Friday, October 29, 2010

Home on the Range Ghostly Tales


The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.- - - H. P. Lovecraft

The story is "Phantom Bomber" of Longdendale, from which a story in Haunted Britain and Ireland, the details are crafted. On the high moors of England, such as Bleaklow, numerous wrecked airplanes litter the rugged terrain, remnants of more than fifty aircraft that have crashed into the peaks during and after WWII. One such pile of tortured debris is all that remains of a US B29 that crashed in 1948 taking with it the souls of it's 13 crew. It is said that the ghost of it's pilot, Captain Tanner, has been spotted casually looking around the wreckage.

There is the endless speculation that this and the other crashes were caused by the area's strangest phenomena, the "Longdendale Lights".These strange, ethereal, flickering balls of blue flame were known to the locals as the "devil's bonfires" and were attributed to either fairy folk or evil witches, with records of their appearing going back as far as the 16th century. Even today their source has managed to evade the sophisticated equipment of professional mountain rescue teams. In 1998 the residents of a youth hostel witnessed a brilliant blue light that illuminated the entire district and lasted for more than three minutes. Drivers on nearby highways have been known to swerve, mistaking the lights for an oncoming car. Others, thinking the lights were the distress flares of an injured hiker or climber, would frequently call out EMS services, all of whom have grown long accustomed to the flickering lights fading slowly away as they get closer to them. It has been suggested that the pilots of the crashed planes may have mistaken the lights for beacons meant to guide their planes and followed them into permanent stony, silence.

In late 1997 as the stories of Captain Tanner and his lost aircraft faded into local folklore, two women, out on the high moors for some star gazing, were surprised by the sudden emergence from a empty sky, of a low flying airplane in the sky that disappearing around one of the peaks. The same aircraft was witnessed by a farmer, as it flew so low over him he dove for the ground. Only moments later, several others heard the sound of a plane crashing and saw an orange glow light up the sky. A search party was quickly organized based on the many reports and a mountain rescue team plus a RAF helicopter, searched ever square inch of the moorland, for an airplane that was never reported as missing. Whatever the witnesses had seen had apparently vanished into the dark night - And the stores began anew. Had the "Phantom Bomber"of Longdendale returned?


The final words of two experienced crews in Sabres in 1954 only add to the mystery. The brand new aircraft were flying in the Peak District, the pilots flying in low cloud, with the latest in navigation gear. "Where are we?" asked one pilot". "I'm not sure" said the second. And then as they apparently spotted a third aircraft, the second pilot gave the order that would fly them into their fate. "Just follow the other jet through the cloud". Since no other planes were known to be flying in the area at the time, many people wonder if they were perhaps lured to their deaths by the appearance of the Phantom Bomber. Many will chalk it up to spatial disorientation, in the frequent and sometimes surprising low fog that is common to the area, and that would be easy to do. Hundreds, if not thousands, of scientific attempts have been made to explain such an event. The results are always inconclusive and distract us from what a ghost story really is.

Few people truly believe that headless ghosts haunt Celtic castles, that restless spirits chase the shadows in every abandoned old farmhouse. But sitting in a darkening room, in a facility that is completely empty but for key personnel, as the winds of Autumn brew around shuttered windows, one can't help but summon up the genuine wonder for those things that are never truly explained. I believe that despite our outward desire for explanation and logic, most members of the public would rather tell stories of haunted hills and ghost airplanes then listen to a dry litany of special disorientation, ground fog and fuel starvation.


For despite our modern conveniences, our science and technology, can we not be surprised that modern man still feels that shadowed belief in spirits, haunting those places in which they were once so affected, when we ourselves scarcely separate ourselves from past lives and past longing, ever hovering over bygone times and all their emotions, in late night, darkened hours, lingering in the past places in which we were loved. Hoping in the dark misty hills of our hearts, we will remember and be remembered.

For despite our technology, we are still dreamers. Certainly I know one half Celt, half Norse woman that is, even if she is still a big kid at heart.




Goblin Gorp - recipe on the sidebar




As Shakespeare said.: We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep.

