1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:03,520 Speaker 1: Hello, it's Richard mccleinsmith here with a quick update before 2 00:00:03,520 --> 00:00:06,920 Speaker 1: we dive into today's episode. Unexplained is very excited to 3 00:00:06,960 --> 00:00:09,320 Speaker 1: be a part of Crime Wave at Sea this November, 4 00:00:09,560 --> 00:00:12,720 Speaker 1: joining forces with some of the eeriest voices in the 5 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:15,920 Speaker 1: world of true crime and the paranormal four nights in 6 00:00:15,960 --> 00:00:20,080 Speaker 1: the Caribbean, with amazing podcasts like Last Podcast on the Left, 7 00:00:20,400 --> 00:00:24,520 Speaker 1: Scared to Death and many more live shows, Meet and greets, 8 00:00:24,760 --> 00:00:28,080 Speaker 1: creepy Stories under the Stars and you can be there too, 9 00:00:28,760 --> 00:00:32,080 Speaker 1: but don't wait. Rooms are nearly sold out. Head to 10 00:00:32,159 --> 00:00:36,479 Speaker 1: Crimewave Atsea dot com forward slash Unexplained to grab your 11 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:39,519 Speaker 1: fan coat and lock in your cabin. We'd love to 12 00:00:39,520 --> 00:00:54,360 Speaker 1: see you on board. Great flurries of snow spiraled around 13 00:00:54,400 --> 00:00:57,240 Speaker 1: the church spire and settled heavily on the roofs of 14 00:00:57,240 --> 00:01:01,920 Speaker 1: the nearby cottages, like a scene from a Victorian Christmas card. 15 00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:06,080 Speaker 1: It was the night of February eighth, eighteen fifty five 16 00:01:06,600 --> 00:01:09,480 Speaker 1: in the parish of Withercombe Rawley in the County of 17 00:01:09,520 --> 00:01:13,640 Speaker 1: Devon in the southwest of England. But while the residents 18 00:01:13,640 --> 00:01:16,800 Speaker 1: of the village and those across the county shivered in 19 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:22,039 Speaker 1: their beds, something was abroad, silently scurrying from house to house, 20 00:01:22,520 --> 00:01:27,720 Speaker 1: across fields and over fences. By dawn the following morning, 21 00:01:28,200 --> 00:01:31,440 Speaker 1: all about the land was carpeted with a sharp frost. 22 00:01:32,520 --> 00:01:34,880 Speaker 1: It was an hour or so after daybreak when the 23 00:01:34,920 --> 00:01:39,119 Speaker 1: Reverend George Musgrave, wrapped up in a heavy coat, left 24 00:01:39,160 --> 00:01:42,160 Speaker 1: the comfort of his rectory parlor and made the short 25 00:01:42,200 --> 00:01:46,399 Speaker 1: walk across to the church. Moments later he caught sight 26 00:01:46,480 --> 00:01:50,800 Speaker 1: of some peculiar prints on the frosty ground. Musgrave dropped 27 00:01:50,840 --> 00:01:54,520 Speaker 1: to his knees to inspect them closer. Transfixed by how 28 00:01:54,560 --> 00:01:59,080 Speaker 1: odd they were, Trembling with wonder and excitement, he jumped 29 00:01:59,160 --> 00:02:02,720 Speaker 1: up and hurried back into the rectory. Then swiftly reappeared, 30 00:02:03,080 --> 00:02:07,360 Speaker 1: carrying some sheets of paper and a fountain pen. With 31 00:02:07,440 --> 00:02:11,400 Speaker 1: great care, he knelt down once more onto the frozen ground. 32 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:14,360 Speaker 1: Then he placed a sheet of paper over some of 33 00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:19,760 Speaker 1: the tracks and began to trace their outlines. Whatever they were, 34 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:23,799 Speaker 1: they were clearly footprints, only not in the double line 35 00:02:23,919 --> 00:02:26,800 Speaker 1: that a four footed animal would make, but in one 36 00:02:27,000 --> 00:02:31,440 Speaker 1: single row, like something with only two legs, and they 37 00:02:31,480 --> 00:02:34,720 Speaker 1: looked to have been made by an unknown creature with 38 00:02:34,880 --> 00:02:41,120 Speaker 1: cloven Who you're listening to unexplained, and I am Richard 39 00:02:41,240 --> 00:02:52,360 Speaker 1: McLean Smith. The winter of eighteen fifty five was a 40 00:02:52,400 --> 00:02:57,800 Speaker 1: bleak one, even by England's chili standards. Temperatures remained at 41 00:02:57,919 --> 00:03:01,440 Speaker 1: or below freezing for weeks, making it colder than anything 42 00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:06,720 Speaker 1: in living memory. The southwestern coastal county of Devon, which 43 00:03:06,800 --> 00:03:10,680 Speaker 1: usually saw slightly milder weather than northern England, did not 44 00:03:10,880 --> 00:03:14,880 Speaker 1: escape the Great Frieze. Two of the region's largest rivers, 45 00:03:15,120 --> 00:03:19,399 Speaker 1: the ex and the Teen, had frozen over entirely in places. 