The sight that greeted us on our very first visit. |
Ever since Laura and I first started working together, there
has been one location that has remained a constant, even as we found ourselves
relocating several times around southern and eastern England over the past ten
years.
An ancient place of Christian worship, located deep in
rural Essex, insular and isolated and, as far as we could tell from our initial
visit, of little historical significance - although further research could
reveal otherwise.
As any visitor will attest, as they often have, it cannot
be denied that the location has a certain atmosphere, one that Laura herself is
not to fond of, so we have always found ourselves being drawn back to the
church, time and time again.
Needless to say, with so much time spent at the site, we
hold a large set of notes on file, that have produced numerous lines of
research that we have still yet to investigate fully.
However, we thought that it was time to share with you
some of our experiences and discoveries that we have made there, over the last
decade or so.
Background
The church building itself dates back several hundred
years, of a very distinctive design and, without intending to be unkind in anyway,
it certainly looks and smells its age. Over the centuries there have been
several major alterations made to the current building, in more recent times, being
mostly been enforced due to damage and decay.
The church was effectively abandoned to the elements some
50 years or so ago and now classified as redundant.
The building was only saved following a series of
fortunate decisions that initially commenced with a demolition order in the
1970’s, leading ultimately to the substantial conservation work undertaken to halt
the decay and underpin the church, that was completed a couple of years ago.
This is how the visitor will find the church today.
Even now, the church is little known outside of the local
community and it still retains its sense of isolation.
We first came across the location whilst searching for
new research projects in the East Anglian area, where we were both based at the
time.
We’d found several reports made by various people mentioning
the high number of EVPs (Electronic Voice Phenomena) that were allegedly being
recorded there, but little else of note concerning the history of the church,
which still remains elusive, even now.
However, this was still enough to pique our interest, so
notes were made and the site added to our ever growing list of future locations
that we intended to visit.
Thinking nothing more of the matter, we then turned our
attention to other areas of interest and simply forgot about the church.
Several months later, during a quiet period, we went back
over our notes and decided that it was finally time to undertake a field trip
to see if there was any substance to the reports that we’d read.
The start of our relationship with the building had
begun.
The visits commence
Our initial visit took place on a warm summer’s evening,
the air filled with the rich evening chorus of blackbirds ringing out to
accompany the setting sun, greeting us as we left the car.
Despite this pleasant welcome, Laura immediately commented
that, to her, the location had a foreboding atmosphere and I noted that she
appeared apprehensive as we entered the church grounds.
The entrance to the church stood in front of us, at the
foot of the Tudor Bell Tower, almost obstructed by a grave memorial, which in
itself we found unusual.
We soon realised that the doorway was a more recent
addition to tower, the main entrance being located on the North side of the
building, via an impressive 17th Century wooden porch, that complemented
the tower.
The present view, looking up from inside the Tudor Belfry. |
To our disappointment, we found that both entrances to
the church were securely locked, upon safety grounds as we later found out, due
to the desperate condition of the building and the imminent risk of collapse.
Indeed, apart from an annual service, the church had been
closed off to the general public for a number of years, until the conservation
project was undertaken and completed.
The restoration itself was completed a couple of years
ago and thankfully saved the church from demolition, with the added bonus that
the public were now able to view the interior of the building, but we
digress....
Finding ourselves restricted to the small churchyard, we
decided to walk around the structure and examine the building and explore the
surrounding churchyard to see what was revealed.
We found that the land surrounding the church was very
overgrown, with trees encroaching right up to the building itself in places,
adding to the atmosphere of the location.
At the time we recall thinking that someone would need to
act quickly, as nature was clearly looking to reclaim what was originally hers
with a vengeance.
Thankfully, as events transpired, action was taken.
Darkness falls – a secret to uncover?
As we strained our eyes and looked as far as we could
into the wooded areas, we could make out old gravestones dotted amongst the
trees – a particularly eerie sight as the sun finally set.
General maintenance of the graveyard had evidently long
stopped here, although the remaining grassed areas had clearly been recently
mown.
We continued our exploration and, Laura remained
unsettled.
In addition to some names and dates, Laura also felt that
the location was being used for occult purposes and not in a particularly nice
way. This use was both historical and, something that was continuing to the
present day.
A quick search of the surrounding area thankfully found
no psychical evidence of such activity.
There was one particular monument that Laura was drawn to
and which continues to be so to this very day, a very large slab of (type of
stone), surrounded by a set low, decorative cast iron rails, protecting the
monument.
The memorial was engraved with the name of family members
covering a number of years, even some that had left these shores and commenced
a new life in a distant country.
However, despite being in a relatively good condition for
its age, it was covered in ivy and other fauna and its inscriptions proved
difficult to read.
Thankfully, this memorial has also been restored and we
now have a complete copy of the inscriptions.
