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Coming up in this episode… We'll look at some historic serial murderers and the strange and unusual way they killed their victims. When it comes to planning the burial of someone, it's always best to keep in mind that whomever is watching how you treat the deceased might be in charge of deciding what happens to you when you are deceased. Sadly, one undertaker, Millard F. Rogers, apparently forgot about the Golden Rule and committed gruesome acts against families. Residents in the town of Blakeney are reporting something horrifying prowling around the neighborhood in backyards, something they describe as a devil dog, a hellhound, a black shuck. And we've all been guilty of wishing we had more money coming in. Some people go out and get a second job. Others look at what they have to sell online or look at what skills they have to offer to the public that they could charge money for. Or you can go the route of Georgia Tan. Her entrepreneurial spirit brought her millions of dollars. And it was a simple idea. Steal other people's children and then sell them. Now, bolt your doors, lock your windows, turn off your lights and come with me into the weird darkness. Murder is always horrendous. But when it's committed in a unique, deviant way, there's something even more sinister to the crime. While some serial killers stick to guns or knives, others prefer a strange, distinctive act that satisfies their demented curiosity or perverse sexual needs. Charles Albright is known as the Texas Eyeball Killer and the Dallas Ripper, for good reason. In 1990 and 1991, Albright terrorized the Dallas community by going after what he felt were easy targets, female sex workers. His technique was to pick up women, shoot them and then dump their half-naked bodies, but not before he removed the eyes from his victims and kept them as souvenirs. Some could say it began at the age of 11 when Albright started a taxidermy class at the behest of his overprotective adoptive mother, Del Albright. Young Albright took to it immediately, going so far as to remove the eyes from birds, leaving two buttons sewn on where the eyes used to be. Throughout his life he was obsessed with women's eyes, including painting them and cutting them out of photographs. In December 1991, Albright was charged with the murder of Shirley Williams, only one of three suspected victims, due to her hairs turning up inside his vacuum. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Before anyone knew who he was, Albert DeSalvo was dubbed the Boston Strangler back in the 1960s when he went on a killing spree from 1962 to 1964. He prayed on the weak and lonely, sneaking into women's houses, many of them older women, savagely raping and then strangling them to death. His typical method was to strangle the victims with their own underwear or stockings. Once he was finished choking them, he would then tie the underwear into a bow around the woman's neck. He then ransacked her home and took some of the victims' belongings for a keepsake. DeSalvo ended up in jail, but not for murder. While he was a convicted rapist, he was never found guilty of killing, even after he confessed to strangling 13 women. In 1973, DeSalvo was stabbed to death in prison. In 2001, his remains were exhumed in an attempt to match his DNA with a DNA sample from the home of his last and final victim, Mary Sullivan. Sadly, results were inconclusive. However, in 2013, police took a DNA sample from a water bottle DeSalvo's nephew drank from and determined with 99.9% certainty that Albert DeSalvo raped and murdered Ms. Sullivan. Police then concluded that he was likely responsible for all of the murders attributed to the Boston Strangler. Jeffrey Dahmer, dubbed the Milwaukee Cannibal, kept the community on high alert from 1978 to 1991 with his serial killings. He preyed on teenage boys and men, subjecting them to the extremes of torture. Dahmer's pattern was to rape and kill his victims, followed by dismembering them and later consuming parts of their bodies. Dahmer was also reported to have sex with the corpses that he left behind. His motivation was to create a submissive zombie sex slave to attend to his needs. He'd capture his victims and then drill a hole in their heads or inject hydrochloric acid or boiling water as a crude form of brain surgery, thinking that he'd be able to take over their minds. Dahmer was arrested in July 1991, at which time authorities discovered severed heads and male organs inside his apartment. He was convicted and given life in prison, but he was killed by another inmate, Charles Sarver, in 1994. Between 1974 and 1978, Ted Bundy committed unspeakable acts of violence within several different states. He was charming and attractive, making it relatively easy to lure in women and girls, some as young as 15. Bundy dismembered some of his victims after he