results were staggering. Almost instantly, they 275 00:18:09,320 --> 00:18:13,200 Speaker 1: experienced that the familiar knocking noises associated with poltergeist hauntings, 276 00:18:13,720 --> 00:18:17,680 Speaker 1: followed by the table being rocked and pulled across the room. 277 00:18:17,720 --> 00:18:21,439 Speaker 1: The group was utterly convinced. They believed that the sound 278 00:18:21,520 --> 00:18:23,600 Speaker 1: and the movement of the table was the result of 279 00:18:23,600 --> 00:18:26,119 Speaker 1: their collective minds trained in such a way as to 280 00:18:26,119 --> 00:18:29,720 Speaker 1: effect the physical world around them. What they claimed to 281 00:18:29,760 --> 00:18:35,200 Speaker 1: have discovered was nothing less than telekinesis. Unsurprisingly, their results 282 00:18:35,200 --> 00:18:38,760 Speaker 1: met with skepticism from the scientific community. And despite claims 283 00:18:38,760 --> 00:18:41,160 Speaker 1: to have replicated the results in studies across the world, 284 00:18:41,359 --> 00:18:45,680 Speaker 1: an absolute proof has remained elusive. But perhaps it is 285 00:18:45,720 --> 00:18:49,240 Speaker 1: something else entirely that is taking place, something unrelated to 286 00:18:49,320 --> 00:19:03,840 Speaker 1: the spirits of the dead, real or otherwise. In his 287 00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:08,119 Speaker 1: essay Mind and Matter, the celebrated Austrian physicist Erwin Schroedinger 288 00:19:08,240 --> 00:19:11,760 Speaker 1: considered the relationship between our conscious minds and the physical world. 289 00:19:13,640 --> 00:19:16,320 Speaker 1: He believed it was merely a convenience to imagine the 290 00:19:16,320 --> 00:19:20,080 Speaker 1: world existing objectively on its own, that one way or another, 291 00:19:20,280 --> 00:19:22,919 Speaker 1: it does not become manifest without a conscious mind to 292 00:19:23,000 --> 00:19:26,880 Speaker 1: observe it. The inference being not that the material world 293 00:19:26,960 --> 00:19:29,840 Speaker 1: might only exist as a figment of our imagination, but 294 00:19:30,080 --> 00:19:33,560 Speaker 1: rather that our conscious minds might somehow create the physical 295 00:19:33,600 --> 00:19:37,359 Speaker 1: world around us. As improbable as this may sound, the 296 00:19:37,440 --> 00:19:41,560 Speaker 1: truth may be even stranger, as demonstrated by what is 297 00:19:41,600 --> 00:19:44,320 Speaker 1: known as the double Slit experiment. Physicists have come to 298 00:19:44,359 --> 00:19:48,399 Speaker 1: accept an extraordinary peculiarity in the way that subatomic particles behave. 299 00:19:49,320 --> 00:19:51,960 Speaker 1: Thanks to the work of physicist Max Bourne, it is 300 00:19:52,000 --> 00:19:55,000 Speaker 1: widely thought, in the mathematical sense, at least, that rather 301 00:19:55,040 --> 00:19:59,280 Speaker 1: than occupying determined positions and outcomes. All particles exist merely 302 00:19:59,320 --> 00:20:03,840 Speaker 1: as a collection of probabilities. The principle is known as superposition, 303 00:20:04,080 --> 00:20:09,360 Speaker 1: and its implications are unfathomably profound. In short, it would 304 00:20:09,400 --> 00:20:11,919 Speaker 1: seem that only when a particle is observed by the 305 00:20:11,920 --> 00:20:15,440 Speaker 1: external world does it become fixed in any meaningful way, 306 00:20:16,000 --> 00:20:20,080 Speaker 1: Perhaps like the eponymous planet of Stanislavlem's Solaris. We might 307 00:20:20,119 --> 00:20:23,159 Speaker 1: imagine the universe as merely a giant mass of energy 308 00:20:23,440 --> 00:20:26,800 Speaker 1: drawn into shape and form when witnessed by our conscious minds. 309 00:20:27,320 --> 00:20:30,800 Speaker 1: The world we create an experience, seamlessly assembled before us, 310 00:20:30,880 --> 00:20:35,000 Speaker 1: as if molded from some kind of subatomic putty. Is 311 00:20:35,000 --> 00:20:38,320 Speaker 1: it inconceivable that, rather than being the disembodied energy of 312 00:20:38,359 --> 00:20:42,199 Speaker 1: a malevolent spirit or the as yet untapped power of telekinesis, 313 00:20:42,800 --> 00:20:47,240 Speaker 1: the Poltergeist phenomena is nothing less than our imaginations becoming manifest, 314 00:20:48,160 --> 00:20:51,600 Speaker 1: a phenomena powered by the heightened sense of collective fear. 315 00:20:53,560 --> 00:20:56,120 Speaker 1: With this in mind, you might start to wander just 316 00:20:56,200 --> 00:21:01,199 Speaker 1: what terrors could we create next? As it might seem, 317 00:21:01,240 --> 00:21:03,600 Speaker 1: it is not fear itself that we should be afraid of, 318 00:21:03,960 --> 00:21:16,159 Speaker 1: but rather ourselves that we should fear. All elements have 319 00:21:16,240 --> 00:21:20,080 Speaker 1: unexplained are produced by me Richard McClain smith. 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