1 00:00:10,600 --> 00:00:14,680 Speaker 1: One morning in January eighteen ninety nine, a tragic but 2 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:19,880 Speaker 1: curious story appeared in the Halifax Evening Career. The article 3 00:00:20,160 --> 00:00:23,639 Speaker 1: concerned a young family who lived in Sowerby Bridge in 4 00:00:23,720 --> 00:00:28,080 Speaker 1: West Yorkshire in the north of England. Sarah Mitchell and 5 00:00:28,200 --> 00:00:33,400 Speaker 1: her ex husband John Kirby shared two daughters between them. 6 00:00:33,600 --> 00:00:36,680 Speaker 1: Five year old Alice lived with her father and grandmother 7 00:00:36,960 --> 00:00:41,240 Speaker 1: on Wakefield Road, while Alice's four year old sister Amy 8 00:00:41,800 --> 00:00:44,680 Speaker 1: lived with her mother just over a mile away on 9 00:00:44,840 --> 00:00:50,320 Speaker 1: Hargreave's Terrace. At roughly ten thirty am on Thursday, the 10 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:55,120 Speaker 1: fifth of January, Alice's grandmother left Alice at home, sleeping 11 00:00:55,120 --> 00:00:58,160 Speaker 1: in her bed, to visit her daughter, who lived up 12 00:00:58,200 --> 00:01:02,040 Speaker 1: the road. It was about forty five minutes later when 13 00:01:02,080 --> 00:01:06,800 Speaker 1: a neighbor, missus Ramsden, noticed the flickering of flames coming 14 00:01:06,840 --> 00:01:10,160 Speaker 1: from inside the house. When all of a sudden, the 15 00:01:10,200 --> 00:01:14,000 Speaker 1: front door burst open to reveal the horrifying sight of 16 00:01:14,040 --> 00:01:18,760 Speaker 1: the young Alice, screaming in agony as flames leaped up 17 00:01:19,000 --> 00:01:23,679 Speaker 1: from all over her body. In a panic, Ramsden rushed 18 00:01:23,720 --> 00:01:26,399 Speaker 1: home and grabbed a rug, then threw it over the 19 00:01:26,480 --> 00:01:30,680 Speaker 1: child in an effort to douse the flames. A doctor 20 00:01:30,800 --> 00:01:34,319 Speaker 1: was promptly called and soon after arrived on horse and 21 00:01:34,440 --> 00:01:37,800 Speaker 1: cart to find the girl barely clinging on to life. 22 00:01:38,720 --> 00:01:42,160 Speaker 1: Her entire body was burned from head to toe, so 23 00:01:42,400 --> 00:01:47,160 Speaker 1: badly in parts that it had blackened and charred. After 24 00:01:47,200 --> 00:01:50,440 Speaker 1: Alice was rushed to hospital, a neighbor was sent off 25 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:54,280 Speaker 1: to inform her mother, Sarah, of the terrible news, But 26 00:01:54,440 --> 00:01:57,840 Speaker 1: just as the neighbor was nearing Sarah's home, they saw 27 00:01:57,880 --> 00:02:02,240 Speaker 1: a traumatized looking Sarah coming towards them from the other direction. 28 00:02:03,680 --> 00:02:07,080 Speaker 1: Assuming Sarah had already heard the news, the neighbor was 29 00:02:07,160 --> 00:02:11,720 Speaker 1: completely bemused when Sarah tried to explain between sobs that 30 00:02:11,840 --> 00:02:14,880 Speaker 1: she was running to her ex husband's home to tell 31 00:02:14,960 --> 00:02:18,960 Speaker 1: him about what had just happened to their daughter Amy. 32 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:23,880 Speaker 1: Only minutes before, Sarah had gone outside to pull some 33 00:02:23,960 --> 00:02:27,200 Speaker 1: water from the community well when she heard the sound 34 00:02:27,200 --> 00:02:32,640 Speaker 1: of screaming coming from inside her house. Racing back, she 35 00:02:32,760 --> 00:02:35,720 Speaker 1: found four year old Amy standing in the middle of 36 00:02:35,760 --> 00:02:41,680 Speaker 1: the kitchen with foot high flames shooting up from her head. Incredibly, 37 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:45,560 Speaker 1: both Alice and Amy appeared to have caught fire at 38 00:02:45,600 --> 00:02:50,400 Speaker 1: almost exactly the same time, despite living in separate homes 39 00:02:50,440 --> 00:02:55,600 Speaker 1: a mile away from each other Tragically. Alice didn't survive 40 00:02:55,680 --> 00:03:00,000 Speaker 1: the night, while Amy succumbed to her injuries the following morning. 41 00:03:01,440 --> 00:03:06,360 Speaker 1: No explanation for how exactly they caught fire was ever found. 