brutally killed them and removed the heads to keep as trophies, as he once told a detective he did with victim Georgian Hawkins. He was also known to have sex with the corpses and was thought to be sexually attracted only to unconscious women. Bundy reportedly killed 30 people during his crime spree in the 70s. He'd been convicted in 1980 and sentenced to death in Florida. He died by the electric chair in 1989. In Wisconsin, during the 1950s, Ed Gein killed women and kept part of them to create things in his home, but he began his intrigue with the dead in cemeteries. After Ed's oppressive mother died, he began roaming cemeteries and digging up corpses that looked like his mother. He used the decomposing skin to make rotten flesh upholstery for his furniture. He practiced necrophilia and did taxidermy on human bodies. When his crimes escalated to murder, he kept human organs in his home and made clothing and accessories from body parts. When he was arrested, police found a female victim strung up in his barn with her torso gutted like a hunted animal. Gein was only convicted of two murders, though authorities suspect there were many more and sent to a mental health facility because he was not mentally fit to stay on trial. In 1984, he died from cancer. Richard Trenton Chase was granted the title of the Vampire of Sacramento. In the 1970s, he went on a murder spree, killing six people in a single month and an entire family a couple of years later. What made his crimes so disturbing was that he not only cut up his victims but he drank their blood. Chase also supposedly ate part of a brain from one of his victims who was pregnant at the time. Growing up, Chase always displayed abnormal personality traits that eventually led him to frequent mental hospitals. His love of blood became evident in his early 20s when he killed animals and ate them raw or blended up. In 1979, Chase was convicted and sentenced to death row. However, he killed himself by overdosing the following year in his cell. Andrei Chikatilo was known as the butcher of Rostov for his love of dismembering his victims. The Ukrainian-born criminal terrorized the Soviet Union between 1978 and 1990, especially at the bus and train stations where Chikatilo met most of his 52 victims. Women and children, both boys and girls, were his targets of choice. When he first started out, he was mainly attracted to his victims' eyes, lacerating the sockets and sometimes removing the eyes completely. As time went on, Chikatilo's desired torture grew. He began to remove other organs, including tongues and reportedly ate the genitals of some of his victims. Chikatilo eventually confessed to his crimes, stating that he killed 56 victims, not just 52. He was convicted in 1992 and executed by gunshot two years later. Alexander Pachushkin alarmed Moscow, Russia when he began killing in 1992. He became known as the chessboard killer because he aimed to kill 64 people to fill all the squares on a chessboard. It was also said that Pachushkin was actively competing with serial killer Andrei Chikatilo, whom I just mentioned, and trying to beat his victim count of 53. Pachushkin usually went after older, homeless men, drinking vodka with them before striking them with a hammer. It was believed he preferred to strike from behind, not only to catch his victims off guard, but to keep himself from getting sprayed with blood. In the end, Pachushkin was caught before he was able to reach his goal of 64 victims. It is known that he killed 48. He was convicted in 2007 and received a life sentence, serving his first 15 years locked in solitary confinement. From 1986 to 1997, Indonesia dealt with a serial killer named Ahmad Siraji, or the Black Magic Killer. Throughout those 11 years, he killed 42 women and girls as young as 11 years old. He lured them in with his supposed magic healing powers, offering to help them with their troubles. He buried his victims waist-deep in the ground, supposedly as part of his healing practice, but then used a cable to strangle them to death. Afterward, it was said that he drank their saliva to enhance his magical powers. Siraji said that his dead father told him in a dream to commit the crimes in order to become a true healer. Siraji was arrested in 1997 and executed by firing squad in 2008. One of Siraji's three wives was also held accountable. She was originally given the death penalty, but later it was changed to a life sentence. From around 1971 until 1983, Robert Hansen terrified Alaska as the butcher baker and killed anywhere from 17 to 30 women, many of them sex workers. In addition to kidnapping and raping his victims, he took them to remote places like the Nick River to torture them and then let them go. He would then hunt the fleeing women like wild animals, striking at them with a knife or gunning them down with a rifle. Hansen was convicted for only four murders in 