46 00:03:20,280 --> 00:03:24,680 Speaker 1: Night after night, icy flakes fell relentlessly, piling up in 47 00:03:24,760 --> 00:03:30,240 Speaker 1: great drifts and blanketing the countryside. However, residents across the 48 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:33,240 Speaker 1: southern part of the county woke up on that morning 49 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:37,240 Speaker 1: of February ninth to find something much more chilling than 50 00:03:37,360 --> 00:03:42,520 Speaker 1: frost and snow. Across a remarkably wide swathe of countryside 51 00:03:42,720 --> 00:03:46,280 Speaker 1: from the town of Exeter to the coast, mile after 52 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:50,240 Speaker 1: mile of what appeared to be strange footprints had appeared 53 00:03:50,920 --> 00:03:54,000 Speaker 1: like something from the pages of a Sherlock Holmes mystery. 54 00:03:55,200 --> 00:03:59,680 Speaker 1: Numerous tracks of what were colloquially called footmarks were reported 55 00:03:59,720 --> 00:04:04,240 Speaker 1: from more than thirty locations across Devon. If the tracks 56 00:04:04,240 --> 00:04:07,440 Speaker 1: had been left by a single creature. Its total travel 57 00:04:07,440 --> 00:04:11,160 Speaker 1: distance that one night would have been somewhere between forty 58 00:04:11,320 --> 00:04:15,480 Speaker 1: and one hundred miles. The size and shape of the footprints, 59 00:04:15,680 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 1: as well as the roots they followed, seemed to defy 60 00:04:18,680 --> 00:04:23,360 Speaker 1: the laws of nature and physics. Typically measuring four inches 61 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:27,080 Speaker 1: long by three inches wide, many of the prints, as 62 00:04:27,160 --> 00:04:31,000 Speaker 1: Reverend Musgrave had noticed, at the shape of a cloven hoof, 63 00:04:31,640 --> 00:04:36,920 Speaker 1: not unlike a donkey's, except just like Musgraves, they progressed 64 00:04:36,920 --> 00:04:41,320 Speaker 1: in a straight, single line, one after another, spaced about 65 00:04:41,400 --> 00:04:46,200 Speaker 1: eight and sixteen inches apart. In the shallow snow, they 66 00:04:46,200 --> 00:04:49,600 Speaker 1: were between half an inch and four inches deep, often 67 00:04:49,680 --> 00:04:55,000 Speaker 1: meandering across gardens and through villages eerily. In places, they 68 00:04:55,000 --> 00:04:59,240 Speaker 1: were said to do impossible things. In the countryside, as 69 00:04:59,279 --> 00:05:03,000 Speaker 1: well as leaving trails across frozen lakes and rivers, they 70 00:05:03,000 --> 00:05:06,200 Speaker 1: would stop at one side of a haystack, leaving its 71 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:10,440 Speaker 1: sides and top undisturbed, then recommence abruptly on the other 72 00:05:10,560 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: side and vanish through small holes in thickets and hedges, 73 00:05:14,760 --> 00:05:19,479 Speaker 1: only to appear again, impossibly, it seemed, on the other side. 74 00:05:20,240 --> 00:05:23,919 Speaker 1: But most unnervingly, they seemed to go from door to door, 75 00:05:24,600 --> 00:05:29,800 Speaker 1: venturing up to front steps before seemingly backing away. In 76 00:05:29,880 --> 00:05:32,719 Speaker 1: some places, it was said that there was hardly a 77 00:05:32,800 --> 00:05:36,919 Speaker 1: home that had not been visited. Most of the people 78 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:41,040 Speaker 1: who saw the bizarre tracks were country folk familiar with 79 00:05:41,120 --> 00:05:44,640 Speaker 1: all manner of animal trails, but none of them had 80 00:05:44,680 --> 00:05:54,960 Speaker 1: seen anything like this before. To many of the god 81 00:05:55,000 --> 00:05:59,440 Speaker 1: fearing Devonians, the strange marks brought to mind sinister echoes 82 00:05:59,560 --> 00:06:02,440 Speaker 1: of a bit biblical story from the Book of Exodus, 83 00:06:02,600 --> 00:06:06,280 Speaker 1: chapter twelve, known as the Plague on the first Born. 84 00:06:07,279 --> 00:06:10,600 Speaker 1: In the story, God addresses Moses and tells him that 85 00:06:10,680 --> 00:06:14,040 Speaker 1: on an appointed night, he will visit Egypt and strike 86 00:06:14,120 --> 00:06:19,039 Speaker 1: down every firstborn, be it human or other animal. But 87 00:06:19,160 --> 00:06:22,760 Speaker 1: to others, the fact the prince were seemingly created by 88 00:06:22,800 --> 00:06:26,920 Speaker 1: something with a cloven hoof they brought to mind something else, 89 00:06:27,160 --> 00:06:33,440 Speaker 1: entirely the devil. Either way, whatever it was so unsettled 90 00:06:33,520 --> 00:06:37,080 Speaker 1: one group of local tradesmen from the coastal town of Dawlish. 