Saturday, September 30, 2006

Who Were The Ghost Children?

The fog was thick on that October night. The Leeds to London Express steam train shrieked its whistle into the chilly Autumn air. It sped through the foothills of the Cotswolds past grey stone cottages and ancient churches. The passengers sat huddled side by side on hard padded seats in the dim light of the flickering gas-lamps. Some were dozing, some awake and they were all tired by the long overnight journey. However, the end of the line was only minutes away.

The driver, Ernest Aldington, was trying to make up five minutes time that had been lost earlier in the trip. The fog grew denser. Unbeknown to him and shrouded by that fog, a shunting engine puffed is way across the main fast line towing behind a line of heavily laden trucks that were destined for the station sidings at the village of Charfield. Seconds later, the inhabitants of this village were abruptly awakened by a thunderous crash, metal ploughing into metal, woodwork splintering and the shrieking and screaming of terrified passengers. There was a roar of crackling fire and an inferno of billowing flames. As if this horror was not enough, a third train then ploughed into the crushed and broken wooden coaches of the now derailed express.

There was explosion after explosion as gas cylinders ruptured. The blaze grew worse. Villagers, dressed only in their nightclothes, ran to help but little could be done. The intense heat drove them back, the light from the fire dispelled the fog and the full horror was to be seen. Some passengers had been thrown clear and, thankfully, forty-one people survived that terrible disaster. For the rest, nothing could be done. They were burnt beyond recognition. A doctor was called, Dr. H. Walsingham Ward. He was a highly respected, distinguished and very trustworthy man as well as being medically qualified. He had seen many a terrible sight in the trenches during the first World War but he found it hard to conceal his anguish at the horror that confronted him. Some of the people were identified by personal belongings as slowly and painfully the clues were pieced together. Fifteen corpses were laid out on the railway tracks together with their mangled possessions.

It was then that the mystery began. Whilst combing the wreckage, two more pieces of burned remains were discovered, side by side in one of the crushed compartments near the front of the train. It was hard to believe they had been living creatures. There was only one clue. Two charred shoes, both nine inches long and certainly a pair, were found. They could have been the shoes of a young boy.

One week later, a coroner’s inquest returned verdicts of accidental death on the victims of that horrible accident on the 13th  October 1928. The fifteen corpses were named. The remaining two were not. They were the ones brought out from that front compartment. Dr. Ward declared that, in his opinion, one was a boy aged about 11 years, the other a girl perhaps around the age of seven.

Thus the mystery of the Ghost Children of Charfield began. No person ever came forward to claim the remains, there were no reports of children having disappeared from anywhere. A further inquest proved to be of little help and only the fact that “two unknown persons” approximately 3-7 and 10-15 met their deaths that night. Dr. Ward remained adamant about his findings. The victims were buried together and on the memorial was added “Two Unknown”.

Doubts soon began to creep into peoples’ minds. They found it hard to accept the evidence of Doctor Ward. Surely, two children could not die in such circumstances and never be missed or claimed? Some suggested that the two body parts found were, in fact, the mangled remains of just one other victim, possibly an adult. Dr. Ward would not be moved. He stated he was experienced enough to be able to determine the sexes, even in such mutilated remains. The police sergeant who had actually found the remains said he and his helpers were certain that the charred bodies they removed were definitely children.

Then Henry Haines came forward. He was a porter at Gloucester Station. He recalled that night very well indeed. The express was late arriving and he had to go through the carriages collecting and clipping tickets before the express could leave the station at 4.56 a.m. He swore that he saw two children travelling alone near the front of the train. One was definitely a boy and the other a girl. He recalled the girl as sitting facing the engine, the boy was opposite her and there was a school-book face down on the seat next to him. It crossed his mind at the time that it was strange that the children were travelling alone, especially at night,  but he was in a hurry so did not stop to speak to them which, he said, he regretted. He remained adamant that he had seen them despite all the heavy  pressure being put on him to admit that he could be wrong, maybe he had made a mistake, maybe he just wanted his name to be known. Nothing would alter his story. He had seen those children. He maintained that all his life.

A popular magazine of the day tried to debunk the whole story, accusing Dr. Ward and Henry Haines of making false claims or having made gross mistakes.

The writer of the story had nothing to base these accusations only except for the fact that he himself did not believe it was possible for the children to die in such a way and never be claimed. Some believed what they read, others remained sure that the doctor and the porter were telling the truth. The story spread throughout Britain, Europe and even into America. Hundreds of thousands of people read about the two little victims. Months slipped by and nobody ever came forward to claim them as their own. Did someone know them? Were they keeping quiet because they had something to gain from the deaths? The rumours rumbled on and on.