The memorial, now restored, helpfully providing us with a lot of information. |
An interesting back story surrounds the family commemorated
by the memorial, although we have still to undertake any further research
relating to this.
Laura felt that the whole location held a secret and that
the memorial, or the people listed there, were the key to unlocking the whole
thing. The memorial indicates that most of the family emigrated in mid 19th
Century, which obviously will form one line of our ongoing research.
The EVPs
Over subsequent visits, various EVP’s were recorded and
the ominous feeling that Laura was getting from the location intensified, to
the extent that Laura was eventually reluctant to visit the church, even in day
light hours.
Laura has never been keen on visiting the church...... |
It is worth mentioning that, despite continually
searching, we’ve thankfully never ever found any evidence of ‘occult’ activity
to this present day. Although, in spite of the lack of physical evidence, Laura
is absolutely certain that the location is still being used for such purposes.
The EVPs that we record at the location are of varying
quality, but at a more frequent level than we experience elsewhere. Helpfully,
they are usually in direct response or in context to the conversation that we were
having at the time.
We’ve also recorded the same EVP on two separate audio
recorders that were recording at the same time, one of the few times that this
has occurred for us.
Of greater interest to us, looking back through our
notes, Laura has been receiving the name ‘James’ during the majority of our
visits, although we weren’t really conscious of this due to the time that had
passed between our visits and this has only come to light recently when looking
back through our notes.
Curiously, during a recent visit, Laura once again picked
up upon ‘James’, only this time our audio recording also picked up another female
voice whispering ‘James’ immediately following Laura asking if James was with
us at the time.
(As always with EVP, best listened to via headphones)
‘James’ is undoubtedly a person of interest for us in our
research, although we have made no progress as to his identification to date.
The restoration...... and a new chapter begins
The restoration of the church itself a couple of years
ago affords visitors access to the interior, after many years of being sealed
off.
In 2015, having recently moved back to the area, we
visited for the first time since the restoration work had been completed and
finally found ourselves stood inside the building at last.
Opening the door for the first time, we found ourselves
inside a church that looked far bigger inside that it did from the outside,
causing us to look around quickly for any Time Lords in the vicinity.
Breathing in the musty air, we found bare plaster walls,
compete with sections of 300 year old murals and even older wall paintings.
The pews and pulpit, which, at the time, we took to be of
a similar age to the murals, but have subsequently found out had been salvaged
from another church locally, were in excellent condition.
The floor mainly consisted of black and red clay tiles,
straight onto an earthen floor, that looked to date from Victorian times, but
we could be wrong.
Almost immediately, upon entering the building, perhaps
unsurprisingly, Laura started to pick up people’s names and dates, together
with what she described as a ‘young boy’, around 11 or 12 years old, who was
holding her hand.
This was not the first time that she had experienced this
at the site, although she was unsure as to whether this was the same ‘boy’ that
has been attracted to here on previous visits.
She also felt that there was a room or area beneath the
church floor itself, where young children were secretly taken and ‘punished’.
At one point Laura received this impression so strongly, she
knelt down to examine the floor for any signs of an entrance to the room below.
Was there a room beneath the floor here. Research has indicated that there isn't, but was something here in the past? |
More Research and another visit
Over the following months, I made some discrete enquiries
and undertook further research, but could find no mention of an underground
room or area - although, tantalisingly, I did find references as to the reason why
the church building had been in danger of collapsing, necessitating the
restoration, which was down to subsidence, in part caused by vaults, or crypts
under the church.
Could it be that one of these vaults be the room that
Laura had referred to, where the ‘punishments’ to the children had taken place?
This new information led to me to visiting the church
once again, without Laura, to see if I could find any trace of the vaults in
the fabric of the floor that remained, although I had my doubts, as the tiles
were clearly of a relatively recent vintage.
I particularly wanted to inspect a gap under a pew that
we’d noticed on a previous visit, although the task would be made more
difficult, in the fading winter light at the time I made the visit.
Although I was unable to determine as to whether there
was anything underground, my inspection was nonetheless worthwhile and, undoubtedly
necessitated a further visit when the light was better.
Of more significance however, it appeared that my visit
to the church had acted as a trigger of some sort, as later that evening Laura
received an image and a vision, relating to the church.
The good the bad and the Pigman.......
The image was that a shard of white frosted, or smoky
glass, self standing, in the area of where the font is now located, containing
an image of a female saint, in prayer.
It should be noted that we use the term with reluctance
here but there were no other words to describe it – a vision.
In it, Laura was stood at the threshold of church itself,
at the entrance in the Tudor Bell Tower, the door wide open.
Here, she found herself facing a priest, who was stood
immediately inside the church.
Beyond the priest, she could see a figure, a man with a
pig’s head (the skull being almost skeletal, coloured brown, but she could
definitely see ears, albeit dried and curling over).