91 00:06:37,440 --> 00:06:41,200 Speaker 1: They conspired to hunt it down and kill it. Seemingly 92 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:45,080 Speaker 1: undaunted by the prospect of it being Lucifer himself, the 93 00:06:45,160 --> 00:06:48,200 Speaker 1: men took up guns and bludgeons and made their way 94 00:06:48,279 --> 00:06:52,240 Speaker 1: to a local churchyard to begin their search, finding the 95 00:06:52,279 --> 00:06:55,440 Speaker 1: tail end of some prince. There, they promptly began to 96 00:06:55,520 --> 00:06:59,320 Speaker 1: follow them through the snow, while all about sparkled white 97 00:06:59,640 --> 00:07:04,120 Speaker 1: under the mid morning sun. The prince first led them 98 00:07:04,160 --> 00:07:07,640 Speaker 1: to the town of Luscombe and then Oakland, a total 99 00:07:07,720 --> 00:07:11,360 Speaker 1: distance of around five miles, but the men found no 100 00:07:11,520 --> 00:07:15,120 Speaker 1: sign of a culprit. At Cliffs Saint George, on the 101 00:07:15,160 --> 00:07:18,560 Speaker 1: other side of the River ex two villagers were following 102 00:07:18,560 --> 00:07:21,679 Speaker 1: a different set of tracks when they discovered what appeared 103 00:07:21,720 --> 00:07:26,640 Speaker 1: to be a strange whitish excrement among the marks. Others 104 00:07:26,680 --> 00:07:29,600 Speaker 1: from the same area followed a further set of tracks 105 00:07:29,640 --> 00:07:32,440 Speaker 1: to the edge of a field, where they stopped abruptly, 106 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:35,720 Speaker 1: only to reappear again in the middle of the field, 107 00:07:36,200 --> 00:07:40,000 Speaker 1: suggesting the perpetrator may have taken to the air before 108 00:07:40,080 --> 00:07:45,000 Speaker 1: coming back down to continue its meandering. One man told 109 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:47,600 Speaker 1: a tale of a local fox hunt that attracted the 110 00:07:47,600 --> 00:07:51,000 Speaker 1: prince down to a wood where whatever the thing was 111 00:07:51,400 --> 00:07:54,920 Speaker 1: appeared to have been cornered, but when the hunt dogs 112 00:07:55,000 --> 00:07:57,920 Speaker 1: rushed in to flush it out, they turned around and 113 00:07:58,040 --> 00:08:02,800 Speaker 1: reappeared suddenly. Why in terror, too frightened to go back, 114 00:08:04,040 --> 00:08:07,680 Speaker 1: not one person or group managed to track the mysterious 115 00:08:07,720 --> 00:08:11,280 Speaker 1: prince for more than a few miles for a while. 116 00:08:11,520 --> 00:08:14,280 Speaker 1: The belief that Satan had been among them drove some 117 00:08:14,480 --> 00:08:18,200 Speaker 1: locals across the county to implement a self imposed curfew, 118 00:08:18,600 --> 00:08:33,080 Speaker 1: refusing to venture outdoors after nightfall. On that strange night 119 00:08:33,160 --> 00:08:36,760 Speaker 1: in February, also at the parish of Cliss Saint George, 120 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,080 Speaker 1: Reverend Henry Elcom had been woken in the middle of 121 00:08:40,120 --> 00:08:43,440 Speaker 1: the night by his dog. The animal had clearly been 122 00:08:43,480 --> 00:08:47,040 Speaker 1: spooped and was barking loudly and pouring at the back door. 123 00:08:48,559 --> 00:08:51,720 Speaker 1: Having looked out into the night and seen nothing outside, 124 00:08:52,120 --> 00:08:55,280 Speaker 1: the reverend finally managed to calm the dog down before 125 00:08:55,320 --> 00:09:00,240 Speaker 1: returning to bed. The next morning, the reverend awoke, much 126 00:09:00,400 --> 00:09:03,760 Speaker 1: like many others that day, to find the strange prince 127 00:09:04,040 --> 00:09:08,199 Speaker 1: dotted about the grounds of his rectory. He later described 128 00:09:08,200 --> 00:09:12,040 Speaker 1: the marks as being similar in shape, albeit varying a 129 00:09:12,080 --> 00:09:16,040 Speaker 1: little in size, and constituted what to his eye was 130 00:09:16,080 --> 00:09:21,240 Speaker 1: some kind of claw print. Elacum also interviewed people who 131 00:09:21,280 --> 00:09:24,800 Speaker 1: attempted to track the