1983 and received a sentence of 461 years in prison without parole. In 2014, he died in a nearby hospital. A once successful pig farmer, Robert Pickton became known as more than a multi-million-dollar rancher in Vancouver, Canada. His rampage began in 2002 as he began going after young, vulnerable women, viciously killing and disfiguring them. Targeting local sex workers, he kidnapped and then murdered them at his farm. After he killed them, he fed their corpses to his pigs to hide any evidence. There were also claims that Pickton sold human remains mixed with his pork to customers without them knowing. While Pickton was charged for 20 murders, he was only convicted of six in the second degree in 2007. He was given life in prison without any possibility of parole for 25 years. In Dana Sue Gray, she was a California nurse and pro-skydiver with an obsession for shopping, which ultimately drove her to murder three and to attempt to murder another. In 1994, she started financing her need for luxury items by robbing and murdering elderly women. Gray strangled her elderly victims with a telephone cord, and she beat and stabbed them to death. After killing them, she ransacked their wallets, taking credit cards and cash to help support her shopping addiction. Her fourth and final victim survived the attack and was able to identify Gray, leading to her arrest and conviction. In 1998, Gray received a life sentence without possibility of parole. You know, we all have been guilty of wishing we had more money coming in. Some people go out and get a second job, others look at what they have that they could sell online, or look at what skills they have to offer to the public that they could charge money for. Or you can go the route of Georgia Tan. Her entrepreneurial spirit brought her millions of dollars, and it was a simple idea. Steal other people's children and then sell them. That story is up next on Weird Darkness. As a madman on a mission of vengeance, is he friend or foe? You'll find the answer to this fantastic mystery in Black Dragons. Join us Friday, January 26th for our next Weirdo Watch Party, as we watch Black Dragons, presented by Horror Hotel's resident vampire Lamia Queen of the Dark, bringing us trivia about the film, the actors and all things horror-related in between segments of the show. And then stick around after Black Dragons because Doc Dredd will be with us with one of his popular and fun movie reviews, giving his opinion of 2023's award-winning horror flick Beneath Us All. The Weirdo Watch Party is always free to watch online with everybody, so grab your popcorn, candy and soda, and jump into the fun, and even get involved in the live chat as we watch the movie. It's Black Dragons, starring Bella Legosi from 1942, presented by Horror Hotel's Lamia Queen of the Dark, then Doc Dredd's movie review talking about Beneath Us All. Friday, January 26th, starting at 10pm Eastern, 9pm Central, 8pm Mountain, 7pm Pacific. See a few clips from the film and invite your friends to watch along with you on the Weirdo Watch Party page at WeirdDarkness.com. We'll see you Friday, January 26th for the Weirdo Watch Party. Between 1924 and 1950, a woman named Georgia Tan abducted and separated more than 5,000 children from their parents, many of whom were poor and unwed mothers. Tan looked like a grandmother and few families had any idea that she was actually a Tennessee baby farmer. During her time working at the Tennessee Children's Home Society, she and her network of social worker spotters would search for children to pull into their operation. With the help of political friends, Tan was able to legally separate parents from their children by citing neglect. The most attractive children were sold to wealthy families, including celebrities. Hundreds of unwanted and unadoptable children died under Tan's care, often due to neglect and starvation. It is believed that some of the children's bodies might still be buried on the grounds of the Children's Home where Tan operated. Tan spent more than 25 years kidnapping children and profiting off of the poor. Although she is not the first woman in history to separate children from their families, her story is one of the most bizarre and disturbing out there. Some of the children in Tan's care suffered greatly both before and after they were placed with their adoptive parents. According to Barbara Besant's Raymond in her book The Baby Thief, the untold story of Georgia Tan, the baby seller who corrupted adoption, Tan allegedly molested some of the girls she abducted and sold teenagers to single men who were possible pedophiles. She ordered older kids to sit on men's laps and say, Daddy. Some children were bought by adults to serve as farm hands or domestic servants and others were neglected by their new families, enduring beatings, starvations and sometimes rape. One of the children Tan sold off, Jim