Index Biography #52: Prize a book March 31, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Index Biography is a quiz pioneered by this blog and introduced in a previous post. The creator must find a biography of a famous individual from history, they must turn to the index and write down eight peripheral facts about the individual’s life. We offered up previously here Sheridan le Fanu and Joseph Stalin (he of ripe […]
Charles Montgomery Skinner, Rogue Researcher March 30, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernCharles Montgomery Skinner was an early American folklore writer famous for such works as Myths and Legends of Our Own Lands. Skinner though had a promising background, one that gets him into that select catalogue of ‘rogue researchers’. Charles has just been describing a series of poltergeists, including some phantom snowball throwers. Without presuming to […]
Seventh Bastard! March 29, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is a scene that I recently ran across in the parish records and that I can’t get out of my head. It is Sunday morning 14 Oct 1855, and we are at the impressive Church of St Mary the Virgin, Blackburn in Lancashire, England. At the baptismal font waits the local vicar John Arthur […]
Daily History Picture: Korean Poster March 29, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesNorth Korean Poster: love the art, but genuine? EC writes in, 29 Mar 2018: Sadly not authentic NK propaganda. It’s from deviantart, the artist is “haryarti“. He’s got one for the UK too
Daily History Picture: Earthy Medieval Art March 28, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesDaily History Picture: Paolo and Francesca in Hell March 27, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesHanging a Twelve Year Old, Lancaster 1812 March 27, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Cripple’s Death It says something terrible about Britain’s nineteenth-century legal system. In 1812 a twelve year old was brought to the scaffold for having broken a window. He was barely able to walk, needing crutches: in fact, he was a ‘cripple’: he had been put on a man’s shoulder’s to break the window and […]
Daily History Picture: New York Fairy, 1918 March 26, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesMermaid Monday: Mermaid in London March 26, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is a weird entry that I haven’t been able to find my way into. The year is 1891 and this is clearly a mechanism of some kind: but how did they do it? drbeachcombing AT gmail DOT com Or was it a light show, like Pepper’s Ghost. The latest addition to the side shows […]
Wilhelm and Alfred Meet Stalin March 25, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryWilhelm and Alfred This post is written not with a sneer still less with pleasure, but with real sympathy for two men who saw their courage relegate them to a thousand footnotes. Welcome from left stage Wilhelm Korpik and Alfred Liskow. A light ripple of applause fills the auditorium. German Attack Wilhelm and Alfred had […]
Daily History Picture: Ghost Misunderstanding March 23, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesHelen Duncan and HMS Hood: A Coincidence? March 23, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryIntroducing HMS Hood This blog dealt yesterday (it feels longer ago) with Helen Duncan, medium extraordinaire, claiming, in Portsmouth in 1941, that HMS Barham had sunk before the British government had announced that ship’s demise. In that post I acknowledged that there was another case where Helen Duncan had learnt that a ship had sunk […]
Helen Duncan and HMS Barham: A Sceptic Speaks March 22, 2018
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryIntroduction It is one of the most extraordinary psychic events of the twentieth century, rave some. It proves that mediums really can communicate with the dead, state others. A Scottish medium, Helen Duncan brought, in early December 1941, a relative of a crew member of HMS Barham into contact with her recently dead son (or […]