Sunday 3 March 2024

Murderers Headless Ghost Haunts Saint Auvent, France.

  

Murderers Headless Ghost Haunts 

Saint Auvent, France.

This scene takes place on the sidewalk in front of the Maison d'Arret in Limoges on March 3rd, 1937. Henri Dardillac, a 27-year-old farmer, has been executed about an hour ago and Deibler's team is preparing to load the guillotine back into the fourgon which has just returned from the cemetery. Henri Sabin is dipping a sponge in a water bucket to wash blood off a part, while André Obrecht is preparing to load another into the carriage.

Source: http://boisdejustice.com/History/Dardillac1937.JPG




December 1st, 1936, 27-year-old Henri Dardillac was driven home by a wine merchant named Martial Fredon, with another passenger in the car. They had attended a Cognac Fair, and the wine merchant had made a huge sum of money. Dardillac witnessed the wine merchant’s wallet and decided he wanted it for himself. He brutally murdered the wine merchant and the other passenger, an old man. Dardillac was eventually captured for the murders, but the wallet of money was never recovered.


 On 3 March 1937, Henri Dardillac heard Mass at the Maison d'Arret in Limoges (located today at 17 Winston Churchill Place.) His lawyer came to see him, and the executioner. The guillotine was waiting on the street outside the prison, with 10, 000 spectators waiting to witness the beheading of Dardillac. He was marched through the gates of the prison, placed into the device, and within minutes, the blade dropped and ended his life. The crowd cheered and whistled at the sight. Henri Dardillac becomes the 385th client of the Limoges executioner. He was the last to be guillotined in a public square.[1]

In 1937, cable news in Australia reported that a French village was being haunted by an executed murderer. The convicted murderer was guillotined at the beginning of 1937 at Saint-Auvent, near Limoges in west-central France.

The family of the murderer, his wife and two children reported a haunting in their home. They heard eerie noises, knocking, loud stamping, the rattle of chains and the chinking sound of broken glass from the garret (attic or loft) between 9pm and midnight, every night.
  Fearing that local people were terrorising the family, armed police began to guard the home, and they too heard the unusual noises. When the police went to investigate the sounds, they suddenly ceased. A priest was called into the home. He went into the garret and blessed it with holy water. It was afterwards reported that the noises continued but were much more subdued.[2]


Researched and written by Allen Tiller ©2024

[1] ‘80 years ago, the guillotine cut off its last head in a public square in Limoges,’ Le Populaire, Du Centre, (2017), https://www.lepopulaire.fr/limoges-87000/politique/il-y-a-80-ans-la-guillotine-tranchait-sa-derniere-tete-en-place-publique-a-limoges_12305432/.

[2] 'Headless Ghost of Murderer', Northern Standard, (16 April 1937), p. 12.


Sunday 25 February 2024

Guitar Playing Ghost

 Guitar Playing Ghost

 


In 1965 it was reported that the ghost of an Australian Army Lieutenant was haunting the hamlet of Kundiawa in the New Guinea Highlands. It was claimed the ghost had been identified as Lieutenant George Charlton Tuckey.
Tuckey died in 1945 while serving with the Angua Administration of the Kundiawa Territory and was buried in a local cemetery.

A local police corporal known as Arambi reported that he often heard guitar music coming from inside a police inspector's house. There were no signs of life in the home, which was in total darkness. Armabi investigated the grounds and house and could find no source for the music, but as he neared the grave of Tuckey, he noted that the music ceased.
 Arambi later claimed that he saw the ghost. It was wearing a white shirt and shorts. He knew Tuckey, as they had worked together for two years, and identified the ghost as him. Tuckey’s ghost shuffled through the compound, and Arambi followed it into the Kundiawa courthouse…where it disappeared.[1]

researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024

[1] 'Guitar-playing ghost now walks about', The Canberra Times, (6 May 1965), p. 22.

Wednesday 7 February 2024

The Petrified Woman


The Petrified Woman





I borrowed this book from the Gawler Libraries yesterday and read it last night. A true crime story from our very own Riverland, in the Renmark/ Murtho region.
The story centres on the finding of a petrified female body. The body has no teeth, fingers or toes and most of its face is missing. Detectives believe they know who she is, and who murdered her, but they never solved the case. Now, much like Somerton Man, DNA would solve the mystery - the author traced the pauper's grave to West Terrace Cemetery, and through a direct descendant of the suspected murdered woman, applied to have the body exhumed for DNA testing...but, successive Governments have ignored or denied the process...
The book is available for loan through your local library at Libraries SA










Monday 29 January 2024

The Haunted Wardrobe – Oxfordshire, England.

The Haunted Wardrobe – Oxfordshire, England.



In 1937, the Northern Standard, a Northern Territory newspaper reported on the case of a haunted wardrobe in Oxfordshire, England. Mrs Barclay of Carterton Manor, Oxon, had advertised in the Morning Post, an English newspaper that she was selling a haunted wardrobe.

