Enfield Poltergeist

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The Enfield Poltergeist was a period of apparent poltergeist activity in England between August 1977 and September 1978, with an added outburst in August 1980.

Contents

[edit] Activity

The said activity occurred at , Enfield, North London; a council house rented to Peggy Hodgson, a lone parent with four children. [1]

During this time furniture is said to have moved by itself, knockings on the walls were heard, and children's toys were said to have been thrown around and to have been too hot to the touch when picked up. A police officer signed an affidavit to affirm that she saw a chair moving. Reports of the activity attracted various visitors including mediums and members of the press. After visiting the house George Fallows, a senior reporter for the Daily Mirror at the time, suggested that the Society for Psychical Research (SPR) be called in to investigate.

[edit] Investigations

The incidents were duly investigated by Maurice Grosse and Guy Lyon Playfair, both members of SPR, who were convinced by the evidence which they encountered during their five month investigation. They reported witnessing various phenomena, including moving furniture, flying marbles, cold breezes, shallow pools of water appearing on the floor, and fires which spontaneously ignited and extinguished themselves.

The family in the Enfield case consisted of a mother, two daughters, and two sons; Margaret aged 12, a younger sister Janet 11, Johnny aged 10 and Billy aged 7. Billy had a speech impediment. Johnny featured only marginally in the inexplicable events, at least 26 of which the investigators considered could not be accounted for by fraud. These included movement of small and large objects, interference with bedclothes, pools of water on the floor, apparitions, physical assaults, graffiti, equipment malfunction and failure, spontaneous combustion, disappearance and reappearance of objects, and apparent levitations.

Among other alleged phenomena they witnessed was one of the children speaking using her false cords for hours on end (which is believed to be medically impossible), while she was apparently possessed by another entity. When speaking with the false cords she said she was "Bill" who had died in the house. Recordings were made of these occurrences. After the BBC went to the house the recording crew found the metal inside recording machines bent, and recordings erased.

However, further investigations by Anita Gregory and John Beloff, also from the SPR were not so positive. They spent a few days with the family and came to the conclusion that the children had faked the poltergeist activity after they found them bending spoons themselves. One of the children (Janet) admitted to Gregory that they had fabricated some of the occurrences. This admission was repeated on the ITV News (12 June 1980) when she stated: "Oh yeah, once or twice [we faked phenomena], just to see if Mr Grosse and Mr Playfair would catch us. And they always did."

After writing a feature on supernatural activity for Loaded magazine, journalist Will Storr included a retrospective investigation of the events and conflicting personalities involved in the Enfield case in his book Will Storr Versus the Supernatural. The book comes to no positive conclusions regarding the truth of the haunting but throws considerable light on the personalities involved, particularly those of Maurice Grosse and Anita Gregory.

[edit] Conclusion

Margaret has publicly stated that although they did fake a few phenomena to catch the investigators out, they were not responsible for all the phenomena. She has stated that "It is ridiculous to suggest that either my sister or I could have been responsible for the strange activity that went on in our house." However, despite this there remain differences of interpretation regarding whether the girls faked all the phenomena or not.

[edit] Ghostwatch

On Halloween night, 1992, the BBC aired a fictional mockumentary entitled Ghostwatch, written by Steven Volk and based on the Enfield Poltergeist investigation. Like the Enfield Poltergeist, Ghostwatch supposedly took place in a North London house, and featured a possessed adolescent girl speaking with false cords. The programme, which was only aired once on television, created a brief period of War of the Worlds-style panic due to many viewers believing the events that they had just witnessed were real.


[edit] Further media coverage

Guy Lyon Playfair wrote a book about his investigation entitled This House is Haunted.

In March 2007 Channel 4 aired a documentary about the events of The Enfield Case. The documentary was called Interview with a Poltergeist.

[edit] Interviewing the Poltergeist

Grosse 'challenged' the poltergeist to speak to him and it did not take long before the poltergeist was communicating. The poltergeist had a habit of making jokes, but also had a very nasty temper, choosing to swear at Maurice, once calling him; "A fucking old sod."

However, the spirit did reveal itself to Grosse as a man named Bill, who died in the house of a brain haemorrhage.

After a few weeks of Bill revealing himself, a man contacted Grosse and claimed to be Bill's son.

In The Enfield Case, the documentary revealed that the two girls often played their own tricks on Grosse, but only to see if he could tell the difference between the poltergeist activity and the girls' activity. The girls said that Grosse always caught them out. Bill's voice was said to be hoax coming from Janet (who the poltergeist seemed to focus most of its attention on). Scientists believed that Janet was creating Bill's voice herself, but doubt has been cast on this.

Peggy Hodgson remained in the house until her death in 2003. Grosse passed away in 2006.

[edit] Further reading

Playfair, G.L. & Grosse, M. (1988). "Enfield revisited: The evaporation of positive evidence". Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 55: 208-219.

Playfair, G.L. This House is Haunted: The True Story of a Poltergeist, Stein & Day, 1980. 0812827325.

Storr, Will 'Will Storr versus The Supernatural', Random House/Harper Collins ISBN-10: 0091901731

[edit] References

  1. ^ Considine, Dave. Enfield, North London (1977-1980). Poltergeists Fact and Fiction. Retrieved on 2007-06-26. “The Enfield Poltergeist. This was a period of supposed poltergeist activity between August 1977 and September 1978, with an additional outburst in August 1980.”

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