The ‘pigman’ (for the lack of a better term) was stood at
the end of the pews, in the open area adjacent to the font, next to the North
Entrance to the church.
In her ‘vision’, as Laura strained to see beyond the
clergyman, the ‘pigman’ asked her if she was coming in.
As she thought carefully about the invitation, the vision
faded and ended.
Laura, re-enacting her 'vision' of the pigman |
Looking at my phone I could see that it was approximately
midnight (my phone was displaying the time of 00:00 am).
Things did not end here and, at approximately 00:40 am,
Laura received her final image of the night, of a rectangular, almost square
headstone, that was in the churchyard, lying flat on the surface of the ground
but raised (rather than level with the surface), with the inscription of a
young woman’s name and age.
To bring this particular episode to a close, the next day
Laura saw a set of symbols that she drew for my inspection when I returned home
that evening.
At the time, I attempted to link these events together
and felt that perhaps the best to interpret the whole affair was on a symbolic
level – clearly British history had not been awash with reports of pig headed
men, from our current level of understanding at least.
We therefore decided that a further visit was necessary,
this time with Laura in attendance, to try and make sense of the vision.
The follow up
Within a week Laura and I found ourselves at the
location, this time late morning - the first time that we’d visited the
location at this time of day.
Laura, having just had her hand 'held' by a child once again. |
As I stopped to get my equipment ready, Laura stopped
ahead of me and turned to tell me that she’d been touched by a child, although
she was not certain that it was one of the ones that had made contact with her
previously.
We started off with a tour of the graveyard, meeting a
friendly dog (and owner) out enjoying the crisp spring air.
This was the first time that we’d really inspected the
area surrounding the church together in detail since its restoration, so we
spent some time looking at the memorials, wondering if any of the names were
familiar to us from our previous visits.
We then turned our attention to the church and began to
walk the circumference of the building in a clockwise direction.
At an area on the south side of the church, Laura
suddenly knelt down and started ‘sweeping’ her arm across the grass.
Catching my attention, I asked her what was wrong?
Laura informed me that, at this spot, she had felt the
urge to immediately kneel down and pray, which then quickly turned to the
desire to uncover something that was buried, or concealed, beneath the ground.
The ‘spot’ was close to the south wall of the church,
immediately next to a bricked up (very large) door or window, with the ground
being uneven or disturbed, which we’d always put down to rubble being dumped
there in previous years.
Subsequent investigation revealed that the bricked up
aperture was the grand entrance to a private chapel attached to the south side
of the church, which had been destroyed and removed in the past. This had resulted
in the disturbed ground where Laura had felt the need to pray.
The former entrance to the chapel, that stood in the grassed area to the lower left of the image. It was in this area that Laura felt the need to pray and uncover a concealed object. |
With nothing else forthcoming, we made our way to the
Tudor Bell Tower and into the church itself.
Once inside the church, Laura pointed out where she’d
been standing during her vision and, where the ‘pigman’ and priest were stood
in relation to her, but nothing further was forthcoming.
As we moved further into the church, Laura mentioned (as
she had done on her previous visit inside the church), that she felt that we
were once again being watched by a man high up in the church, against the Bell
Tower. She felt that the man lived in the church, or at least had the habit of
staying overnight there and, was possibly a curate that was attached to the
church.
Laura walked towards the altar and sat down on the step
in silence and attempted to tap into the atmosphere of the building.
After several minutes in quiet contemplation, she arose,
walked forward several feet and then bent her knees and touched the floor at a
certain point in the aisle. She insisted that there was still, or had been, a
room or chamber below.
It was at this point that Laura asked out aloud if James
was with us now, sensing that he was possibly close, resulting in us recording
the female voice whispering ‘James’ that we referred to earlier.
The present day.
As we mentioned right at the start, our research is still
ongoing and there is clearly far more to be revealed at this location.
However, we have reached the point where we have started
to make some progress, so perhaps this is an opportune moment to cover some of
our experiences at the location, together with our current findings date:
1. There
are a lot of children connected to the location
This has been a constant for
Laura ever since we first visited the location - the building would have served
at sometime as a sort of workhouse, possibly a school.
Whilst we’ve been unable to
establish anything definitively, in a recent conversation with a local historian,
from his research, he believed that there was a second chamber within the
church, no longer existing, that was used either as a school room at some
point, or indeed where a priest lived (which also ties us to point 5. below).
As you can imagine, this has
been an important development for us and has now become a strong line of
research for us, which we will hopefully be able to expand upon at a future
date.
2. An
underground vault, where children were abused (not sexually)
This has, so far, proved a dead
end for us. Apart from a reference to underground vaults, or crypts, being
mainly responsible for the subsidence at the church, we’ve not been able to
progress this any further so far, even with physical inspections at the
location itself.
a. A
secret connected to the family mentioned
in the large memorial slab, adjacent to the Tudor Bell Tower
b.
