Journal Summer 10

Journal Summer 10

“Nasci, Laborare, Mori, Nasci” Summer 2010 The Ghost Club Journal Summer 2010 Chairman’s letter The Ghost Club Journal Summer 2010 Welcome to the Summer issue of The Chairman’s Letter 2 Ghost Club Journal. Writing the chairman’s letter is usually a Philip Paul, A Tribute 4 task undertaken with pleasure, but on this Alan Murdie occasion it is tinged with some sadness. As you will see, this issue of the Journal re- Ghost Club notices and 7 cords the passing of two of the great Announcements names in British ghost hunting of the last Notebook 8 sixty years. These are Philip Paul and Tony Mark Salmon & Paul Collins Cornell, and tributes to them are included inside. Haunted Scotland 11 As with many others, I have personal Derek Green reasons through the Ghost Club for re- Ixworth School Ghost Walk 15 membering both. In 1997, Tony Cornell Laura Dean was the speaker at the first Ghost Club meeting I ever chaired (this was when the What’s on in London 17 Ghost Club met at 6.30 pm, on Tuesday Philip Carr evenings at the Victory Services Club). Book Reviews 20 Tony spoke on poltergeists, on which he Sarah Darnell. Anna Pearce. John Barrett was an acknowledged authority, not least from first-hand experience. Hauntings at Worth 24 With Philip Paul, I was delighted first to Chris Huff correspond, and then meet him in person in 2001. Meeting Philip was to be put in Ghosts in the News 27 touch with an important period from the Sarah Darnell Ghost Club’s history. Between 1952-54, Letters to the Editor 33 Philip was responsible for reviving our Club after it had ceased to meet, following A Tribute to Tony Cornell 34 the death of Harry Price in 1948. The Club Alan Murdie we enjoy today is descended directly from that initiative. Sadly, it was straight after Is It A Ghost? 37 attending our Club meeting held on June 12th this year that I learned that Philip had From The Archive… 39 died. An Article by Maurice Grosse However, in one of those marvellous 2 The Ghost Club Journal Summer 2010 pieces of synchronicity that sometimes oc- female skull – unfortunately 200 years too cur, on the following Saturday, one week young. Nevertheless, strange manifestations later, I was delighted to come across, quite still persist....” unexpectedly, an article about Philip, pub- Naturally, I bought the magazine (it was lished over fifty years ago and mentioning only 10p!). To come across this item, at the Ghost Club. such a time, was all at once meaningful, Like many Ghost Club members, I love rather poignant and yet also a comfort. Of second hand bookshops, and I was brows- course, it is easy to assign such moments ing in one of my favourites, Lankester’s to coincidence. But the older I get, the Books and Antiques at Saffron Walden, in more coincidence seems an over-worked word to describe the numerous events Essex. I have been to Lankester’s many which seem to link up together at certain times over the last twenty years but on this significant stages in the journey of life. occasion, I discovered a room stuffed with At such times, I am also reminded of the old books and magazines which I had minutes of a Victorian Ghost Club meeting never previously entered (I think it has re- held on March 1st 1889, recording the con- cently been opened up to accommodate the tribution of Mr Henry Hood on the occa- burgeoning collections of old volumes sion of the death of a fellow member, gracing the shelves). Within it, I found a Stanhope Speer: large pile of Essex Countryside magazines, “Mr Hood emphasised the fact that death dating from the mid-1950s through to the hid from mortal eye a separated brother, but was powerless to affect the concrete late 1980s. Flicking through the piles - unity of the Club. The loss was only appar- about the sixth or seventh copy I picked up ent when we happily change our condition at random – I found the edition from the that is the only change. We remain the summer of 1957, Volume 5 number 2. same. Stanhope Speer is one of us still, as Turning the pages, I found myself reading he has always been. The unity of the broth- the following item under the heading erhood is unbroken.” “Most Haunted House”: The following year on November 2nd “Peterborough” in the Daily Telegraph, re- 1890, the Ghost Club President Mr Paice cently had something to say about Borley. He spoke of how Club members were assured mentioned Mr Philip Paul, the vice-chairman “of the continued existence of the so- of the Ghost Club, had told the Psychic and called “Dead” and of the power enjoyed by Literary Luncheon