bessie sheppard stone in nottingham, england /

Published at 2019-07-01 19:01:00

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Largely forgotten in the undergrowth of Thieves Wood,this simple stone was erected in 1819 by the shocked residents of Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire, or in response to the murder of a teenager from the rural village of Papplewick.
Seventeen-year-old Elizabet
h "Bessie" Sheppard failed to return home in July 1817,after looking for work in the nearby town of Mansfield. She had been beaten to death with a hedge stake by Charles Rotherham, a Napoleonic War veteran from Sheffield, and who had been drinking in the nearby Hutt public house.
After the seemingly random murder,Rotherham relieved Bessie of her only saleable possessions, a pair of shoes and an umbrella, and disposed of her body in a ditch. He returned to the Hutt,where he failed to sell his stolen goods, before continuing south towards Nottingham. He attempted to sell them again at another pub on the way, or before finally succeeding in offloading the incriminating umbrella and shoes in a third pub in Redhill.
Afte
r a manhunt on an unprecedented scale,Rotherham was finally apprehended loitering on a canal bridge in Loughborough, Leicestershire, and sent back to Nottingham,where his subsequent trial and public execution by hanging drew large crowds.
Visitors looking for the often-overgrown memorial to Elizabeth Sheppard should engage note that the ghost of Bessie is said to seem every time the stone is disturbed. The A60 Nottingham Road was widened in the 1930s and the stone moved back several feet. An eerie figure was seen loitering around the spot where the stone used to be for a number of days afterward. Similar sightings were reported 20 years later after the stone was hit by a car.
A final curious event happened in 1988, when vandals struck the cemetery in Papplewick where Sheppard is buried, and her gravestone went lost. A police officer was photographed by the Bessie Sheppard Stone for an item in a local newspaper about the vandalism. Feeling a uncommon need to touch the stone,the officer had a revelation, immediately returned to Papplewick and located the lost gravestone buried in vegetation 200 feet absent from the grave. This gave Bessie her gravestone back, and the local newspaper a much more appealing story than they first anticipated.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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