A woman, her young son torn away from her,
still upset; and
c. James
Laura feels strongly that
these three separate ‘events’ are potentially linked.
Throughout our visits Laura
frequently senses the presence of a woman, who is grieving, having had her son
taken away from her.
In the same way, she feels
that this woman is linked to the family detailed on the memorial slab and that
the child was taken away because of the shame that it brought onto the family.
Less confidently, Laura feels
that the James that lingers there could possibly be this child, but she has
never receive any answers to this when she has asked.
At this moment, this remains
an ongoing line of research, with the only facts that we’ve been able to
establish is the names on the family memorial. However, Laura feels that we’re
close to getting an answer here, so only time will tell.
3. Something
concealed beneath the ground where the chapel was located.
Again, our enquiries are
ongoing, but details of the former chapel are sparse and obviously we’re not in
a position to go around digging up church yards.
However, the fact that Laura
felt the strong need to kneel pray and then uncover a concealed item beneath what
we now know would have been the chapel floor provides an interesting line of
research for us.
4. That
the location is used, both historically and currently by people for occult
purposes
Whilst we are not in
possession of any supporting evidence whatsoever for this, the relative
seclusion and remoteness of the location would not appear to exclude this.
Interestingly, Laura has felt that a particular person could have visited this
location and, in a completely unrelated conversation recently, another person
suggested something that could support this.
This is one aspect that we’ll
maintain a watching brief upon.
5. The
man, possibly a curate, that watched from high, who lived in the church
As mentioned in point 1. above, a recent discussion
with a local historian revealed that he believed that historically, there used
to be a second chamber within the church that was where the priest used to live
or was used as a school room (possibly both), who produced an historical plan
of the church, a few hundred years old, to illustrate his point.
When asked why would the
priest live inside the church and not elsewhere, the historian explained that
during Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries, from 1536 to 1541, the
priest in residence was ejected from the neighbouring Manor House when it was
seized by Henry's men and he therefore took residence in the church itself.
This would support what Laura had picked up,
but how does this explain the ‘watching from above’ element?
The area of the Nave from which Laura has always felt that we were being watched, from above. |
This part was clarified by another
historian, who advised that in the past, there was a former upper floor gallery
at the rear of the Nave, as was popular in churches at the time, which would
clearly have provided the platform ‘from above’ that would allow the man to
observe visitors.
6. The
gentleman, unflatteringly referred to as ‘Pigman’
It probably goes without
saying that Laura’s vision of the ‘pigman’ was the most difficult to
understand.
We initially thought we
needed to interpret this at a symbolic level, especially in light of the symbols
that she received and drew, the following morning after the vision.
After a while, we thought we'd arrived at
a plausible interpretation for the vision and symbols, taking into account
other things that were occurring with Laura at the time.
However, subsequent events led us to dismiss his interpretation.
However, subsequent events led us to dismiss his interpretation.
A few weeks later I met an
historian at the church who, whilst discussing the development of the building
over the centuries, mentioned the upper gallery at the rear of the Nave, as
discussed in point 5. above.
As I’d tentatively touched
upon the reason for enquiring about the gallery during our conversation and
hadn’t been rebuffed, I pressed on and, after providing a lengthy introduction
as to what I was going to say, explained what Laura had seen and threw myself
at the historian’s mercy.
To my surprise, the response
was not what I was expecting.
The historian explained that
the grave immediately outside the ‘new’ entrance, in the Tudor Bell Tower, was
that of a gentleman, an ex-serviceman, who served the church and, was in the
habit of standing at the corner of the building, directing people around to the
North Porch entrance. Being ex-military, he had a certain way about him and the
historian could imagine him standing there, asking, of any stragglers, are they
coming in?
Although the gentleman was of
a different age, the historian knew that he had a certain reputation locally,
of being a ‘pig’........
Another possible explanation
provided by the historian was the locality’s connection to pigs, dating back to
Anglo Saxon times, if not earlier. Was the vision a link to this?
Either way, had we finally
found our ‘pigman’?
The future?
It must be said that we both found this very difficult to
write.
Not only was there so much that we could have written
(there is a lot that we’ve simply left for another time), but things that have
been moving at such a rate, we have had to constantly re-write, add or remove
elements.
Indeed, we started
writing this over 15 months ago and even now were in two minds as to whether or
not to publish what we had written.
Unlike most if the other pieces that we’ve written about
here, there is no conclusion to our research and we simply, at this stage, do
not know where it is going, so it’s fair to say that we will be issuing further
updates, from times to time.
However, what we are certain about is that this location
has many secrets to reveal, which we both feel we are on the cusp of discovering.
In some ways, our
journey with this location has most definitely only just begun.