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Ghost Planes


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#1    dancin'hamster

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 10:04 AM

Just read a thread about Ghost Bombers so I thought I'd stick this up~

A faint throb of a Lancaster returning in the morning mist, a light flickers in a disused control tower and a roar of laughter comes from the derelict pilot's quarters. The ghosts of Britain's abandoned airfields have intrigued investigators for years. These ghostly tales are from people who have experienced a close brush with the supernatural in some of Britain's most eeriest places.

There are at least five books that detail the appearances and habits of ghosts at Lincolnshire's airfields, whether derelict or not. What attracts people to read these books is the reality behind the stories, often very sad or heart-warming but most of all chilling.

There are at least eight books that detail the appearances and habits of ghosts at Lincolnshire's airfields, whether derelict or not. What attracts people to read these books is the reality behind the stories, often very sad or heart-warming but most of all chilling.

One haunted airfield is that at Lindholme in North Lincolnshire, now a part of South Yorkshire due to recent boundary changes. The exploits of Lindholme Willy can be read here.

Waltham's Ghostly Airman

The Royal Air Force quickly abandoned many airfields after war, RAF Waltham, near Grimsby is one such airfield.

RAF Waltham was opened as a heavy-bomber station with squadrons of Wellington Bombers stationed there. While stationed at Waltham, No. 100 squadron attacked targets across Germany and the occupied countries of Europe. In 1945 the station closed and the No.35 maintenance unit used the airfield for storage but this wasn't for long and they too left.

According Bruce Halpenny in "Ghost Stations" late in 1969, Susan Burchell lived on the perimeter of the airfield, and her house was built on the foundations of old wartime huts. One night, Susan awoke to see in the gloom, somebody standing at the foot of her bed. She switched on her bedside lamp and clearly saw the figure of a young ginger haired airman in uniform, with one sleeve pinned to his shoulder.

The phantom airman continued to stare at Burchell before moving slowly towards her wardrobe and disappearing into it.

Susan began to scream and awoke her parents. They began to search the house and garden, including the wardrobe but found nothing. Although the airman never appeared again, the family soon moved out.

Local folklore claims that the hut which Burchell's house was built over was destroyed when an ex-crew member who had done many missions, and been declared unfit for flying, due to injuries caused in an attack, killed himself with an hand-grenade.

Other airmen have been seen walking around the airstrip, once a popular area for courting couples. In 1982, a phantom airman was seen walking up and down before vanishing into the darkness. A memorial for the No.100 squadron situated on a nearby road also has a phantom airman who appears regularly.

RAF Metheringham's Phantom Lady

Although little remains of RAF Metheringham, its ghost continues to remind people that it played an important role in World War 2.

A young lady, in her late teens is often spotted standing at the side of the road between 9:30 and 10:00pm. She stands on what was once part of the airfield and wears a pale green coat with a grey scarf. Pinned to her lapel is a RAF wings badge.

The ghost has stopped cyclists, motorists and pedestrians, asking for help, telling whoever she stops that her fiancé has skidded riding his motorcycle and is lying injured nearby. The ghost appears quite real rather than the ethereal. As with most road ghosts, there is a sinister side to the sighting. On her sudden disappearance, the witness is stricken with inexplicable fear, panic and sense of unreality. The ghost leaves behind a powerful odour of putrefaction. One witness who met the lady said, "I could not see her eyes, or horribly, no eyes in the sockets at all, the frontal skull orbits were empty!"

Halpenny claims that the young lady was killed near the end of World War 2 when her fiancé crashed his bike, throwing her off it, and breaking her neck and causing terrible head injuries. The two were due to be married and she had just ordered her wedding gown.

The Most Haunted Airfield?

RAF Elsham Wold opened in July 1941; similar to Waltham, as a heavy bomber station and from the outset it held Wellingtons, Halifaxes and finally Lancaster Bombers. Elsham Wold is a cold bleak site and the squadrons based there had many losses and accidents caused by ice and freezing fog.

In January 1945, Corporal Hilary, took a van across the far side of the airfield, due to the thick fog, Hilary had to drive with the van lights full on. It was midday and Hilary became lost out on the airfield. She stepped out of the van to try and locate her position, when she saw coming out of the fog into the van headlights three aircrew in full flying kit. She asked them for directions but they just walked past and disappeared into the fog. That day no flying took place because of the fog and aircrew would not have walked across the field. Did Hilary see a phantom crew?