42 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:17,360 Speaker 1: Some nine years before the mysterious case, in Sowerby Bridge, 43 00:03:17,760 --> 00:03:21,040 Speaker 1: just over three thousand miles away on the outskirts of 44 00:03:21,160 --> 00:03:26,080 Speaker 1: air Massachusetts, in the United States, a doctor picks his 45 00:03:26,120 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 1: way through the woods, beckoned forward by a distraught young woman. 46 00:03:31,320 --> 00:03:35,040 Speaker 1: As he moves deeper into the trees, he becomes aware 47 00:03:35,360 --> 00:03:38,800 Speaker 1: of the faint smell of burnt flesh in the air. 48 00:03:40,000 --> 00:03:44,240 Speaker 1: The further he goes, the stronger the smell becomes, until 49 00:03:44,280 --> 00:03:47,120 Speaker 1: he's forced to cup a handkerchief to his nose to 50 00:03:47,240 --> 00:03:53,320 Speaker 1: block it out. There, says the woman, finally pointing towards 51 00:03:53,360 --> 00:03:58,480 Speaker 1: something on fire in a small clearing. The doctor stood 52 00:03:58,520 --> 00:04:01,760 Speaker 1: startled for a moment as he tried to comprehend the 53 00:04:01,840 --> 00:04:06,920 Speaker 1: peculiar and shocking scene. It was a body covered in 54 00:04:07,040 --> 00:04:11,960 Speaker 1: fifteen inch flames, pitched forward on one knee, with its face, 55 00:04:12,320 --> 00:04:16,320 Speaker 1: arms and chest lying flat against the ground while its 56 00:04:16,400 --> 00:04:22,400 Speaker 1: right leg remained rigidly stuck up straight. The body hissed 57 00:04:22,400 --> 00:04:25,919 Speaker 1: and crackled as it burned. Then a pop was heard. 58 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:30,960 Speaker 1: Was the right tibia snapped off completely, leaving the foot 59 00:04:30,960 --> 00:04:36,040 Speaker 1: hanging from a string of quickly blackening tendons. Well put 60 00:04:36,040 --> 00:04:41,480 Speaker 1: her out, for God's sake, shouted the doctor. Moments later, 61 00:04:41,520 --> 00:04:44,960 Speaker 1: as others arrived to help, a spading fork was used 62 00:04:44,960 --> 00:04:48,560 Speaker 1: to shovel earth over the corpse until the flames died out, 63 00:04:49,600 --> 00:04:53,480 Speaker 1: and then they all just stood watching the blackened figure, 64 00:04:54,120 --> 00:04:58,880 Speaker 1: its clothes all but burned off, quietly smoking in the woods. 65 00:05:00,200 --> 00:05:04,120 Speaker 1: Shortly before she caught fire. The victim, the mother of 66 00:05:04,160 --> 00:05:06,880 Speaker 1: the woman who'd called for the doctor in the first place, 67 00:05:07,279 --> 00:05:10,559 Speaker 1: had been clearing stumps and roots from an area close 68 00:05:10,640 --> 00:05:15,520 Speaker 1: to her home. Some suggested she must have accidentally set 69 00:05:15,600 --> 00:05:20,600 Speaker 1: fire to herself. However, not only was the body found 70 00:05:20,600 --> 00:05:23,640 Speaker 1: a good ten meters from the fire, but there was 71 00:05:23,720 --> 00:05:27,640 Speaker 1: also no damage to the forest floor around it, with 72 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:31,960 Speaker 1: only a slight charring of the leaves underneath. Even the 73 00:05:32,040 --> 00:05:34,880 Speaker 1: straw hat the woman was wearing at the time she 74 00:05:35,000 --> 00:05:39,920 Speaker 1: caught fire lay several feet away with only minor scorchings. 75 00:05:41,600 --> 00:05:46,039 Speaker 1: The doctor who attended the scene, a doctor Heartwell, gave 76 00:05:46,080 --> 00:05:49,840 Speaker 1: his account of this peculiar story in the February eighteen 77 00:05:49,920 --> 00:05:54,160 Speaker 1: ninety two edition of the Boston Medical Journal. It is 78 00:05:54,200 --> 00:05:57,440 Speaker 1: thought to be the first officially recorded case of a 79 00:05:57,480 --> 00:06:02,320 Speaker 1: medical professional finding a human body combusting in which the 80 00:06:02,440 --> 00:06:07,719 Speaker 1: material of the body itself was feeding the fire. Heartwell's 81 00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:11,239 Speaker 1: own conclusion was that the woman, despite being well known 82 00:06:11,440 --> 00:06:15,359 Speaker 1: as a diligent and sober individual, had likely been caught 83 00:06:15,400 --> 00:06:18,599 Speaker 1: out by a sudden burst of flame from the fire 84 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:22,279 Speaker 1: she'd made, which had then latched onto her clothes and 85 00:06:22,480 --> 00:06:27,760 Speaker 1: quickly overcome her. But could it have been something a 86 00:06:27,760 --> 00:06:34,600 Speaker 1: little stranger you're listening to unexplained? And I'm Richard McClane Smith. 