Then, exactly a year to the day, October 13th 1929, Charfield was to witness a mysterious happening. A chauffeur-driven car stopped at the gates of the old cemetery. A woman emerged dressed in deep black with a long veil to hide her face from any onlookers. She carried a small posy of flowers. She took them to the victims’ grave, knelt for a few moments and then placed the flowers beneath the engraving “Two Unknown” and then she left. She returned on the same date the following year.

This was not the end of the tale. A few miles away in Bristol a sensational case arose concerning one of the most upstanding and respected citizens of the town, no less than the Chief Constable, a Mr. James F. Watson. He had misused public funds to send some of his officers on holiday. He was first suspended and then dismissed from his post. Now, Mr. Watson had played a massive part, along with his men, in the rescue work on the night of the Charfield crash. He suddenly disappeared from the City and then rumours began to spread that maybe he had some connection with the two children. A man came forward to say that he had seen Mr. Watson in the chauffeur driven car at the cemetery and that he had waited inside whilst the woman visited the memorial. No one knew where Mr. Watson had gone and no one seemed interested in searching for him. Then, just before Christmas 1930, a Bristol lawyer, Mr. Francis Hapgood, was contacted by his friend Mr. Watson. He received a telegram from London which said simply “Meet me, Waterloo Bridge Tomorrow Midnight - J.Watson.”

Mr. Hapgood took the train to London and met him on the Embankment by the Thames. Their meeting was very brief. They apparently shook hands and parted. What conversation passed between them was never revealed. Hapgood would never speak of it and took that secret to his own grave.

Two mornings later, the body of Mr. Watson was found in the pleasure gardens at Eastbourne, lying next to an open, cut-throat razor. People were stunned when a an open verdict was returned. Open verdict? There were no signs of a struggle, his throat had been cut, a open razor was lying near him. How could there be an open verdict. It had to be suicide. So, there it ended. Mr. Hapgood  refused to even discuss the matter and would give no details of what had been spoken of at their meeting. He died  himself not all that long afterwards.

A medium visited the site of the crash scene, and she immediately felt the presence of two children, brother and sister and she was convinced they died on that awful night.

After the suicide? of Mr. Watson, the lady in black was never seen again.

The mystery remains. Were Dr. Ward and the porter both mistaken, had Dr. Ward made a wrong assumption as to what the remains were and then felt he could not back down because of his reputation? Was Mr. Haines, the porter just trying to make a name for himself. If they were indeed two children, why were they never claimed? They must have belonged to somebody, someone must have bought their tickets for that journey? Did that person have something to gain by not coming forward? What connection had Mr. Watson to the children, if he had any at all and who was the woman in black? The memorial still stands today although the inscription  “Two Unknown” is barely legible now. The mystery remains as strong today as it did all those years ago.

Who or what were the Charfield ghost children? We shall never know.

37 comments:

Anonymous said...

Where on EARTH did you find that story??!!!  Made my blood run cold for sure.  A real Boxing Day Evening tale. - Angie

Anonymous said...

What an excellent entry ,Jeannette you do these storys so well ,What a shame there was no conclusion to this story,leaving us forever wondering ,.,.,Jan xx

Anonymous said...

You had me enchanted from the title.  You wrote this so well.  How did you know of this story?  So sad and mysterious too.  We have a show on in the states that I love called COLD CASE FILES and another called FORENSIC FILES.  It has similar mysterious stories such as this.  Love the show.
Nelishia
http://journals.aol.com/nelishianatl/WISHINGANDHOPING/
http://journals.aol.com/tsalagiprincess1/JumpingOffTheDeepEnd/

Anonymous said...

Hiya; that was excellent; I love that sort of tale, but a lot used to happen like that in those days especially with important fellas and maids or vice versa......I would go with the fact it was two children!!!

Anonymous said...

WOW!!!!....what a story...you have a gift there for story telling...hope we will get to enjoy more stories in the future...like every week LOLOL...just great...lets me use my imagination as to how the ending should go....hmmm???  hugs from KY....Ora

Anonymous said...

GREAT STORY! Love things like this. :)
Have a nice weeekend.
Sugar

Anonymous said...

That was a really fascinating, but chilling story Jeannette.  I`m certain the children existed but why did no-one come forward?  Was that woman their mother?  If only there was an answer.

Sandra xxxx

Anonymous said...

Hi Jeannette!  You are a GREAT story teller.  WOW you had my attention from the first word!  
Pam

Anonymous said...

wow, very sad

Anonymous said...

WOW, what a story. I think they were the illegimate children of the lady in black and Mr Watson.  Perhaps the lady in black also commited "suicide" when he did.  Or he killed her before he killed himself.  When we get to heaven someday, we'll know the truth about those two dear children, straight from their mouths. I love your stories... Linda in WA  

Anonymous said...