Whether our dreams are that of coherent order and forensic logic or haunting memory of those places we wish we could revisit, I can't help but think just how small my being is. How infinitesimal within the world's workings, the grand chaotic design. As I pour another cup of tea, I'll light a small lamp, for suddenly I feel very insignificant. Insignificant and small, as moonlight flits amongst the shroud of Spanish moss, the wind tapping on the window like a ghostly finger, the night but one last lamenting kiss.

Happy Halloween ! - Brigid and Barkley

12 comments:

Rev. Paul said...

A haunting tale, that; well done. My Uncle Verle was on Adak 30 years before I was, and used to tell stories of the sound of B-25s coming back to the airstrip ... but no planes would ever appear.

Just One More Day said...

On Oct 26th you have a poem listed. Did you write it or is it from somewhere else? It is beautiful.

The reason I am asking is because I would like to have several of the lines carved into my sons headstone.

Thanks

Brigid said...

Just one more day - it's my poem, you are welcome to use any parts of it that bring you comfort.

These words have been said so many times they might seem to lose meaning, but they never do, for me anyway. I'm sorry for your loss.

Six said...

Happy Halloween Brigid and thanks for the tale.

BePrepared said...

Ghost stories are sometimes always thought of that, simply stories.

I for one believe that ghosts, benevolent or otherwise exist with us. I like to use the example of the excellent (albiet little known) movie "Always" where Ted is mentored by the spirit of Pete. It does not take much imagination to think that a "guardian angel" was there for parts of your life. I know I have had a few instances of my life "pushed" in a direction that I wouldn't normally do.

Kathryn Tucker Windham has a book called "13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffery". I can't speak for Jeffery, but I've seen relics from the "Eliza Battle" and heard the stories of the steamer in flames, and I can put a hand on the religious volume of your choice and say that I've seen no grass grow over the water well as told in "The Crying Spirit at the Well".

Twenty years later as I drive by to lands of my youth, I still see no grass growing over that spot in that yard. You can see it from Alabama Hwy 21.

Spirits are amoungst us. Have been and will be.

Marty said...

Brigid, I just noticed that the counter is over 5 million!! It was just a couple months ago you hit the 4 million milestone. Congratulations!

Word must be getting around that you're the coolest woman in the blogosphere!! Or maybe a lot of us just keep coming back to check out the red-headed mistress of the night. ;)

Stretch said...

"I don't believe in ghosts but I'm Irish enough to know when none are around." - P. J. O'Rourke

The Cartman said...

I have an aircraft ghost story for you and your learned readers. It even has a Christmas flavor to it as for many years it was read on CBC as a Christmas tale as well. It is "The Shepherd", a short story by Frederick Forsyth.
Here is a link to the audio version
Enjoy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HsF8o4DDX3Y

Roscoe said...

Most women never made it past my taste in movies/TV.

Stormdrane said...

Happy Halloween!

Ed Foster said...

I was helping a buddy, Chris Worthen, research his family tree, and we found the old family homestead near Amesbury Mass. The property, now overgrown but still owned by a Worthen, was visited by Chris and his two small sons, aged 6 and 9.

After several hours of futile searching through heavy growth covering the supposed hill, the guys gave up and headed back to the car, cutting across a smaller hill nearby.

The little one said "Dad, when were we here last?".

Chris said "Peter, we've never been here before".

The 9 year old chimed in "Yes we have. Remember the big red house with the high roof, and the funny looking sheep with the big horns?".

They then noticed they were standing in an overgrown cemetery filled with three centuries of Worthens, and later discovered that the house the boys remembered had been built in 1640, and burned in the 1930's.

For reference, northwestern Massachusetts was settled by Welshmen, who had absolutely no love of England or it's government. The feeling was quite mutual.

The Welsh spread south and east, the English moving up from Boston headed north, and the two peoples met again in the town of Salem. All but two of the women executed for witchcraft in Salem, including one of the Worthen's ancestors, were Welsh.

To this day, our cartoons of witches show an elderly Welsh woman, replete with flat brimmed and pointy Welsh hat, in "widows weeds", the shapeless black garment traditionally worn by them while in mourning.

I make my living in engineering, and believe what I can see. But hearing the graveyard story from three people who were there....

BK said...

Creepy! Well written though, and I'm off to research the longdendale lights instead of reading the Scarlet Letter for american lit. like I'm supposed to be doing. Thanks for fueling my inner Abby Scuito