87 00:06:41,960 --> 00:06:46,479 Speaker 1: Mary wasn't her usual self ever since she'd moved out 88 00:06:46,520 --> 00:06:50,400 Speaker 1: to Florida. Her son Richard couldn't help but notice how 89 00:06:50,480 --> 00:06:53,919 Speaker 1: unhappy she'd become. It had all seemed like such a 90 00:06:53,960 --> 00:06:58,920 Speaker 1: good idea at first. Only three years before the sixty 91 00:06:58,960 --> 00:07:04,560 Speaker 1: seven year old Mary's beloved husband and Richard's father, Richard Riesa, 92 00:07:04,640 --> 00:07:11,360 Speaker 1: had died. Mary and Richard Sor had lived together in Columbia, Pennsylvania, 93 00:07:11,400 --> 00:07:15,240 Speaker 1: where they enjoyed a lively social life, often hosting their 94 00:07:15,280 --> 00:07:19,120 Speaker 1: many friends that their beautifully turned out home that was 95 00:07:19,200 --> 00:07:23,960 Speaker 1: full of antique furniture and art. When Richard died, however, 96 00:07:24,720 --> 00:07:29,559 Speaker 1: everything changed. The home where her son had also grown 97 00:07:29,680 --> 00:07:33,720 Speaker 1: up so grand and full of wonderful memories, was now 98 00:07:33,840 --> 00:07:39,640 Speaker 1: just a painful daily reminder of her husband's absence. Though 99 00:07:39,640 --> 00:07:42,760 Speaker 1: she tried to carry on like before, it was clear 100 00:07:42,800 --> 00:07:45,960 Speaker 1: to her son that his father's death had taken a 101 00:07:46,040 --> 00:07:51,440 Speaker 1: heavy toll and she needed help. After graduating from Cornell 102 00:07:51,680 --> 00:07:55,600 Speaker 1: Medical School, like his dad, Richard was sent to Florida 103 00:07:55,800 --> 00:07:58,880 Speaker 1: to look after US troops stationed there as part of 104 00:07:58,880 --> 00:08:02,400 Speaker 1: their training to being sent overseas to fight in the 105 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:06,680 Speaker 1: Second World War. Richard liked it so much that he 106 00:08:06,800 --> 00:08:11,000 Speaker 1: and his wife, Ernestine, along with their three daughters, decided 107 00:08:11,040 --> 00:08:14,040 Speaker 1: to stay there and moved into a large family home 108 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:19,040 Speaker 1: in Saint Petersburg. The obvious solution, therefore, was to have 109 00:08:19,160 --> 00:08:22,960 Speaker 1: his mother moved down to be closer to them, and 110 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:26,960 Speaker 1: so in late May of nineteen fifty one she did, 111 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:30,440 Speaker 1: taking an apartment on Cherry Street in the east of 112 00:08:30,480 --> 00:08:35,079 Speaker 1: the city, just by the coast. By July first, however, 113 00:08:35,520 --> 00:08:40,360 Speaker 1: only five weeks later, Mary was struggling. It was the 114 00:08:40,440 --> 00:08:43,800 Speaker 1: heat and humidity more than anything else, being such a 115 00:08:43,880 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 1: marked contrast to what she'd been used to in Columbia, Pennsylvania. 116 00:08:48,400 --> 00:08:51,800 Speaker 1: She missed her friends too, and her apartment was also 117 00:08:51,920 --> 00:08:55,920 Speaker 1: beginning to depress her. With only one bedroom and three 118 00:08:56,000 --> 00:08:58,960 Speaker 1: rooms in total, it was a far cry from the 119 00:08:59,040 --> 00:09:03,400 Speaker 1: much prettier house she'd shared with her husband, and once 120 00:09:03,400 --> 00:09:09,160 Speaker 1: again something had to break. In the end, Mary decided 121 00:09:09,160 --> 00:09:11,960 Speaker 1: to keep the place in Florida, but moved back to 122 00:09:12,040 --> 00:09:16,240 Speaker 1: Columbia in Pennsylvania for the remainder of the summer and 123 00:09:16,360 --> 00:09:21,440 Speaker 1: asked her friends to help her find somewhere to stay. Sadly, however, 124 00:09:22,080 --> 00:09:28,440 Speaker 1: finding a place proved an almost impossible task. Undeterred, Mary 125 00:09:28,760 --> 00:09:31,839 Speaker 1: succeeded in convincing a friend to drive her back to 126 00:09:31,920 --> 00:09:36,800 Speaker 1: Pennsylvania so she could organize something herself, only for her 127 00:09:36,840 --> 00:09:41,800 Speaker 1: friend to then break her leg, and so Mary had 128 00:09:41,880 --> 00:09:45,920 Speaker 1: no choice but to stick it out in Saint Petersburg indefinitely. 