Lambert, recalled Tan removing him and his three siblings from their mother in 1932. He was later abused by his adoptive mother and when he finally found information about his biological mother, he found out she had already died. In the late 1940s, the Tennessee governor tasked attorney Robert L. Taylor with investigating Georgia Tan and judge Camille Kelly, who helped Tan push through suspicious adoptions. What Taylor found was hard to believe. When he visited Tan's orphanage, Taylor noted her babies died like flies. Taylor speculated that Tan made more than a million dollars selling children. It was common for the kids to be transported out of state at night to meet their adoptive parents, with many of the children going to California and New York. Under Georgia Tan's directive, children were abducted from the streets, daycare centers and even churches. She and her operatives took kids born to mothers serving time in prison or placed in mental hospitals. Others were stolen from the hospital shortly after they were born. Doctors, nurses and social workers were in on Tan's operation together, whisking the infants off before anyone noticed. Some doctors would even take bribes to tell new parents that their babies had died at birth. A number of the abducted children did die under Tan's watch and others were adopted out, but their real identities were kept secret and records were falsified. Few would ever reunite with their birth parents. While Georgia Tan was executive director of the Tennessee Children's Home Society, numerous children died under her care. At the time, the infant mortality rate in Memphis was considerably larger than anywhere else in the United States. It is believed that as many as 500 children died due to disease, inadequate care and possibly abuse. Despite this alarming statistic, Tan was praised for the work she performed. The media at the time praised her as the foremost leading light in adoption laws. Eleanor Roosevelt consulted with Tan over child welfare and President Truman asked her to attend his inauguration. Actress Joan Crawford adopted five children during her life. In 1947, she found her twin daughters Kathy and Cynthia through the Tennessee Children's Home Society. Contradictory to Georgia Tan's supposed mission of placing children in better homes, Crawford allegedly abused her kids. Cindy and Kathy, however, vehemently denied that their mother hurt them. Actors June Allison and Dick Powell also adopted a child from the society. So did actress Lana Turner and Mary Pickford, writer Pearl S. Buck and New York Governor Herbert Lehmann. Professional wrestler Rick Flair, who was born in Memphis in 1949, was reportedly one of the many children Tan had snatched from unsuspecting birth parents. Georgia Tan started working for the Tennessee Children's Home Society in 1924. It wasn't long before she realized that babies could mean big business. She developed a marketing strategy and paid for ads and newspapers to entice prospective parents. In one advertisement that she placed around the holidays, cherubic blonde babies looked up beamingly as the words want a real live Christmas present lured in potential buyers. In another ad from 1935, an adorable little boy holds a ball. The caption reads, yours for the asking. George wants to play catch, but he needs a daddy to complete the team. A woman named Alma Simple gave birth to a daughter named Irma in Memphis, Tennessee on August 27, 1945. Her boyfriend Julius John Talos worked in the Air Force and had recently shipped out to Panama. Six weeks after Simple settled into a one-bedroom apartment, she was visited by Georgia Tan, who claimed she was checking in on a neighbor who was purportedly abusing a child. Tan returned the next day and noticed Irma had a cold. She offered to take the baby to the hospital because Simple couldn't afford a doctor. Simple agreed and tried to visit her baby the next day. But when she tried to see her child, she was told Irma belonged to the Children's Home Society. Then a few days later, Tan told her that Irma died of pneumonia. Simple attempted to arrange a funeral, but Tan claimed she had already taken care of it. Simple had no idea that Irma was in fact still alive and adopted out to a couple in Cincinnati. They renamed her Sandra. In December 1989, Simple was watching Unsolved Mysteries when she saw a segment about Tan. The show recommended that viewers who had run-ins with Tan reach out to the group Tennessee's Right to Know who would help families reunite with their children who were kidnapped and adopted out. Simple and Irma slash Sandra were reunited seven months later, 44 years after the baby was stolen from her true mother. Tan placed an estimated 5,000 children into new families over the course of her career. She outright stole some of them, kidnapped others and persuaded some parents to relinquish their kids. During adoption