
In 19th-century Britain, human skeletons were often taken from
criminals, who were either executed or died in prison. If you purchased a
skeleton, it could have been the leftovers of a medical school
dissection, and might originally have belonged to a petty thief, a
murderer, or someone who was mentally deranged.
In
the mid-19th century William Hicks, the mayor of Bodmin, in Cornwall,
hosted a dinner party. As the story goes, rather than entertaining his
guests with music or poetry, he chose to prank his guests with a fake
seance. He brought in the skeletal remains of a purported witch and
encouraged his guests to ask it yes or no questions. In response, the
spirit of the witch would supposedly rap its responses with the extra
bones placed in front of the witch’s remains. What he didn’t tell them
was that the person doing knocking was a friend who was hidden nearby.
Everything
that night was going to plan until the host and party goers encountered
actual paranormal activity. According to Cecil Williamson, the founder
of The Museum of Witchcraft, the bones used for the rapping were “seized
by the poltergeist force on that fateful night of the spoof seance organized by William Hicks and with which the assembled party guests
were beaten about the head and shoulders.”
The bones
were traced back to Joan Wytte, who was called the "Fighting Fairy
Woman" because she was short and had a bad temper. Did that bad temper
carry on after death? Read about
Joan Wytte and the eventual disposition of her remains at Strange Remains
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