creature and obtained samples of the 132 00:09:24,840 --> 00:09:29,600 Speaker 1: excrement found alongside the trails. He forwarded the samples to 133 00:09:29,679 --> 00:09:34,440 Speaker 1: renowned naturalist Richard Owen, a controversial figure in the world 134 00:09:34,520 --> 00:09:38,360 Speaker 1: of naturalism. Owen is perhaps best known for coining the 135 00:09:38,440 --> 00:09:43,120 Speaker 1: term dinosauria, from which we get the word dinosaur, meaning 136 00:09:43,280 --> 00:09:48,600 Speaker 1: terrible reptile. His thoughts on the matter remain unknown. Perhaps 137 00:09:48,679 --> 00:09:53,280 Speaker 1: less than impressed at receiving Reverend Elcom's scatological samples in 138 00:09:53,360 --> 00:09:57,640 Speaker 1: the post, he neglected to send a reply. A few 139 00:09:57,720 --> 00:10:01,840 Speaker 1: days later. Ellacum did receive a, however, from his colleague 140 00:10:01,880 --> 00:10:05,600 Speaker 1: George Musgrave, who'd been so animated by his discovery of 141 00:10:05,640 --> 00:10:08,440 Speaker 1: the prince he'd made the effort to preserve a record 142 00:10:08,480 --> 00:10:13,040 Speaker 1: of them. Musgrave included a sample of one of his drawings, 143 00:10:13,320 --> 00:10:16,080 Speaker 1: along with his own explanation for what it could be. 144 00:10:17,200 --> 00:10:20,439 Speaker 1: Unlike many of his parishioners, who feared the devil might 145 00:10:20,520 --> 00:10:23,960 Speaker 1: be among them, it was Musgrave's theory that the creature 146 00:10:24,240 --> 00:10:27,560 Speaker 1: was in fact a kangaroo that had perhaps escaped from 147 00:10:27,600 --> 00:10:32,640 Speaker 1: a zoo or some kind of traveling show. Within a fortnight, 148 00:10:32,960 --> 00:10:36,480 Speaker 1: the story of the mysterious footprints was being reported in 149 00:10:36,520 --> 00:10:41,640 Speaker 1: the national press, including the Illustrated London News and enormously 150 00:10:41,720 --> 00:10:45,600 Speaker 1: popular Weekly It broadcasted the story to a wide audience 151 00:10:45,880 --> 00:10:50,360 Speaker 1: and included images of the apparent footprints. This was the 152 00:10:50,360 --> 00:10:54,800 Speaker 1: great age of the Victorian gentleman naturalist, typically a man 153 00:10:54,880 --> 00:10:58,200 Speaker 1: from the upper or middle class with the financial means 154 00:10:58,240 --> 00:11:01,960 Speaker 1: and social standing to pursue a passion for natural history, 155 00:11:02,760 --> 00:11:05,760 Speaker 1: and so the floodgates were opened, and a host of 156 00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:10,320 Speaker 1: unusual theories were proposed, ranging from the rational to the bazaar. 157 00:11:11,440 --> 00:11:14,520 Speaker 1: At the more rational end were that the footprints belonged 158 00:11:14,520 --> 00:11:19,720 Speaker 1: to mice, rats, squirrels or otters, and had been enlarged 159 00:11:19,760 --> 00:11:23,280 Speaker 1: in size by a freeze thor action, in much the 160 00:11:23,320 --> 00:11:26,600 Speaker 1: same way that bare footprints in the Himalayas can become 161 00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:30,680 Speaker 1: distorted and enlarged, only to be mistaken for yety tracts, 162 00:11:31,080 --> 00:11:36,960 Speaker 1: as discussed in Unexplained, Season seven, episode eight, Walking on Snow. 163 00:11:37,600 --> 00:11:43,000 Speaker 1: Other suggestions verged increasingly toward the ridiculous, including the suggestion 164 00:11:43,360 --> 00:11:45,960 Speaker 1: that the tracks had been made by the hindfoot of 165 00:11:46,000 --> 00:11:50,120 Speaker 1: a badger that had somehow hopped its way across large 166 00:11:50,160 --> 00:12:00,320 Speaker 1: parts of South Devon. In the weeks that follow the 167 00:12:00,360 --> 00:12:04,040 Speaker 1: appearance of the unusual markings in the snow, an intriguing 168 00:12:04,160 --> 00:12:07,839 Speaker 1: series of letters was published in the Illustrated London News 169 00:12:08,160 --> 00:12:14,000 Speaker 1: by a correspondent signing himself enigmatically as South Devon. The 170 00:12:14,040 --> 00:12:17,880 Speaker 1: so called South Devon started by listing the primary places 171 00:12:18,080 --> 00:12:21,680 Speaker 1: in which the footmarks were discovered, then made a series 172 00:12:21,720 --> 00:12:26,040 Speaker 1: of assertive claims. One such claim was that the marks 173 00:12:26,080 --> 00:12:30,040 Speaker 1: in every parish were in fact exactly the same size 174 00:12:30,360 --> 00:12:33,880 Speaker 1: and the step distance the same length, contrary to what 175 00:12:33,960 --> 00:12:38,320 Speaker 1: had previously been reported. The writer also noted that the 176 00:12:38,360 --> 00:12:41,640 Speaker 1: Prince at one point appeared to have vaulted a fourteen 177 00:12:41,679 --> 00:12:45,520 Speaker 1: foot war and appeared on the roofs of houses. They 178 00:12:45,559 --> 00:12:49,520 Speaker 1: also dismissed the idea that thawing and refreezing could have 179 00:12:49,600 --> 00:12:53,360 Speaker 1: distorted the marks, noting that other animal prints made the 180 00:12:53,400 --> 00:12:59,080 Speaker 1: same night remained perfectly recognizable. In total, he claimed that 181 00:12:59,120 --> 00:13:02,280 Speaker 1: the marks formed a trail at least one hundred miles 182 00:13:02,320 --> 00:13:05,200 Speaker 1: in length, and were all in a straight line, and 183 00:13:05,360 --> 00:13:08,720 Speaker 1: had even at one point crossed the two mile wide river. 184 00:13:08,840 --> 00:13:13,560 Speaker 1: Ex South Devon claimed to be an experienced countryman with 185 00:13:13,679 --> 00:13:17,040 Speaker 1: a great deal of experience in tracking wild animals and 186 00:13:17,160 --> 00:13:20,760 Speaker 1: birds upon the snow, who had once spent five months 187 00:13:20,880 --> 00:13:25,080 Speaker 1: hunting in the Canadian wilderness. The prints, they said, were 188 00:13:25,200 --> 00:13:30,040 Speaker 1: like nothing on Earth they'd ever seen, and from there 189 00:13:30,400 --> 00:13:33,760 Speaker 1: the theories of what had made the devil's footprints, as 190 00:13:33,800 --> 00:13:38,439 Speaker 1: they had by then become known, became even wilder. A 191 00:13:38,559 --> 00:13:42,479 Speaker 1: former naval officer named Rupert Gould, who had a particular 192 00:13:42,559 --> 00:13:45,800 Speaker 1: interest in the mysteries of the sea, noted with alarm 193 00:13:46,120 --> 00:13:49,360 Speaker 1: how the so called devil's hoof marks had appeared on 194 00:13:49,480 --> 00:13:53,680 Speaker 1: land close to the coast. He saw a parallel with 195 00:13:53,760 --> 00:13:57,360 Speaker 1: a strange report that emerged from the Cagoulin Islands, also 196 00:13:57,440 --> 00:14:02,040 Speaker 1: known as the Desolation Islands, located around eighteen hundred nautical 197 00:14:02,080 --> 00:14:07,240 Speaker 1: miles south of Madagascar. Back in eighteen forty. A member 198 00:14:07,280 --> 00:14:11,319 Speaker 1: of the crew of the James Ross Antarctica expedition exploring 199 00:14:11,360 --> 00:14:14,560 Speaker 1: the islands that year claimed to discover a series of 200 00:14:14,600 --> 00:14:18,120 Speaker 1: small horse or donkey like tracks in the snow on 201 00:14:18,120 --> 00:14:22,760 Speaker 1: one of the islands, made by some unidentified creature that, 202 00:14:23,320 --> 00:14:27,560 Speaker 1: like something disturbing from the Lovecraft mythos, appeared to have 203 00:14:27,640 --> 00:14:33,240 Speaker 1: come out of the sea. Some decades later, Edwardian ghost 204 00:14:33,320 --> 00:14:37,040 Speaker 1: hunter Eliot O'Donnell claimed that he had once been told 205 00:14:37,080 --> 00:14:41,480 Speaker 1: a peculiar story by a man named mister Wilson. The 206 00:14:41,560 --> 00:14:45,760 Speaker 1: man supposedly detailed a boyhood visit to the Devon seaside 207 00:14:45,800 --> 00:14:48,680 Speaker 1: in the early nineteen hundred z when he discovered a 208 00:14:48,720 --> 00:14:52,400 Speaker 1: single line of hoofmarks one morning on a deserted beach 209 00:14:53,000 --> 00:14:58,160 Speaker 1: which also led directly into the sea. On this occasion, 210 00:14:58,320 --> 00:15:02,680 Speaker 1: the marks were of whole cloven hoofs six feet apart, 211 00:15:03,200 --> 00:15:06,120 Speaker 1: and were so deeply impressed in the sand that they 212 00:15:06,160 --> 00:15:10,320 Speaker 1: were significantly deeper than the footprints left by Wilson himself, 213 00:15:10,800 --> 00:15:21,760 Speaker 1: who weighed sixteen stone. One of the more unusual attributions 214 00:15:21,800 --> 00:15:25,040 Speaker 1: for the footprints was that they had secretly been made 215 00:15:25,200 --> 00:15:29,600 Speaker 1: by Romany travelers. The main advocate of this theory was 216 00:15:29,640 --> 00:15:33,800 Speaker 1: a man named Manfrey Wood, as described in his autobiography 217 00:15:34,240 --> 00:15:37,480 Speaker 1: in the Life of a Romany Gypsy, published in nineteen 218 00:15:37,520 --> 00:15:42,120 Speaker 1: seventy three. According to Wood, the Devil's footprints were the 219 00:15:42,160 --> 00:15:45,760 Speaker 1: result of at least eighteen months of careful planning by 220 00:15:45,880 --> 