proceedings, Tan worked with a judge, Camille Kelly, whom she paid off, so parents had a difficult time getting their children back. Even though mothers and fathers went to the police, they were often poorly educated and didn't have a lot of money. They struggled to go up against Tan, who was wealthy and had a lot of powerful and intimidating connections in the legal and political systems. Denny Glad, who was president of Right to Know in Tennessee during the 90s, didn't think the majority of adoptive parents had any idea the children they were taking in were obtained illegally. She told the Los Angeles Times, for whatever reason most of them had not been able to qualify to adopt in the state in which they lived. Primarily, age was the reason most were in their 40s and 50s. These parents, who were desperate to expand their families, learned about the availability of Tennessee children through the grapevine. The cost to adopt one of Tan's children in California was approximately $750. Denny Glad, the president of Right to Know in Tennessee in the 90s, suspected that Georgia Tan could have been motivated by more than just financial gain. Most of the victims, her operation kidnapped, were children of poor parents or single mothers. They had fewer advantages in their lives than kids who lived with more affluent families. Glad explained to the Los Angeles Times in 1990, Ms. Tan docked at Affluency meant good and I believe that's just how she justified what she was doing. She was taking children who never would have had a chance in placing them in homes where they were going to get good educations and all the material things. She just thought that she knew better than God. In 1950, the governor of Tennessee held a press conference informing the public of Tan's crimes. Yet most of the children she placed in adoptive homes were never reunited with their biological families. No effort was made to reconnect parents with their children. In 1995, following years of red tape, the victims were finally allowed to get access to their birth certificates and adoption records. Even then, only a small percentage reconnected with their birth mothers. Tan died from uterine cancer at the age of 59 in September of 1950. Just days earlier, the state of Tennessee announced the case against her. The charges did not include kidnapping. Rather, they focused on her stealing money from a state-funded organization. Tan didn't leave any of her fortune to the Tennessee Children's Home Society or charitable organizations. The judge that she worked with, Camille Kelly, resigned after the investigation and passed away in 1954. The Children's Home Society shut down permanently. In 1913, Georgia Tan graduated from Martha Washington College in Virginia with a degree in music. She was a teacher for a brief time before committing to a career in social work. In 1920, she took advantage of her father's role as judge of the Mississippi Second Chancellery District Court and the absence of laws regarding adoption. She kidnapped children from poor women while employed by the Kate McWillie Powers receiving home for children in Jackson, Mississippi. However, her acts were discovered and she was fired for her actions. Tan then moved to Texas before settling in Memphis, Tennessee where she earned the title of Executive Director at the City's Tennessee Children's Home Society. Even though Tan made adoption more socially acceptable, she also used some legal processes that later became controversial. Under her directive, all of the Children's Home Society's adoptions were closed, meaning all information about an adoptee's birth parents was kept private. The records were shrouded in secrecy and children were not permitted to find out who their biological parents were. Many states still follow these rules. Interestingly, in 1999, Tennessee became the first state to change its rules regarding closed adoptions. Despite her criminal methods, Georgia Tan also brought more attention to the potential of adoption for many Americans, making it more popular. Before 1920, little was done for orphans. They were often put in institutions and orphanages and no one cared if they lived or died. According to Barbara Bassant's Raymond, author of The Baby Thief, The Untold Story of Georgia Tan, the baby seller who corrupted adoption, Tan did give some children better homes than the ones they were born into. However, it is unclear to this day how many found better futures and prospects due to her meddling. Coming up on Weird Darkness, residents in the town of Blakeney are reporting something horrifying prowling around the neighborhoods and backyards, something they describe as a devil dog, a hellhound, a black shuck. But first, when it comes to planning the burial of someone, it's always best to keep in mind that whoever is watching how you treat the deceased might be in charge of deciding what happens to you