129 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:57,960 Speaker 1: In the early afternoon of July first, clearly withdrawn, Mary 130 00:09:58,400 --> 00:10:01,480 Speaker 1: arrived at her son's house to look after her youngest 131 00:10:01,559 --> 00:10:04,599 Speaker 1: granddaughter while the rest of the family went out to 132 00:10:04,679 --> 00:10:09,560 Speaker 1: the beach. According to Richard's account given to the police 133 00:10:09,640 --> 00:10:12,679 Speaker 1: the following day, while he was at the beach, he 134 00:10:12,760 --> 00:10:16,280 Speaker 1: couldn't stop thinking about how down his mother seemed, and 135 00:10:16,440 --> 00:10:21,840 Speaker 1: decided to head home early. Once back, Mary insisted to 136 00:10:21,960 --> 00:10:25,280 Speaker 1: him that everything was fine and asked to simply be 137 00:10:25,400 --> 00:10:28,880 Speaker 1: driven back to her apartment, which Richard agreed to do 138 00:10:29,160 --> 00:10:32,439 Speaker 1: after he'd taken a shower. By the time he came 139 00:10:32,480 --> 00:10:36,600 Speaker 1: back down, his mother had left, having decided just to 140 00:10:36,640 --> 00:10:42,479 Speaker 1: walk home. Not being fully dressed. Richard asked his wife, Ernestine, 141 00:10:42,600 --> 00:10:45,160 Speaker 1: to chase after her in the hope of picking her 142 00:10:45,240 --> 00:10:49,319 Speaker 1: up on the way, but Mary was nowhere to be seen. 143 00:10:51,040 --> 00:10:56,240 Speaker 1: When Ernestine eventually arrived at Mary's apartment, she wasn't there either. 144 00:10:57,880 --> 00:11:03,439 Speaker 1: Ernestine waited unsuccessfully until five pm before deciding to drive 145 00:11:03,480 --> 00:11:08,800 Speaker 1: back home, having heard nothing from his mother by eight pm. 146 00:11:08,920 --> 00:11:12,360 Speaker 1: Richard then claimed to have driven back to her apartment 147 00:11:12,640 --> 00:11:15,480 Speaker 1: with one of his daughters, where he found the door 148 00:11:15,600 --> 00:11:19,720 Speaker 1: open and his mother sitting silently in her easy chair, 149 00:11:20,240 --> 00:11:25,280 Speaker 1: smoking a cigarette and listening to the radio. Richard later 150 00:11:25,400 --> 00:11:30,439 Speaker 1: said that she seemed oddly relaxed given the circumstances, perhaps 151 00:11:30,760 --> 00:11:34,920 Speaker 1: helped by the two sleeping pills she'd just taken. He 152 00:11:35,040 --> 00:11:38,760 Speaker 1: said that Mary insisted she was fine, again, saying that 153 00:11:38,840 --> 00:11:41,280 Speaker 1: she planned to go to bed as soon as her 154 00:11:41,320 --> 00:11:45,720 Speaker 1: program was finished. Satisfied that his mother was at least 155 00:11:45,760 --> 00:11:49,360 Speaker 1: home safely. Richard said he simply gave her a kiss 156 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:52,000 Speaker 1: good night, then promised to call in on her in 157 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:55,640 Speaker 1: the morning before he and his daughter drove back home. 158 00:11:57,800 --> 00:12:02,320 Speaker 1: Alamander Apartments, where Mary was home to a hotel and 159 00:12:02,520 --> 00:12:06,880 Speaker 1: five apartments in total. However, Mary was the only person 160 00:12:07,000 --> 00:12:11,520 Speaker 1: living there at the time, along with her landlady Pansy Carpenter. 