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The Sauchie Poltergeist
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235938144
- EAN9798235938144
- Date de parution07/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
In late November 1960, an ordinary house in Sauchie, Clackmannanshire, became the centre of one of Scotland's most unsettling modern poltergeist cases. At the heart of the outbreak was eleven-year-old Virginia Campbell, newly arrived from Ireland and trying to adjust to life in a Scottish village. What began as strange knocking sounds soon escalated into reports of moving furniture, vibrating bedheads, disturbed bedclothes, unexplained noises, and incidents that seemed to follow Virginia from the bedroom into the classroom.
Unlike many ghost stories built on rumour, the Sauchie case drew in named witnesses whose testimony gave the events unusual weight. The Reverend T. W. Lund, local doctors, Virginia's teacher Margaret Stewart, neighbours, family members, journalists, and later the psychical researcher A. R. G. Owen all became part of a short but troubling investigation. Their accounts did not produce an easy answer.
They left behind something more difficult: a compact, carefully witnessed Scottish mystery that still resists simple dismissal. The Sauchie Poltergeist examines the case with restraint, atmosphere, and historical care. It explores the village setting, Virginia's circumstances, the reported phenomena, the witnesses, the sceptical explanations, the theories of psychical research, and the uneasy afterlife of Park Crescent in Scottish paranormal history.
This is not a sensational ghost story. It is a serious nonfiction account of a brief outbreak that unsettled a family, challenged local professionals, and became one of the most important poltergeist cases ever recorded in Scotland. A child in a bed. A minister listening in the dark. A schoolroom desk that would not stay still. A village left with questions no one could fully answer.
Unlike many ghost stories built on rumour, the Sauchie case drew in named witnesses whose testimony gave the events unusual weight. The Reverend T. W. Lund, local doctors, Virginia's teacher Margaret Stewart, neighbours, family members, journalists, and later the psychical researcher A. R. G. Owen all became part of a short but troubling investigation. Their accounts did not produce an easy answer.
They left behind something more difficult: a compact, carefully witnessed Scottish mystery that still resists simple dismissal. The Sauchie Poltergeist examines the case with restraint, atmosphere, and historical care. It explores the village setting, Virginia's circumstances, the reported phenomena, the witnesses, the sceptical explanations, the theories of psychical research, and the uneasy afterlife of Park Crescent in Scottish paranormal history.
This is not a sensational ghost story. It is a serious nonfiction account of a brief outbreak that unsettled a family, challenged local professionals, and became one of the most important poltergeist cases ever recorded in Scotland. A child in a bed. A minister listening in the dark. A schoolroom desk that would not stay still. A village left with questions no one could fully answer.