when you become deceased. Sadly, one undertaker, Millard F. Rogers, apparently forgot about the Golden Rule and committed gruesome acts against families. That story is up next on Weird Darkness. The Chilling True Terror of the Black-Eyed Kids, a monster compilation by G. Michael Vasey. The Black-Eyed Kids are an urban legend of vast proportions. The stories of small children turning up on people's doorsteps all across the world spreading fear and terror have only increased over time. This compilation of G. Michael Vasey's books on this scary phenomena include new material and new true stories as well as the complete texts of the Black-Eyed Demons are coming and the Black-Eyed Kids. Supernatural expert G. Michael Vasey carefully investigates this truly terrifying phenomenon using real life encounters with these scary supernatural beings. The result is an unsettling and sometimes terrifying book that will have you fearfully anticipating that knock at your door, late at night. Who and what are these mysterious visitors to the doorstep? Are they demons? Aliens? What do they want? Why do they need to enter your home and what happens if they do? Small kids that ask to use your phone or for a ride and yet those who encounter them are scared to death even before they notice their black eyes. The Chilling True Terror of the Black-Eyed Kids, a monster compilation by G. Michael Vasey, narrated by Weird Darkness host Darren Marlar. Hear a free sample on the audiobooks page at WeirdDarkness.com. It's November 12, 1891, and you sit down in your favorite chair after a day's work and open up the Alton, Illinois Evening Telegraph. Right there on the front page is a story that makes you immediately lose your appetite for dinner. Headline. Horrible practice. Revolving charges against an undertaker. Sensation in a Chicago suburb. The bodies of pauper infants disposed of by being placed in coffins containing corpses which the undertaker has been called upon to attend to. Six pauper children said to have been buried in one grave. Chicago, November 11, Englewood, recently a suburb of Chicago but now embraced in the city, is greatly wrought up over the revolting charges that are being made against undertaker Millard F. Rogers. Citizens whose deceased relatives were buried by the undertaker are apprehensive that the graves of their loved ones have been desecrated, and a number of people have announced their intention of exhuming their friends' remains and satisfying themselves that they are not the victims of the repulsive practice of burying pauper infants in the coffins of deceased adults. Three weeks ago the remains of an Englewood man were exhumed shortly after being buried by undertaker Rogers and the body of a pauper infant was found between the feet of the corpse. Rogers claimed at the time that he was a victim of conspiracy inspired by his assistant C. F. Norman. Tuesday, however, another case came to light. Disturbed by rumors, the friends of the late James P. Tansy who died 18 months ago had him exhumed and the remains of an infant were found under the satin trimmings at the foot of the coffin. The remains of Mr. Tansy were interred to Mount Alavette long before Norman went to work for Rogers and this fact has convinced most of the friends who believed the undertaker's tale that there is more in the charges than they supposed. Among the staunchest friends were the Masons and Odd Fellows, of which organizations Rogers is a member. He proclaimed that they would stand by him, but Tuesday evening it was decided in the Englewood lodges of both orders to make a full investigation and a member of the Masonic fraternity admitted that if the charges were substantiated Rogers would be expelled. The citizens have thoroughly organized for an investigation of the charges and the attorney for the prosecution stated Tuesday evening that he had satisfied himself that Rogers had buried in one grave at Oakwood Cemetery the bodies of six pauper children. As none of the children had relatives able to stand the expense of exhuming the remains and there is nothing in the statutes pronouncing such action criminal, the matter will not be pushed further in this direction, but other cases will be pushed. Some time ago the father of Mr. Sylvester and Englewood Expressman died and the remains after being prepared by Rogers were shipped to Wisconsin for burial. Soon after some alarming rumors were spread but were not credited and until the recent charges were made Mr. Sylvester did not trouble himself about them. Lately he commenced an investigation and the other day induced the man who assisted Rogers at the time of the burial to make a confession. This man whose name is Foskett pretended to know but little but admitted that on the day the remains were prepared for burial a woman connected with Rogers establishment left the undertaker shop with the body of a child in a shawl