161 00:12:12,760 --> 00:12:16,480 Speaker 1: Pansy said she saw Mary a short time before Richard's 162 00:12:16,520 --> 00:12:21,640 Speaker 1: arrival and again after he left. Having noticed her tenant's 163 00:12:21,760 --> 00:12:25,959 Speaker 1: downbeat mood, Pansy had chatted to Mary briefly about her 164 00:12:26,000 --> 00:12:29,600 Speaker 1: disappointment and not being able to get back to Pennsylvania, 165 00:12:29,720 --> 00:12:31,720 Speaker 1: and had then gone off to buy her some ice 166 00:12:31,760 --> 00:12:35,200 Speaker 1: cream to try and cheer her up. When she returned 167 00:12:35,240 --> 00:12:40,240 Speaker 1: to the apartment, however, the lights were off. Assuming that 168 00:12:40,280 --> 00:12:43,840 Speaker 1: Mary had gone to bed, Pansy decided not to disturb 169 00:12:43,880 --> 00:12:55,040 Speaker 1: her and soon after went to sleep herself. It was 170 00:12:55,080 --> 00:12:58,640 Speaker 1: five am the following morning when Pansy was woken by 171 00:12:58,720 --> 00:13:02,280 Speaker 1: the thud of what she assumed was a door slamming 172 00:13:02,320 --> 00:13:07,440 Speaker 1: somewhere on her property. Stepping out into the warm morning darkness, 173 00:13:07,840 --> 00:13:12,319 Speaker 1: her flip flops clacking against the concrete path. Pansy's relief 174 00:13:12,360 --> 00:13:15,880 Speaker 1: at finding the place deserted was soon tempered by the 175 00:13:15,920 --> 00:13:20,920 Speaker 1: whiff of something burning. Thinking it was the water pump overheating, 176 00:13:21,360 --> 00:13:25,000 Speaker 1: she headed into the garage to inspect it. With the 177 00:13:25,080 --> 00:13:29,200 Speaker 1: smell of burning having by then dissipated, she decided to 178 00:13:29,240 --> 00:13:32,199 Speaker 1: air on the side of caution and switched it off 179 00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:37,640 Speaker 1: before returning back to bed. Pansy was up again at 180 00:13:37,679 --> 00:13:41,720 Speaker 1: sixty five and stepped outside to collect the morning paper 181 00:13:42,360 --> 00:13:46,280 Speaker 1: when she noticed Mary's apartment was still dark, which was 182 00:13:46,400 --> 00:13:51,760 Speaker 1: unusual since Mary was such an early riser. Just over 183 00:13:51,840 --> 00:13:56,040 Speaker 1: an hour later, a telegram messenger arrived with a telegram 184 00:13:56,120 --> 00:13:59,360 Speaker 1: for Mary. Since she didn't appear to be up yet, 185 00:14:00,480 --> 00:14:05,439 Speaker 1: agreed to deliver it herself. She felt a sudden pang 186 00:14:05,440 --> 00:14:09,480 Speaker 1: of nerves as she set off toward Mary's apartment, which 187 00:14:09,559 --> 00:14:13,000 Speaker 1: was located beyond a screen door and down a corridor 188 00:14:13,040 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 1: to the left. Pansy grabbed the screen door, then pulled 189 00:14:17,640 --> 00:14:23,120 Speaker 1: back her hand in shock. It was searingly hot. It 190 00:14:23,160 --> 00:14:28,400 Speaker 1: was also unlocked, which was never the case. Taking care 191 00:14:28,560 --> 00:14:32,120 Speaker 1: not to burn her hand, Pansy poured the screen door 192 00:14:32,200 --> 00:14:37,600 Speaker 1: open again and stepped through into the corridor. Beyond. A 193 00:14:37,720 --> 00:14:41,400 Speaker 1: disturbing warmth hung in the air. As Pansy made her 194 00:14:41,400 --> 00:14:44,840 Speaker 1: way down to Mary's apartment, where she found the door 195 00:14:45,280 --> 00:14:50,240 Speaker 1: slightly ajar and knew immediately that something was terribly wrong. 196 00:14:51,840 --> 00:14:55,560 Speaker 1: Pansy ran outside and called out to the telegram messenger 197 00:14:55,600 --> 00:14:59,080 Speaker 1: for help, along with two decorators who were busy working 198 00:14:59,080 --> 00:15:02,680 Speaker 1: on a house across the street. The men told Pansy 199 00:15:02,760 --> 00:15:06,720 Speaker 1: to wait outside as one of the decorators, Albert Downet, 200 00:15:07,120 --> 00:15:12,440 Speaker 1: headed inside toward Mary's apartment. A thick plume of black 201 00:15:12,480 --> 00:15:17,520 Speaker 1: smoke escaped as Albert pushed open the door, batting it away. 202 00:15:17,960 --> 00:15:21,840 Speaker 1: He stepped inside, where a thick smell of grease clung 203 00:15:21,920 --> 00:15:26,200 Speaker 1: to the air. Through the smoky darkness, he could just 204 00:15:26,360 --> 00:15:29,720 Speaker 1: make out some flames licking up through the springs of 205 00:15:29,760 --> 00:15:33,320 Speaker 1: an easy chair that had clearly been destroyed by a fire, 206 00:15:34,520 --> 00:15:36,880 Speaker 1: and at the base of what remained at the chair 207 00:15:37,680 --> 00:15:44,080 Speaker 1: was a bizarre, gelatinous, red, smoldering mass. Albert ran straight 208 00:15:44,120 --> 00:15:47,680 Speaker 1: out and yelled for Pansy to call the fire brigade. 