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FT430

so, so, tempted by the front cover to post that "Not The Nine O'Clock News" sketch.... it parodied a British Gas advert of the time (1980) and had the dulcet tones of Gryff Rhys-Jones intoning "Come home to a real fire...."

Thoughts. About hauntings at military bases. The Chicksands Priory haunting. I lived, at university, on a former RAF base whose barracks had been repurposed for students. (Horsham St Faith, Norwich. There are others on this forum who would have).

In my time there I picked up on two reports of air-related hauntings. One was pretty much an urban myth about an airman who had stood too close to the engine and had been decapitated by a moving propellor. This wasn't creditably reported as an ongoing thing in my time there and I do remember thinking it was unlikely. Somebody killed on the airstrip - which was by then partially a residual RAF base and mainly Norwich Airport - well, if you had a violently unexpected death on the runway or in a hangar, isn't your ghost more likely to be seen there rather than in the barracks?

The second one: the former admin buildings for the air base now housed, among other things, the union bar. Just opposite there was a room, used sometimes for meetings, but for most of the time empty and unlit. That had been, in old days, the Officers' Dining Room just over the way from the Mess Bar. By 1984 on an RAF base first opened in the middle 1930's and which had been active in WW2 - it wasn't the bar of the officers' mess. It was the dark empty large room that had once been the lounge, or the dining room, for RAF officers that carried the atmosphere. In that place in the evening, it could feel definitively creepy. While it never happened to me - I did go in there to see if it would, but no luck - people I would otherwise have rated as reliable observers reported going in there in the dark and hearing voices that sounded as if they were speaking Russian or something. Confusingly, another reporter said if she'd been forced to guess, it might have been Dutch or German... well, probably not German, but you know what I mean...

RAF Horsham St Faith housed a Polish squadron in 1940-41. Later in the war a Belgian squadron was based there. (Was it the one that had Michael Bentine as its intelligence officer?)

With regard to air crashes and fatalities - the neighbouring village, a short walk away, had a commemorative monument to an American Air Force crew who crashed there in 1944 (eight dead). I'll have to see if I can retrieve it, but Horsham ceased to be an active fighter base in 1967-ish. I found RAF casualty records for the peacetime period and worked out there were a number of crashes and fatalities involving RAF personnel from Horsham in the period 1945 - 1966 - maybe a dozen in total - including several that happened on the base itself. (But nothing recorded for WW2).

So I wonder if the Headless Airman of UEA was either a ghost story that grew in the telling - or maybe a distorted account of one of those post-war fatal accidents.....
 
Just wondering what the point was in the "Witch Farm" article? So many reported phenomena and the best the author could do was blame the husbands past?

Just because someone else has lived there for 25 years with no phenomena does not mean the family made up, exaggerated or otherwise enhanced their experiences.

A damp squib of an article on an interesting case IMHO.
 
Re: the Witch Farm article. O'Keeffe is always approached for the sceptical view of events - which is fine; don't accept things at face value - but when he hasn't an explanation, he merely states that they are hiding the psychology at the root. In short: it's all in the mind. His credibility in my eyes is reduced by his involvement with Most Haunted 2004 - 2010.
The published letter from the current owners, smacks of smugness on the part of the author - "I told you so!"

I love it when I see articles on Nazi flying saucers. Reminds me of the Aurora model kit I built, of the saucer from The Invaders TV series. So much so, I wouldn't be surprised if the Takom kit of the Haundebu wasn't a repurposed design of the Aurora I.P.
 
Hey AgProv,

Another one-time Horsham inmate here – I seem to have a vague memory that we've discussed this before... or did I imagine it?
 
Hey AgProv,

Another one-time Horsham inmate here – I seem to have a vague memory that we've discussed this before... or did I imagine it?
Hi! I'm fairly sure we have - and it's still recorded here for posterity somewhere! Also - trying to get their board title absolutely right - Cycleboy chimed in, and one or two others. I may go looking for that! Weren't we at UEA at approximately the same time, 1984 and on?

In other news: looked up the service record for Michael Bentine to check where he was posted as Intelligence Officer first to 300(Polish} squadron of Bomber Command, and then to 350 (Belgian) Squadron, (fighter-bombers). Disappointingly, this was in Lincolnshire with the Poles and Suffolk with the Belgians - he went nowhere near Norwich.
 
Wonder what happened to the article on Arthur C C Clarke's World of Strange Powers that was in the next issue tease of #429. Hopefully it'll turn up in an upcoming issue!
 
I agree with others about the Witch Farm article. A lot of the article was dedicated to simply describing the case, and on the whole there was a lot of unnecessary waffle. I appreciate the author didn't have the luxury of investigating the case first hand, but overall the analysis was pretty weak (and I'm quite sceptical of the case myself).
 
O'Keefe was involved with the Uncanny podcast on the Witch Farm, as a critic - not as a sceptical analysis but just to give an alternative explanation of the events. In effect, he was reading data and making his own interpretation. He wasn't involved in any investigation of the case.
I didn't like the article because it seemed to me to be a commentary on the phenomena, rather than an analysis of events. It's a third hand account.
 
O'Keefe was involved with the Uncanny podcast on the Witch Farm, as a critic - not as a sceptical analysis but just to give an alternative explanation of the events. In effect, he was reading data and making his own interpretation. He wasn't involved in any investigation of the case.
I didn't like the article because it seemed to me to be a commentary on the phenomena, rather than an analysis of events. It's a third hand account.

Agreed, having listened to the podcast there wasn't anything new or illuminating in the article.
 
Maybe I should write an article about an article written about an investigation and claim it's an article about an investigation? ;)
 
Arthur C is coming soon – FT432.
I had not seen this.
By pure coincidence I have picked Arthur to be this weeks avatar.

Anyhoo, that's not why I am here.
I just wanted to mention that my FT 430 has arrived, sopping wet. I don't think the print has run, and the pages haven't stuck together.
I'm assuming that the postman got caught in one of the downpours we have been having today and his bag was open, or something.
But you would think that the single prerequisite of postal delivery would be to keep the damn stuff dry, wouldn't you?
Oh, that and 'deliver it to the correct address' which this postman seems also unable to achieve with 100% certainty as we repeatedly get letters for a number 78 in one of the local roads.
And it wouldn't have been a problem if the FT was still being delivered in a plastic envelope, but oh no, for some reason it's now being despatched in a paper covering (which itself is often ripped anyway).
That's probably one for the 'whinge' thread though.
 
What about the weird cover?! You can see through his head (at least the upper part) and on the house you can read "bbc sounds". The cover with "Nessie" also looks bad. They used to have some great ones.
 
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