Tag Archives: Superstitions

Family Plagued by Supernaturally Large “Hex Cat,” 1911

Gettysburg Times, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania28 September 1911

HEX CAT DODGES BULLET OF GOLD


Feline Blamed For Casting Spell Over Family

PEOPLE STIRRED BY STORY

While Hex Tales From Tumbling Run Have Created Derision, the Authorities Are Suprised at Number of Weird Complaints

Pottsville, Pa, Sept. 28.– In the gray of the early morning a score of the more intrepid farmers of Tumbling Run Valley and a few interested ones, on invitations given by Miss Mary Isabella Thomas, who alleges that a “hex” or witch has placed a spell on the family through the machinations of a relative ... [More »]

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Macabre method for removing birthmarks, circa 1800

Raleigh Herald, Raleigh, West Virginia1 September 1910

The Dead Man's Hand


Charms as cures for sickness were common in England a century ago. Lady Wake, who was born in 1800, tells of a grewsome cure adopted for the removal of some birthmarks which disfigured her face. Her mother was persuaded that “a dead man’s hand held upon my cheek and hands would effectually remove the marks,” ... [More »]

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Young Woman Buried Alive, ca. 1890

Hutchinson News, Hutchinson Kansas19 December 1901

Mystery of a Haunted Churchyard Revealed


By the opening of a tomb in the burying ground of Goose Creek church, near Charleston S.C., a mystery that has haunted the place for a dozen years has been cleared away. Inside the door, several feet from an open coffin, was found the skeleton of a young woman showing that she had died in ... [More »]

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Vampire Folklore Considered, 1904

The Washington Post21 August 1904

THE COMMON VAMPIRE


(Andrew Lange In the London Post) MR. BRAM STOKER lately added to the gayety of nations by a romance about vampires named “Dracula.” Vampires, these scourges of nature, were represented as having made great strides In culture. They had large balances at their banks, and one vampire employed two firms of family solicitors. They extended ... [More »]

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Spirits in the Fog, Wales

Notes and Queries 2 (19), page 2949 March 1850

FOLKLORE OF WALES


No. 1. Cron Annwn. – When a storm sounds over the mountains, the Welsh peasant will tell you that his ear discerns the howl of the Cron Annwn mingling with that of the wind, yet as clearly distinct from it as is the atmosphere in a diving-bell from that of the surrounding waters. These dogs ... [More »]

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