209 00:15:54,840 --> 00:15:58,560 Speaker 1: Assistant fire Chief Stephen Griffith was one of the first 210 00:15:58,720 --> 00:16:02,840 Speaker 1: to arrive on the scene. He noticed first that a 211 00:16:02,880 --> 00:16:05,920 Speaker 1: plastic face plate for a switch in the hall had 212 00:16:05,960 --> 00:16:10,040 Speaker 1: morphed completely out of shape, suggesting a significant heat had 213 00:16:10,040 --> 00:16:15,920 Speaker 1: been generated from within the apartment beyond. Then, pushing open 214 00:16:15,960 --> 00:16:21,200 Speaker 1: the door, he entered inside as he called out Mary's name, 215 00:16:21,720 --> 00:16:24,360 Speaker 1: Barely able to see more than a few meters in 216 00:16:24,440 --> 00:16:27,120 Speaker 1: front of him through the smoke, he headed straight for 217 00:16:27,240 --> 00:16:32,400 Speaker 1: a window and opened it up. Turning back, he saw 218 00:16:32,440 --> 00:16:34,960 Speaker 1: then that one of the joists in the living room 219 00:16:35,320 --> 00:16:38,360 Speaker 1: and the remains of the easy chair, was still on fire. 220 00:16:39,560 --> 00:16:45,120 Speaker 1: Using a hand held water pump, Griffith quickly extinguished the flames. Then, 221 00:16:45,480 --> 00:16:48,800 Speaker 1: with the smoke now steadily clearing, he looked down to 222 00:16:48,840 --> 00:16:52,080 Speaker 1: the floor and saw next to the remains of the 223 00:16:52,160 --> 00:16:56,640 Speaker 1: chair a large pile of ash, surrounded by a dark 224 00:16:56,920 --> 00:17:00,960 Speaker 1: globular mass, and sticking out of it was an almost 225 00:17:01,080 --> 00:17:05,800 Speaker 1: perfectly preserved leg, burned off from just below the shin, 226 00:17:06,320 --> 00:17:11,840 Speaker 1: with an unburned black satin slipper on its foot. The 227 00:17:11,960 --> 00:17:15,840 Speaker 1: pile of ash and sticky mass, it seemed, along with 228 00:17:15,920 --> 00:17:21,040 Speaker 1: the leg, was all that was left of Mary. Griffith 229 00:17:21,119 --> 00:17:24,600 Speaker 1: stood bemused by the whole thing, looking about at the 230 00:17:24,640 --> 00:17:28,840 Speaker 1: rest of the apartment that appeared almost completely undamaged by 231 00:17:28,880 --> 00:17:33,280 Speaker 1: the apparent blaze, Though there were undeniable signs that a 232 00:17:33,359 --> 00:17:37,160 Speaker 1: fire had taken place, such as the ceiling having been 233 00:17:37,160 --> 00:17:41,760 Speaker 1: blackened by the smoke, an internal screen window clogged with soot, 234 00:17:42,160 --> 00:17:45,600 Speaker 1: and a degree of burning between the partition separating the 235 00:17:45,680 --> 00:17:49,760 Speaker 1: kitchen and living areas. Very little of the apartment appeared 236 00:17:49,800 --> 00:17:54,520 Speaker 1: to have actually caught fire, aside from the chair where 237 00:17:54,560 --> 00:17:57,600 Speaker 1: Mary must have been sitting when it happened, a small 238 00:17:57,680 --> 00:18:00,400 Speaker 1: table next to it and a wooden lamp on top 239 00:18:00,440 --> 00:18:04,440 Speaker 1: of that were all that was burned, and even then 240 00:18:04,560 --> 00:18:09,080 Speaker 1: only partially. Not one of her two day beds or 241 00:18:09,119 --> 00:18:12,760 Speaker 1: the sheets on them, nor the dining table and four chairs, 242 00:18:13,320 --> 00:18:16,399 Speaker 1: all located close to the apparent source of the fire, 243 00:18:16,720 --> 00:18:20,760 Speaker 1: were affected, while nothing in her dressing room or bathroom 244 00:18:20,920 --> 00:18:30,879 Speaker 1: was damaged either. Once the room was cleared of smoke 245 00:18:31,200 --> 00:18:36,480 Speaker 1: and cool enough to investigate. Alongside Mary's lower leg, forensics 246 00:18:36,520 --> 00:18:40,320 Speaker 1: also found some teeth, a charred piece of liver attached 247 00:18:40,359 --> 00:18:43,359 Speaker 1: to some spine, as well as a hip bone and 248 00:18:43,480 --> 00:18:48,240 Speaker 1: a piece of Mary's skull buried within the ashes. Though 249 00:18:48,280 --> 00:18:51,320 Speaker 1: there was little