Club that “neither Price’s them under veritable condition of a re- inaccuracies nor the attempts to demolish his association with us conscious on both claims shook the strong evidence for ghostly sides”. On recalling the names of deceased phenomena”. Disappointingly, though, Mr. Ghost Club members he “invited the Paul had to admit that though he had been Members present in the flesh to devote to Borley on July 28 for the last seven years some moments of serious recollection and he had failed to see the famous woman in of affectionate association with these their black who has appeared to so many others departed friends and brethren – members on that day....Harry Price believed the still of this Club”. woman in black to be the ghost of a nun With best wishes murdered 300 years ago. After extensive dig- ging Mr Paul did in fact unearth parts of a Alan Murdie Summer 2010 The Ghost Club Journal 3 It is with great regret we announce the Philip puzzled about why his sister might passing of Philip Paul, author, journalist and have signalled thus, rather than alerting fam- authority on the paranormal who died on ily members in the same house, and sought June 12th 2010. In the space available, I can- answers in psychical research. The phe- not attempt to do justice either to Philip or to nomenon led him to the writings of Cammille his work but let it be recorded at the outset, Flammarion, the French Astronomer and psy- that the Ghost Club owes him a great debt, chical researcher which are filled with similar since he was instrumental in reviving the cases of crisis manifestations, as are the re- Club as a functioning body between 1952 cords of the British Society for Psychical Re- and 1954. search. The Ghost Club had ceased meeting fol- Following the tragedy, Philip went to stay lowing the death of Harry Price in 1948 and with his mother’s family in a remote Norfolk Philip took a lead in re-establishing it as a village, where the people still exhibited the place for believers and sceptics to meet in a mindset of the pre-modern era. They still convivial setting. The story of the successful looked at the world in stark and simple Bibli- re-launch is told in his book Some Unseen cal ways and at the same time populated Power (1985) but unfortunately, Philip found their village with numerous spectres. his efforts hindered and hi-jacked shortly af- (Growing up in East Anglia myself, I can re- ter the revival begun. The spirit of openness member the tail-end of this rural culture and and enquiry he had hoped to engender was such character from my own boyhood). quashed by the personal agendas of certain Ghost stories told by candle light stimulated members, and as a result he withdrew. None- his mind yet further, and provided inspiration theless, he continued to take an interest in for his ambitions as an author. the Club and its doings over the following His first writing job came as a reporter with years. After reforms of the Ghost Club in the weekly Newmarket Journal and in June 1997, he was in touch with the then General 1944 he achieved his first major scoop. An Secretary, the late Commander Bill Bellars ammunition train blew up at Soham station OBE and sent his best wishes. In 2002 we causing large scale destruction just as the were delighted to formally welcome Philip paper was going to press. At the time the pa- back to the Club. In the years that followed per was lacking an editor – he had died the he attended a number of meetings and week before – leaving Philip a free hand to events, until prevented from doing so by fail- send the story to Fleet Street. This provided ing health in 2008. Even then he continued to an entry for Philip to national journalism (the contribute to the Journal with his last article story appeared belatedly in the Newmarket appearing in the spring 2010 edition. Journal the following week). Like the young Philip drew upon a lifetime of experience Dickens he excelled in two subjects: crime investigating the paranormal. The starting and ghosts, about which he continued to point was a family tragedy in 1938 which oc- write for the next sixty years. curred when Philip was 15 years old. This An influence in Fleet Street was the famous was the sudden death of his sister Iris, aged editor Hannen Swaffer (known as the Pope of 22, in the bath at home. Simultaneous with Fleet Street for both his magisterial manner her death, a relative three miles away heard and his spiritualist views). But Philip became an unexplained knocking on the window.

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