Ok, before anyone jumps on the title, look at the punctuation at the end of it, and then read the article.
I am getting very grumpy in lockdown and home schooling I must admit, the lack of ability to suffer fools is getting much harder and I am developing an intimate relationship with the block and mute buttons on social media.
That said, there is still history and weird stuff to write about so here is another little blog for you to ponder. For those of you who listened to my recent podcast with the totally lovely (and slightly incomprehensible for those not acquainted with the black country accents, it’s a standing joke, no need to accost me with pitchforks and flame, I love my midlander brethren) Russ and John at Wednesbury Paranormal where we discussed the beautiful and incredibly fascinating Highgate Cemetery, we mentioned the name of Elizabeth Siddall (Siddal) so I thought I would elaborate on her story.
If you have not yet listened to my most recent broadcast, fret ye not, you still can and what is more, it will not cost you a single penny (sorry for that!)
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One of the areas we discussed was where did the assumption that it was a vampire residing at the cemetery and not just your common run of the mill ghost. John mentioned that in Bram Stokers Dracula, he mentions the first “Bride of Dracula” having been interred there, and the general assumption was that this was Elizabeth Siddall.
Who was she and why did people think she was related to the un-dead?
Born to what could be viewed as working class London based beginnings in July 1829, Elizabeth discovered a love of poetry at a relatively young age and during her time with her future husband, Dante Rossetti, she began to write. It seems that she suffered from illness during her adult life (some historian believe it to be tuberculosis, others an intestinal complaint) and was regularly prescribed laudanum for the pain. According to reports, on her wedding day to Dante, she had to be carried into the church as she was too weak to walk. After a still birth in 1861, she fell into a deep depression and her usage of the drug laudanum (basically opium) became more addiction based than pure pain relief.
On the 11th February 1862, her husband found her unresponsive and after much effort on the part of Doctors, she was pronounced dead. There has always been a question as to whether she had deliberately overdosed, but if there had been some kind of suicide note, Dante would have destroyed it to prevent both the “shame” of someone committing “self murder” and also the ability to have her interred in consecrated ground.
But why did people think she had some form of supernatural powers? A few years after she was buried at Highgate Cemetery, Rossetti, still overcome with grief, wanted her body exhumed so that he could retrieve the poems he had placed in her coffin. When this was done, the spectators were shocked to see that she had hardly decomposed at all and what was even more strange, her hair and fingernails had grown. Had she actually been alive? Or more importantly, was she one of the un-dead?
Well, science has marched on since the 1860s and with places like The Body Farm in Tennessee conducting various experiments on the dead and decomposition, we are more aware of the factors which aid in the decay of a human carcass.
Firstly, I would wager that if every coffin was taken back out of the ground after five or six years, you would find quite a lot of bodies still looked relatively fresh, but why? There are quite a few factors but two of the main ones are the embalming fluid used and the lack of air and therefore bugs to help with the breaking down of the bodily tissue. A website I found stated that it takes at least four times as long for a body to decompose underground as it does in the air and at least eight to twelve years for it to be reduced to skeletal remains.
The hair and nails bit? That’s quite simple too, they do not keep growing after death, but with the skin at the base of them retracting and shrinking due to lack of oxygen permeating its cells and dehydration, it gives the appearance of growth.
So, do you think the late Elizabeth Siddall (Siddal) was the bride of Dracula or just someone who was buried and then disturbed?