doubting the identity of the body for 250 00:18:51,480 --> 00:18:55,760 Speaker 1: sixty seven year old Mary Reesa was ultimately identified by 251 00:18:55,800 --> 00:18:59,800 Speaker 1: the black slipper on her foot, which her son recognized 252 00:19:00,000 --> 00:19:05,040 Speaker 1: as hers. So unusual was the incident that the Saint 253 00:19:05,040 --> 00:19:08,280 Speaker 1: Petersburg Police were forced to enlist the help of the 254 00:19:08,359 --> 00:19:14,120 Speaker 1: FBI to try and untangle it. Attention soon focused on 255 00:19:14,160 --> 00:19:19,480 Speaker 1: Mary's son, Richard, whom her landlady Pansy Carpenter, reported seeing 256 00:19:19,600 --> 00:19:23,920 Speaker 1: arriving at the apartment the night before she died. As 257 00:19:23,920 --> 00:19:28,160 Speaker 1: she explained to the police, although that wasn't unusual, it 258 00:19:28,280 --> 00:19:31,000 Speaker 1: was strange that she found Mary's door had been left 259 00:19:31,040 --> 00:19:34,560 Speaker 1: open and the screen door unlocked when she went to 260 00:19:34,600 --> 00:19:39,320 Speaker 1: call on her the following morning. That Mary's bed also 261 00:19:39,359 --> 00:19:42,280 Speaker 1: appeared to have been slept in, despite the fact that 262 00:19:42,320 --> 00:19:45,560 Speaker 1: she clearly died while sitting in her easy chair, was 263 00:19:45,640 --> 00:19:51,240 Speaker 1: also a little suspicious. In the end, however, Richard was 264 00:19:51,280 --> 00:19:57,359 Speaker 1: never seriously considered a suspect. Two electricians were tasked with 265 00:19:57,480 --> 00:20:01,119 Speaker 1: examining all the electrical items in the flower to determine 266 00:20:01,119 --> 00:20:04,680 Speaker 1: if an electrical fire was the cause, but no faults 267 00:20:04,720 --> 00:20:10,359 Speaker 1: were found. The apartment also had an electric fire, which 268 00:20:10,440 --> 00:20:15,760 Speaker 1: wasn't far from where Mary's remains were found. However, according 269 00:20:15,840 --> 00:20:18,919 Speaker 1: to those who first arrived at the apartment, this was 270 00:20:18,960 --> 00:20:23,280 Speaker 1: switched off when they got there. For someone so disgruntled 271 00:20:23,320 --> 00:20:27,040 Speaker 1: with the Florida heat, it also seems highly unlikely that 272 00:20:27,119 --> 00:20:31,520 Speaker 1: Mary would have had reason to turn this on. After 273 00:20:31,640 --> 00:20:36,320 Speaker 1: three weeks spent analyzing smoke samples, pieces of rug, and 274 00:20:36,480 --> 00:20:40,240 Speaker 1: segments of the easy chair, among other things, the FBI 275 00:20:40,520 --> 00:20:48,240 Speaker 1: concluded that no oxidizing chemicals, petroleum hydrocarbons or other volatile fluids, 276 00:20:48,680 --> 00:20:52,840 Speaker 1: or any other chemical substances used to initiate or accelerate 277 00:20:52,920 --> 00:20:58,679 Speaker 1: combustion were found at the scene. As investigators struggled to 278 00:20:58,720 --> 00:21:02,919 Speaker 1: explain it all, a raft of amateur detectives contacted the 279 00:21:02,960 --> 00:21:07,800 Speaker 1: local fire department to offer their own theories. Everything from 280 00:21:07,920 --> 00:21:12,640 Speaker 1: lightning to an accident with napalm was suggested, with one 281 00:21:12,720 --> 00:21:16,199 Speaker 1: individual even claiming that they'd watched a ball of fire 282 00:21:16,720 --> 00:21:27,200 Speaker 1: come through the open window and hit Mary. With all 283 00:21:27,240 --> 00:21:31,480 Speaker 1: the various theories about what had happened floating around, Mary's 284 00:21:31,560 --> 00:21:36,120 Speaker 1: daughter in law, Ernestine, had one of her own. Speaking 285 00:21:36,160 --> 00:21:39,679 Speaker 1: to the Saint Petersburg Times in nineteen ninety one, she 286 00:21:39,800 --> 00:21:43,199 Speaker 1: said that Mary was a heavy smoker who most likely 287 00:21:43,320 --> 00:21:46,760 Speaker 1: fell asleep in her chair while smoking and set herself 288 00:21:46,840 --> 00:21:51,720 Speaker 1: on fire. With Mary having taken sleeping pills that night 289 00:21:52,240 --> 00:21:55,879 Speaker 1: while wearing a night dress made of rayon acetate, a 290 00:21:56,000 --> 00:22:00,200 Speaker 1: highly flammable material. It is certainly plausible that this