00:15:50,800 Speaker 1: seven Romany tribes. Together, they had supposedly used more than 221 00:15:50,920 --> 00:15:54,520 Speaker 1: four hundred pairs of specially made stilts in the shape 222 00:15:54,520 --> 00:15:58,520 Speaker 1: of cloven hoofs fashioned from old step ladders to create 223 00:15:58,560 --> 00:16:03,080 Speaker 1: the devilish marks. The aim of this elaborate plan was 224 00:16:03,120 --> 00:16:06,560 Speaker 1: to ultimately scare away two rival groups of the Romanes, 225 00:16:06,920 --> 00:16:11,160 Speaker 1: who were Pagans and fervent believers in the occult. A 226 00:16:11,280 --> 00:16:15,119 Speaker 1: nineteen eighty three article in the UK's Daily Mirror newspaper, 227 00:16:15,360 --> 00:16:19,560 Speaker 1: written by a so called traveling gentleman, Danny Smith, backed 228 00:16:19,640 --> 00:16:24,640 Speaker 1: up the theory. However, neither proponent could explain how between 229 00:16:24,760 --> 00:16:28,359 Speaker 1: four hundred and five hundred travelers had managed to coordinate 230 00:16:28,400 --> 00:16:31,040 Speaker 1: a long distance stilt walk in the dead of a 231 00:16:31,080 --> 00:16:36,520 Speaker 1: snowy winter's night, traversing gardens and routots without once being spotted. 232 00:16:38,080 --> 00:16:41,400 Speaker 1: Perhaps the most bizarre culprit of all was proposed by 233 00:16:41,520 --> 00:16:46,240 Speaker 1: one s ke off North Street in Brighton in a 234 00:16:46,320 --> 00:16:49,520 Speaker 1: letter published in the Brighton Guardian paper on the twenty 235 00:16:49,560 --> 00:16:54,600 Speaker 1: eighth of February eighteen fifty five. The writer asserted that 236 00:16:54,640 --> 00:16:58,200 Speaker 1: the footprints were made by a strange creature known as 237 00:16:58,200 --> 00:17:04,240 Speaker 1: a unipede, first identified by the Norse Icelandic navigator Bjarni 238 00:17:04,400 --> 00:17:07,879 Speaker 1: Herelson during a visit to the coasts of Labrador in 239 00:17:07,960 --> 00:17:11,560 Speaker 1: what is present day Canada in one thousand one. See 240 00:17:12,960 --> 00:17:15,960 Speaker 1: Herelson is believed by some to be the first known 241 00:17:16,040 --> 00:17:19,120 Speaker 1: European to set eyes on the mainland of the North 242 00:17:19,160 --> 00:17:23,120 Speaker 1: American continent, having apparently done so as far back as 243 00:17:23,200 --> 00:17:28,000 Speaker 1: nine hundred eighty six. See in the Saga of the Greenlanders, 244 00:17:28,280 --> 00:17:33,080 Speaker 1: which recounts the apparent Norse colonization of North America. Theres 245 00:17:33,119 --> 00:17:36,879 Speaker 1: an account of Harelson setting sail from Norway to Iceland 246 00:17:37,040 --> 00:17:40,200 Speaker 1: to visit his parents, only to find that his father 247 00:17:40,400 --> 00:17:44,000 Speaker 1: had left to go to Greenland. Attempting to find his 248 00:17:44,040 --> 00:17:47,560 Speaker 1: father with no map or compass, Hereolson and his crew 249 00:17:47,840 --> 00:17:51,240 Speaker 1: were blown off course by a storm before glimpsing a 250 00:17:51,320 --> 00:17:56,159 Speaker 1: land with tree covered mountains that was most definitely not Greenland. 251 00:17:57,800 --> 00:18:01,600 Speaker 1: It looked hospitable, but Byani was eager to see his parents, 252 00:18:02,160 --> 00:18:05,320 Speaker 1: and so despite the entreaties of his crew, who wanted 253 00:18:05,359 --> 00:18:08,760 Speaker 1: to go ashore, he turned the ship around and eventually 254 00:18:08,920 --> 00:18:14,520 Speaker 1: arrived in Greenland. However, it seems that the adventurous Icelander 255 00:18:14,760 --> 00:18:18,880 Speaker 1: went back to have another look. On a supposed later 256 00:18:18,960 --> 00:18:23,400 Speaker 1: trip to the Labrador coast, Herelson described seeing a bizarre 257 00:18:23,440 --> 00:18:27,600 Speaker 1: animal that had one leg and wings which appeared to 258 00:18:27,720 --> 00:18:30,639 Speaker 1: radiate from the middle of its back and spread out 259 00:18:30,680 --> 00:18:36,000 Speaker 1: like a peacock's tail. When this fantastical creature was alarmed 260 00:18:36,080 --> 00:18:39,720 Speaker 1: or excited, it erected a single crest of feathers above 261 00:18:39,760 --> 00:18:43,400 Speaker 1: its head in such a way that Harelson believed previous 262 00:18:43,440 --> 00:18:57,359 Speaker 1: observers had mistaken it for a unicorn. Bianni Herelson is 263 00:18:57,400 --> 00:19:01,719 Speaker 1: said to have named the peculiar creature the unipede. It 264 00:19:01,800 --> 00:19:04,840 Speaker 1: was said to emit a hideous cry, unlike that of 265 00:19:04,920 --> 00:19:08,119 Speaker 1: any other creature, and was also said to be able 266 00:19:08,200 --> 00:19:12,840 Speaker 1: to part run, part fly incredibly fast, touching the ground 267 00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:18,639 Speaker 1: frequently at equal distances, leaving footprints in a single line. Crucially, 268 00:19:18,880 --> 00:19:22,760 Speaker 1: the icelander claimed that the one legged creature's single limb 269 00:19:23,080 --> 00:19:26,639 Speaker 1: resembled that of a quadruped rather than a bird with 270 00:19:26,760 --> 00:19:31,919 Speaker 1: a hoof like foot, a description which greatly resembled pictures 271 00:19:31,960 --> 00:19:35,160 Speaker 1: of the so called devil's footprints that had been published 272 00:19:35,200 --> 00:19:38,880 Speaker 1: in the papers, and thus the correspondent to the Brighton 273 00:19:38,960 --> 00:19:43,000 Speaker 1: Guardian concluded the Devon tracts were almost certainly that of 274 00:19:43,080 --> 00:19:48,480 Speaker 1: the mythical unipede. In nineteen fifty two, a collection of 275 00:19:48,560 --> 00:19:52,159 Speaker 1: manuscripts and letters were found by a local historian named 276 00:19:52,280 --> 00:19:56,120 Speaker 1: Major Anthony Gibbs in the parish church of Cliss Saint George. 277 00:19:56,920 --> 00:19:59,639 Speaker 1: They were the papers of the Reverend Elcum, which had 278 00:19:59,720 --> 00:20:02,720 Speaker 1: lain preserved in the parish box at the church for 279 00:20:02,800 --> 00:20:08,200 Speaker 1: all that time. When folk historian Theo Brown gained access 280 00:20:08,280 --> 00:20:11,760 Speaker 1: to the Elegent papers that same year, she uncovered the 281 00:20:11,800 --> 00:20:15,560 Speaker 1: true identity of the mysterious South Devon, who had so 282 00:20:15,680 --> 00:20:20,000 Speaker 1: caused a stir with his controversial proclamations about the apparent 283 00:20:20,119 --> 00:20:24,199 Speaker 1: creator of the Prince. As it turned out, South Devon 284 00:20:24,560 --> 00:20:27,760 Speaker 1: was a nineteen year old named William Durban who had 285 00:20:27,800 --> 00:20:32,680 Speaker 1: simply made up his accounts. All in all, there are 286 00:20:32,720 --> 00:20:35,800 Speaker 1: three candidates most firmly in the frame for making the 287 00:20:35,840 --> 00:20:40,479 Speaker 1: Devil's footprints that wintry night in eighteen fifty five. Perhaps 288 00:20:40,560 --> 00:20:44,080 Speaker 1: the most intriguing is the balloon theory, which was not 289 00:20:44,160 --> 00:20:47,240 Speaker 1: considered at the time, but has been proposed more recently. 290 00:20:48,359 --> 00:20:51,800 Speaker 1: The suggestion is that the hoofmarks were in fact made 291 00:20:51,840 --> 00:20:55,160 Speaker 1: by a rope with a horseshoe shaped weight that had 292 00:20:55,200 --> 00:20:59,960 Speaker 1: been left dangling from an errant balloon, perhaps explaining how 293 00:21:00,119 --> 00:21:02,920 Speaker 1: the marks were left in straight lines for mile after 294 00:21:03,000 --> 00:21:07,879 Speaker 1: mile as the balloon drifted across the countryside. But if so, 295 00:21:08,440 --> 00:21:11,600 Speaker 1: why were no scuff marks from other trailing portions of 296 00:21:11,640 --> 00:21:15,120 Speaker 1: the rope found, and who would be so suicidal as 297 00:21:15,119 --> 00:21:17,880 Speaker 1: to be aloft in a balloon on such a freezing night. 298 00:21:19,920 --> 00:21:22,639 Speaker 1: The most common mammals that might have been out on 299 00:21:22,680 --> 00:21:27,399 Speaker 1: that winter's night are rats, mice, and squirrels, which are 300 00:21:27,440 --> 00:21:30,560 Speaker 1: all known to leave hopping tracks in which all four 301 00:21:30,600 --> 00:21:34,040 Speaker 1: feet held together can form a pattern similar to a 302 00:21:34,040 --> 00:21:38,159 Speaker 1: hoof mark and appear on a singular line, an effect 303 00:21:38,240 --> 00:21:41,080 Speaker 1: that will be enhanced if the snow in which there 304 00:21:41,160 --> 00:21:45,680 Speaker 1: left melts and then refreezes, as it did that February night. 