Barclay explained that she purchased the wardrobe for ten pounds at a sale. Three months later, after having it in her house, the doors and drawers of the wardrobe would open and close of their own volition, causing a ruckus. Not long after this happened, she witnessed the ghost of an elderly man, Barclay claimed, ‘the figure of an elderly man, dressed in old-fashioned clothes and wearing a kind of deer-stalker cap appeared in the house.’ Every evening, the ghost would walk from the bedroom, down the stairs out the front door.[1]
 Barclay stated in an interview, ‘I am not nervous, but the wretched ghost will make such a noise. He clatters across the landing and shuffles down the stairs and the noise is exasperatingly loud.’[2] Barclay also claimed the ghost had terrified and frightened away her cook.[3]

 

The night before the auction, Mrs Barclay claimed that the ghost was upset with the sale. He (the ghost) banged the doors of the wardrobe with more than his usual venom. It clattered down the stairs louder than she had ever heard it before, so she had the wardrobe taken out into the grounds of the manor.
 A group of practical jokers, dressed as ghosts, invaded Carterton Manor that evening, and refused to leave until Mrs Barclay's secretary dispersed them by firing a shotgun![4]

Mrs Barclay auctioned the wardrobe. A bidder asked if she could guarantee that the ghost would come with the wardrobe, which she could not. Bidding for the wardrobe saw it sell for much more than the 10 pounds she had previously purchased it for. Mr E Rundle, an ex-R.A.F. officer, who owned an inn, purchased the haunted wardrobe from Mrs B. Barclay for 50 pounds.[5] Mr Rundle stated after making the purchase, ‘I am having my bedroom enlarged and am having the wardrobe put in it. Anyone who wants to do so may sleep there. Personally, I do not believe in ghosts.’[6]

Rundle took the wardrobe to his Clanfield Inn and soon reported the same strange occurrences. Being a sceptic, he decided to pull the Victorian-era wardrobe apart to investigate why the doors and drawers would open of their own volition. Finding no hidden mechanisms, or reason for the wardrobe to act in the manner it did, Rundle closed his investigation and carefully restored the wardrobe. After restoration, Rundle reported that it never acted in the same manner again.

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2024

[1] 'A Haunted Wardrobe Complete with Ghost', The Catholic Advocate, (25 November 1937), p. 6.

[2] Ibid.

[3] 'Haunted Wardrobe', The Argus, (21 August 1937), p. 13.

[4] '£50 Highest Bid for Haunted Wardrobe', Lachlander and Condobolin and Western Districts Recorder, (6 September 1937), p. 6.

[5] Ibid.

[6] 'HAUNTED WARDROBE FETCHES £50', Northern Standard, (31 August 1937), p. 4.

Wednesday 17 January 2024

Haunted Adelaide Plains South Australia - BOOK!

 

Haunted Adelaide Plains
South Australia




On dark and stormy nights, a phantom walks Port Wakefield Road, hitchhiking to Adelaide. He wears a long, Australian Air Force jacket, with a RAAF uniform underneath. He hitches a ride, and then vanishes from the car…who is this ghost that has been reported since the 1940s? Is he the only ghost walking Port Wakefield Road, and what other spectres are seen in the area?In Haunted Adelaide Plains: South Australia, award-winning historian and paranormal investigator, Allen Tiller investigates this ghost story, and others from the region; including the ghost of a soldier in Mallala, phantoms in Alma, Balaklava, Dublin, Pinery, and Two Wells… and, an unusual sighting of Princess Diana in Mallala at the time of her death.

Allen Tiller focuses his research on true ghost stories drawn from historical sources, interviews, witness statements and his own paranormal investigations. Allen Tiller is a former volunteer at the Mallala Museum and the Adelaide Plains Historical Committee. His family are pioneers in the region and can be linked to two hauntings on the Adelaide Plains, which Allen discusses in this book.
Haunted Adelaide Plains: South Australia, investigates the paranormal through fact-checked historical information that adds authenticity to some stories and debunks others; valuing evidence-based stories over psychic hearsay and giving an unbiased, factual account of local hauntings on the Adelaide Plains.

Buy it here:

Sunday 31 December 2023

A List of Offences and Punishments Extracted from the Port Arthur “Punishment Book”

 

A List of Offences and Punishments Extracted from the Port Arthur “Punishment Book”



July 1, 1840 – Having a spoon in possession contrary to orders. Twenty-four hours’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

December 26, 1840 – Absent without leave. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

January 13, 1841 – Absent without leave. Twenty stripes on the breech.

January 21, 1841 – Absent without leave. Ten days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

February 12, 1841 – Absent without leave. Twenty stripes on the breech.

April 14, 1841 – Disorderly conduct on the chain. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

June 1, 1841 – Misconduct un using improper language to the overseer. Four days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

June 23, 1841, Repeated disorderly conduct. Forty-eight hours’ solitary confinement.

December 31, 1841 - Absent without leave. Twenty-five stripes on the breech.

January 28, 1842 – Absent without leave. Two months’ labour in chains.

March 3, 1842 – Disorderly conduct. Five days’ solitary confinement on bread and water.

May 27, 1842 – Absent without leave. Ten days’ solitary confinement.

November 7, 1842 – Absent without leave. Twenty-five stripes on the breech.

November 9, 1842 – Insolence to the Superintendent. Ten days’ solitary confinement.

December 19, 1842 – Misconduct in sleeping out of his berth, and further, with breaking up the flooring of his silent apartment. Fourteen days’ solitary confinement.

January 7, 1843 – Misconduct in having a quantity of potatoes improperly in his possession. Five days’ solitary confinement.

 

Extracted from the book “Convicts of Van Diemen’s Land”, p. xi for educational purposes.

Allen Tiller 2023

Sunday 17 December 2023

Richmond Congregational Cemetery - Tasmania

 

 Richmond Congregational Cemetery - Tasmania

 


In her 2007 book, ‘Tasmanian Tales of the Supernatural,' Margaret Giordano writes of the apparition of a man seen wandering the Richmond Congregational Cemetery on Torrens Street. The old cemetery is now a reserve.

Reports indicate that the apparition is of a man seen as ‘hazy.’[1]

Currently, it is not known who he may be.

Researched and written by Allen Tiller © 2023

[1] Margaret Giordano, Tasmanian Tales of the Supernatural, (Launceston, 2007), p. 74.