is 291 00:22:00,240 --> 00:22:04,080 Speaker 1: what happened. It was also true that the floor under 292 00:22:04,119 --> 00:22:07,600 Speaker 1: the carpet was concrete, which may have helped to contain 293 00:22:07,640 --> 00:22:13,080 Speaker 1: the spread of any resultant fire. And yet such deaths 294 00:22:13,160 --> 00:22:16,880 Speaker 1: are by no means unheard of, but rarely, if ever, 295 00:22:17,240 --> 00:22:20,639 Speaker 1: do they result in the complete cremation of the victim, 296 00:22:20,840 --> 00:22:24,760 Speaker 1: something that would likely require well over a thousand degrees 297 00:22:24,800 --> 00:22:30,040 Speaker 1: celsius to occur. By comparison, the heat generated from a 298 00:22:30,080 --> 00:22:34,240 Speaker 1: burning chair would be more akin to six hundred degrees celsius. 299 00:22:35,600 --> 00:22:38,959 Speaker 1: One theory put forward was that the reason the apartment 300 00:22:39,119 --> 00:22:43,159 Speaker 1: hadn't burned down was because Mary hadn't been set on fire, 301 00:22:43,520 --> 00:22:47,560 Speaker 1: but had instead burned from the inside, with her body 302 00:22:47,640 --> 00:22:53,040 Speaker 1: fat sustaining the burn like a candle while simultaneously keeping 303 00:22:53,080 --> 00:23:00,119 Speaker 1: the resultant fire localized around her body. Famed anthropologist de 304 00:23:00,200 --> 00:23:04,840 Speaker 1: Wilton Krogeman of the University of Pennsylvania was also brought 305 00:23:04,920 --> 00:23:08,960 Speaker 1: in to consult on the mystery. Considered an expert on 306 00:23:09,000 --> 00:23:12,760 Speaker 1: the effects of fire on the human body, Krogeman made 307 00:23:12,800 --> 00:23:16,280 Speaker 1: the intriguing point that had the fire been a common one, 308 00:23:16,720 --> 00:23:20,919 Speaker 1: Mary's skull should have exploded rather than shrunk, as it 309 00:23:21,040 --> 00:23:25,680 Speaker 1: was found to have done. Krogeman, who regarded the case 310 00:23:25,760 --> 00:23:29,120 Speaker 1: as the most amazing thing he'd ever seen, and who 311 00:23:29,160 --> 00:23:31,760 Speaker 1: felt the hairs bristle on the back of his neck 312 00:23:31,960 --> 00:23:35,960 Speaker 1: whenever he thought about it, stated that he couldn't conceive 313 00:23:36,080 --> 00:23:40,240 Speaker 1: of such a complete cremation without more material having been 314 00:23:40,280 --> 00:23:44,720 Speaker 1: burned in the apartment where I living in the Middle Ages, 315 00:23:44,760 --> 00:23:50,800 Speaker 1: he said, I'd mutter something about black magic. To this day, 316 00:23:51,200 --> 00:23:59,320 Speaker 1: the bizarre death of Mary Esa remains unexplained. A few 317 00:23:59,440 --> 00:24:04,720 Speaker 1: days to Mary's remains were discovered, Pansy Carpenter, her landlady, 318 00:24:05,200 --> 00:24:09,880 Speaker 1: remembered that she still had Mary's undelivered telegram in her office, 319 00:24:10,600 --> 00:24:14,400 Speaker 1: handing it over to Mary's son, Richard. He read it 320 00:24:14,680 --> 00:24:21,720 Speaker 1: and wept. It was a message from Mary's friends in Columbia, Pennsylvania. 321 00:24:22,000 --> 00:24:25,359 Speaker 1: They'd managed to find her an apartment after all, and 322 00:24:25,440 --> 00:24:34,000 Speaker 1: couldn't wait to see her again. If you enjoy Unexplained 323 00:24:34,000 --> 00:24:36,120 Speaker 1: and would like to help support us, you can now 324 00:24:36,160 --> 00:24:40,000 Speaker 1: do so via Patroon. To receive access to ad three episodes, 325 00:24:40,440 --> 00:24:43,880 Speaker 1: just go to patron dot com, Forward slash Unexplained Pod 326 00:24:44,000 --> 00:24:48,240 Speaker 1: to sign up. Unexplained, The book and audiobook, featuring ten 327 00:24:48,280 --> 00:24:50,760 Speaker 1: stories that have never before been covered on the show, 328 00:24:51,040 --> 00:24:55,040 Speaker 1: is now available to buy worldwide. You can purchase through Amazon, 329 00:24:55,240 --> 00:24:59,439 Speaker 1: Barnes and Noble, and Waterstones, among other bookstores. All elements 330 00:24:59,440 --> 00:25:02,639 Speaker 1: of unexpl Blamed, including the show's music, are produced by 331 00:25:02,680 --> 00:25:06,040 Speaker 1: me Richard McClain smith. 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