The airfield closed in 1947 and a new road cuts through the airfield. For many years the Gregory family lived in the wartime control tower at Elsham Wold. They often heard mysterious morse code messages and saw phantom airmen walking around their home.

Their first experiences came as soon as they moved into the tower. A tapping noise could be heard on one of the walls, the noise continued for months and the Gregorys realised that there was a pattern to the tapping. When ex-servicemen visited the tower, they told the Gregory's that it was in fact morse code.

As with most haunted airfields, a phantom airman kept the family spooked. The airman would appear at the bottom of Mr and Mrs Gregory's bed, smile and then disappear. One night he was seen by Mr Gregory sitting in one of their chairs smiling once again, when Gregory moved, the airman stood up and disappeared.

Another incident involved the Gregory's son, Paul. One night, Mrs Gregory heard her son screaming in the middle of the night.

"When I went in his room, he was sitting up in bed screaming his head off," she said. "He said 'Can't you hear that plane? It's talking off and its' not coming back.''"

Paul described in great detail a four-engined aircraft and its seven-man crew he had seen taking off from the old main runaway, which is less than 100 yards from his bedroom window in the control tower.

Today, the tower no longer exists, demolished to make way for a new road from the M180 and the Humber Bridge. The road also follows the line of one of Elsham Wold's runways - so one foggy night you might meet one of its phantom aircrews!

Article from Mystery Mag

Hammy x x x



#2    Cufflink

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 11:19 AM

I love phantom aicraft/aircrew stories. One of the first ghost stories I ever heard was of that type.

The story of the phantom woman is horrifying. scared.gif
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#3    dancin'hamster

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 11:31 AM

It is a bit isn't it?

There's an old dis-used Air Field here in Dorset and some funny things have been seen...........maybes I'll post it up.......

#4    Cufflink

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 02:28 PM

Please do, Hams.

I'm gonna look for the creepy case of the BBC recordings made at a haunted airfield...got spooked by that one when I first heard it.
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#5    Pasiphae

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 03:40 PM

Thanks Hammy, there some great little stories! I hope you'll stick the others up soon. I'm wracking my brains trying to remember some 'credible' stories that might entertain.
I'm not scared of the dark...it's the bits that go bump that worry me!

#6    dancin'hamster

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Posted 26 October 2003 - 04:47 PM

QUOTE (Pasiphae @ Oct 26 2003, 03:40 PM)
I'm wracking my brains trying to remember some 'credible' stories that might entertain.

Credible?
Ooooooohhh don't let that worry you sweetheart ~ certainly doesn't stop me from posting like a fevered-posting-thing!

Hammy x x x

#7    Cufflink

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Posted 03 November 2003 - 02:09 AM

Another creepy story involving air crew, which I found by chance, set on an RAF base in Egypt, during WW2.

The base in question was an RAF bomber base, from where sorties were flown over the Mediterranean to prevent sea-borne supplies reaching General Rommel in Africa. Commander George Potter and Flying Officer Reg Lamb were drinking in the officer's mess one evening. There were others in the mess at the time, including a wing commander known only as `Roy.'

There was a burst of laughter from Roy and the group of officers he was with, which made Potter look towards him. At this moment, Potter had a terrifying vision of death.

He saw what appeared to be the head and shoulders of the Wing Commander slowly moving in a background of blue-blackness. Shockingly, his eyes were missing. His lips were drawn back from his teeth, and his flesh was blotched in greenish-purple, and starting to peel off. Potter broke out into a sweat at the vision, and began to tremble. He stayed this way, staring at this terrible vision for an unknown length of time, until he suddenly became aware that Reg Lamb was pulling at his sleeve.

"What the hell's the matter? You've gone as white as a sheet.", said Reg, "As if you've seen a ghost."

Potter described the vision to Lamb who looked over at Roy, but Lamb could see nothing. They both knew that Roy would be flying the next night, but decided they could do nothing to stop it.

The next night, Potter heard that Roy and his aircraft had been shot down and had ditched in the Mediterranean. There was a report that Roy and the crew had managed to climb into a life raft, and for a while, Potter believed his vision had proved false.

Sadly, it turned out not to be. Roy had perished. Potter realised that he had been seeing the image of the Wing Commander in the blue blackness of the Mediterranean at night, floating while dead. His head and shoulders must have been held up by his life jacket.

See? Creepy.


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#8    Lionel

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Posted 03 November 2003 - 06:43 AM

Here is another similar story Click Here
He who walks in another's tracks leaves no footprints. Joan Brannon




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