Perfect!
The time has come
It's here at last!
Click the link
And do it fast!
Prepare yourself, oh
You must be brave!
For Halloween is
out from it's grave.

Anonymous said...

Wow Jeanette! what an action packed thriller!immensely interesting! umm waht caused the train to crash?thanks you! hugs!hope you and grand kids are well!
love,nat

Anonymous said...

Now this is one mystery story that I would like to know the answer to. I still say you should be a writer as you do it so well. The graphic matches the story perfectly. Thanks for your email. Hugs, Helen

Anonymous said...

An excellent mystery!   Were they illegitimate children?   Had the driver obeyed protocol which even in those days allowed for a system of safety, not tried to make up the unimportant 5 minutes time, the fate of those victums could have been spared and the children would have never perhaps become an object of public attention.    The outcome of the story shows how important the identity of each individual life carries great importance.    I enjoyed reading this intriguing narrative that brings to life that fateful event in history.    mark

Anonymous said...

Great story...you are so talented....
Lyn

Anonymous said...

There you go again.....doing what you do best!  ;o)  -  Barbara

Anonymous said...

Wow!  I would really like to see this mystery solved!!  It will sit in the back of our minds and hearts forever while we wonder and ponder and feel for those two unknown children.  
Lisa  

Anonymous said...

I was wondering if there would be any ghost stories this year.... Thank you!! This was a great one!!
Have a great Sunday!
Linda :)

Anonymous said...

hi Jeannette...

thank you, that was a lovely Ghost story...

Astra!

Anonymous said...

what a fasinating story. i hope some day it is solved and a new grave stone can be placed with the names of those two angels engraved on it. god bless their little souls. thank you for sharing this with us. (((hugs))))
Cindy

Anonymous said...

So sad to think two children were not missed...so much goes on in peoples lives that we don't know about, so many questions...This ghost story like many I've heard gives us just a glimpse of the other side.  My children used to love to tell ghost stories and we'd sit around the campfire until no one could stay awake any longer telling spine chilling stories...Thank you for the tale ...you told their story well.  'On Ya' - ma

Anonymous said...

Jeannette that was a fascinating read ~ thankyou I really do enjoy a good ghost story ~ Ally

Anonymous said...

Great short story, you should think about getting published.  Perfect time of year for a ghost story.

Anonymous said...

Fascinating and enthralling, Jeannette!  I would think there was a connection between Mr. Watson and the children.  You worked wonders weaving this piece of folklore which still continues to be a mystery.  (Are the alerts acting up again?)  xx  Chris

Anonymous said...

Great story Jeannette, really enjoyed it this morning. Say the alert for it last night but could not keep my eyes open long enough so i kept it for this morning.  Thanks again for writing it. Love Joan.

Anonymous said...

I love getting caught up with your journal...nothing better than a good ghost story from you...many hugs and love,
Joyce

Anonymous said...

Lovely spooky story Jeanette, I would love to know who the children belonged to and where they were going,
take care Lynne xx

Anonymous said...

Excellent ghost story! Thanks for sharing this! Love Conniex

Anonymous said...

Enjoyed reading this so much!!I wonder who the children were?? What a mystery.Very interesting Jeannette. . .thank you for sharing this story

Anonymous said...

graet mystery and neat story thanks for sharing makes you wondwe where the children were

Anonymous said...

Oh, my gosh, that is a very interesting mystery!  I love tales like this!  Thanks so much for telling it to us.  You have a wonderful way with words.  You make the story come to life!
Kathy  http://journals.aol.com/kaydeejay5449/ALittleLeftofCenter/

Anonymous said...

    Great story.
Jude
http://journals.aol.com/jmorancoyle/MyWay

Anonymous said...

Great story jeannette

Anonymous said...

Great tale.  Is it true?  If so, those children have gone on peacefully as their spirits have not returned to the site in confusion.  Bless.

Susie
http://journals.aol.co.uk/susanebunn/ItAllStartsAfter50/

Anonymous said...

I love it when you do real stories.  You write so very well, I enjoyed reading this one...Sandi

Anonymous said...

Jeannette....I wanted to thank you for this entry this was haunting. I really liked this entry. I should have told you about which entry I meant. Sorry about the mix up. Take care.

Anonymous said...

What an interesting, but sad story..  Hmm..  Could Mr. Watson have cross-dressed as a woman in disquise when he visited the graves?  Hmm...  It just doesn't make sense that no one claimed the children, unless they were orphan?  Perhaps they were sent to meet their father, and the father did not step up to claim them--perhaps the father had something to hide?  Interesting, but sad.  Thanks for your entry!!  I will plan to visit your journal more often!  Julie :)