305 00:21:47,080 --> 00:21:50,760 Speaker 1: But it's highly unlikely that so many such creatures that 306 00:21:50,880 --> 00:21:54,160 Speaker 1: would be required to make all the markings would each 307 00:21:54,240 --> 00:21:58,560 Speaker 1: have hopped for such long distances, sometimes up to five miles, 308 00:21:59,320 --> 00:22:09,959 Speaker 1: something that would be unusual if only one had done it. 309 00:22:09,960 --> 00:22:12,159 Speaker 1: It would seem then that if we were looking for 310 00:22:12,240 --> 00:22:15,879 Speaker 1: a material culprit, birds would seem to be the most 311 00:22:15,960 --> 00:22:22,000 Speaker 1: likely capable of covering long distances and landing on high walls, rooftops, 312 00:22:22,040 --> 00:22:26,040 Speaker 1: and haystacks. But how would a bird's foot, webbed or 313 00:22:26,119 --> 00:22:30,880 Speaker 1: clawed come to resemble a cloven hoof. There is one candidate, 314 00:22:31,200 --> 00:22:35,440 Speaker 1: remarked on by one astute observer back in eighteen fifty five, 315 00:22:35,960 --> 00:22:40,359 Speaker 1: known as the Great Bustard. Weighing anywhere between thirteen and 316 00:22:40,480 --> 00:22:44,720 Speaker 1: forty pounds, it is one of the heaviest living flying animals, 317 00:22:45,400 --> 00:22:48,120 Speaker 1: looking a bit like a cross between a wild turkey 318 00:22:48,320 --> 00:22:51,719 Speaker 1: and a large grouse. Bustard ceased to breed in Britain 319 00:22:51,840 --> 00:22:55,080 Speaker 1: in eighteen thirty two, when they were hunted to extinction, 320 00:22:55,600 --> 00:22:58,600 Speaker 1: but they were still seen in the countryside until around 321 00:22:58,680 --> 00:23:03,600 Speaker 1: eighteen seventy three. Bustard's feet make a heel mark and 322 00:23:03,800 --> 00:23:07,520 Speaker 1: three distinct toe marks, so it's possible that the donkey 323 00:23:07,720 --> 00:23:11,000 Speaker 1: like cloven hoof prints were in fact the imprints of 324 00:23:11,040 --> 00:23:15,600 Speaker 1: these birds. It would certainly explain why the footprints appeared 325 00:23:15,600 --> 00:23:19,080 Speaker 1: across a relatively large area in a short space of time, 326 00:23:19,800 --> 00:23:26,359 Speaker 1: including in places that could only be reached by flight. Inexplicable, 327 00:23:26,600 --> 00:23:30,560 Speaker 1: diabolical looking hoof marks are by no means an exclusively 328 00:23:30,880 --> 00:23:36,320 Speaker 1: nineteenth century phenomenon. In nineteen fifty seven, a missus Linda Hansen, 329 00:23:36,600 --> 00:23:40,040 Speaker 1: saw footprints of what appeared to be cloven hoofs in 330 00:23:40,119 --> 00:23:45,320 Speaker 1: her back garden in Humberside, Northeast England. The cloven prints, 331 00:23:45,600 --> 00:23:50,160 Speaker 1: four inches across and spaced twelve inches apart, were sharply 332 00:23:50,240 --> 00:23:53,520 Speaker 1: defined and stopped suddenly in the middle of the garden. 333 00:23:54,840 --> 00:23:59,280 Speaker 1: More recently, in two thousand nine, Jilled Wade, a resident 334 00:23:59,359 --> 00:24:03,159 Speaker 1: of North day woke up to find that overnight, a 335 00:24:03,359 --> 00:24:07,800 Speaker 1: snow covered back garden had been inexplicably imprinted by single 336 00:24:07,880 --> 00:24:11,399 Speaker 1: hoof prints which ran for almost seventy feet in a 337 00:24:11,440 --> 00:24:16,480 Speaker 1: single linear direction. Their shape and size were eerily similar 338 00:24:16,600 --> 00:24:19,880 Speaker 1: to the Prince in Devon one hundred and seventy years earlier. 339 00:24:20,840 --> 00:24:24,600 Speaker 1: Graham Ingalls from the Center for forty in Zoology went 340 00:24:24,640 --> 00:24:28,960 Speaker 1: to investigate. He concurred that the footprints were a match 341 00:24:29,080 --> 00:24:32,959 Speaker 1: to those from eighteen fifty five, and although he surmised 342 00:24:32,960 --> 00:24:36,280 Speaker 1: the most likely cause to be a mouse, he admitted 343 00:24:36,359 --> 00:24:41,000 Speaker 1: that he had never seen anything like it before. Perhaps 344 00:24:41,040 --> 00:24:47,600 Speaker 1: instead the devil had simply returned. Either way, whatever it 345 00:24:47,760 --> 00:24:51,159 Speaker 1: was that caused the Prince in Jill Wade's garden, and 346 00:24:51,320 --> 00:24:55,440 Speaker 1: indeed those that appeared across southern Devon on that wintry 347 00:24:55,560 --> 00:25:01,160 Speaker 1: February night of eighteen fifty five, remains to this day unexplained. 348 00:25:08,840 --> 00:25:12,359 Speaker 1: This episode was written by Diane Hope and produced by 349 00:25:12,480 --> 00:25:17,120 Speaker 1: Richard mclin smith. Diane is an audio producer and sound 350 00:25:17,160 --> 00:25:19,880 Speaker 1: recordist in her own right. You can find out more 351 00:25:19,880 --> 00:25:23,959 Speaker 1: about her work at Dianehope dot com and on Instagram 352 00:25:24,000 --> 00:25:28,399 Speaker 1: at in the sound Field. Thank You as ever for listening. 353 00:25:28,800 --> 00:25:32,159 Speaker 1: Unexplained is an Avy Club production. 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