
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Creepy, Occult & Spooky Series #3 of 4. There wasn’t a soul in London, much less the neighborhood of Smithfield market, who hadn’t heard of the Cock Lane ghost. In 1762, the narrow London street was crowded with throngs of onlookers and busy-bodies who wanted to know if the rumors were true. A young girl at 20 Cock Lane , Elizabeth Parsons, was said to be possessed by a restless spirit. The Cock Lane ghost’s biggest claim to fame was its alleged knocking and scratching at all hours of the night and day. Witnesses devised a code to communicate with the ghost who claimed to have been murdered by her lover two years earlier. This had Londoners up in arms. Everyone took a side. Methodists and Anglicans viciously argued over the possibility of contact with the dead. London newspapers wrote daily updates about the séances, investigations and hearings that sought to uncover the truth behind Scratching Fanny, as the ghost was named, and her suspicious death. Londoners used the mysterious happenings at Cock Lane as a vehicle to debate religious difference, pre-marital sex, fraud, murder, and the vulnerability of some of London’s greatest minds in the face of superstition.
Find Show Notes, Affiliate Links and a Transcript here!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Recorded History Podcast Network4.7
362362 ratings
Creepy, Occult & Spooky Series #3 of 4. There wasn’t a soul in London, much less the neighborhood of Smithfield market, who hadn’t heard of the Cock Lane ghost. In 1762, the narrow London street was crowded with throngs of onlookers and busy-bodies who wanted to know if the rumors were true. A young girl at 20 Cock Lane , Elizabeth Parsons, was said to be possessed by a restless spirit. The Cock Lane ghost’s biggest claim to fame was its alleged knocking and scratching at all hours of the night and day. Witnesses devised a code to communicate with the ghost who claimed to have been murdered by her lover two years earlier. This had Londoners up in arms. Everyone took a side. Methodists and Anglicans viciously argued over the possibility of contact with the dead. London newspapers wrote daily updates about the séances, investigations and hearings that sought to uncover the truth behind Scratching Fanny, as the ghost was named, and her suspicious death. Londoners used the mysterious happenings at Cock Lane as a vehicle to debate religious difference, pre-marital sex, fraud, murder, and the vulnerability of some of London’s greatest minds in the face of superstition.
Find Show Notes, Affiliate Links and a Transcript here!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

23,813 Listeners

3,232 Listeners

226 Listeners

3,472 Listeners

555 Listeners

187 Listeners

1,518 Listeners

795 Listeners

39 Listeners

384 Listeners

24,504 Listeners

15,617 Listeners

914 Listeners

119 Listeners

737 Listeners

143 Listeners

499 Listeners

13,603 Listeners

990 Listeners

3,311 Listeners

1,890 Listeners

2,059 Listeners

1,386 Listeners

836 Listeners