which she carried. She went to the Sylvester residence and when she left it is alleged she failed to bring the infant's body with her. Mr. Sylvester will at once have his father's remains exhumed by the Wisconsin relatives. Foskett further admitted that while he was with Rogers the body of an infant was placed in the coffin of a woman who lived near the corner of 61st Street and Stewart Avenue. He declares he cannot remember the name. Still another suspicious case now being investigated is that of the infant child of Officer W. H. Harris of the Englewood police station. It was remarked that the casket furnished by Rogers was very large for an infant's remains. The coffin will probably be exhumed. The practice of burying infants and adults coffins could be made very remutorative to one who did Rogers' large business, said an Englewood physician on Wednesday. The interment fee of $6 is charged in each case, and if the undertaker has but one grave dug instead of two he can make a pretty penny in the course of a year, especially when he does business for a couple of foundling's homes and orphan asylums. While sad it was a common practice to bury stillborn children into the gap at the foot of an adult grave. Usually it was not the wishes of the family only coming down to the bottom line the cost of a burial. According to the January 31st, 1892 edition of the Cincinnati Enquirer headline, In Cigar Boxes, Many Little Bodies Find Nameless Graves. We have many people bring us little babes in boxes, it said, ranging in size from a cigar box to a coffin a foot or so long, said a sexton. They hardly ever leave instructions, so we just put the boxes at the bottom of some grave we dig for a grown person. Not surprisingly, the practice of filling in a gap at the foot of an adult grave with a child's coffin was a source of much pain to bereaved, pauper parents who could not afford to have their babies buried in a plot with other children, as would have been their desire for a departed child. She heard the light dragging and tinkling of a chain but could see nothing. Whatever made the noise, however, followed her as she walked. It comes as no surprise to weird Norfolk that Black Shuck has been regularly seen in Blakeney, whose name means Black Island. That the much feared devil dog has been spotted quite so often, however, is quite another matter. And then there is the not inconsiderable consideration that in some tales, Shuck has not one but two heads. A plethora of Blakeney sightings are included on the superb Hidden East Anglia website, which recounts a host of unsettling encounters in or close to the beautiful North Norfolk village. Black Shuck's haunt Norfolk folklore, a dark figure as big as a calf and as noiseless as death stalking through the county since the 16th century. Seen across the county and in Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Essex, Black Shuck takes many forms, and has many purposes, a true manifestation of everyone's fear, a creature you definitely do not want to see on a dark and stormy night. Whether he has eyes like saucers or hot breath like a lick of fire, whether he foretells your impending death or is some kind of guardian spirit, whether he roams the coast or woodland, heath or roadside, one thing is for certain he is not of this realm. Back to Blakeney, where there is the recurring tale of Old Shuck, who haunts Long Lane, which runs south over Ruberry Hill, which is mentioned in W.A. Dutt's The Norfolk and Suffolk Coast, published in 1909. The otherworldly creature has also been spotted in Little Lane in Blakeney as he runs between Wells and Sharingham. Iris Portal, writing to the Eastern Daily Press in 1953, suggested that Shuck regularly ran past her garden wall in Long Lane. A few days after Mrs. Portal's letter, another appeared from Jeffrey Booty of West Ronton. It read, I read with interest your article on Old Shuck and would like the following on record. He travels between Blakeney, Sharingham and Overstrand and is supposed to be searching for his master who was shipwrecked on the coast. Shuck is a large black retriever with a chain attached to his neck. This apparently is a good description because one night, very late to cycling from Sharingham, when, to my surprise, Shuck was running beside me with his chain clinking the ground. He followed me to my gate at West Ronton and passed on down the lane to the beach. This is a true incident and I would like to know the description of Shuck given by other people who have seen him. Shuck has been seen on the B-1388 at Blakeney, where in a letter to Hidden East Anglia's Mike Burgess from J. Wallace in 1983, he was described as having two heads. When he catches a rat, it escapes through his other mouth. And in another letter to Ivan Bunn, editor of the Borderline Science Investigation Group's Lantern, a Mrs. A.P. Markucci recalled hearing something strange on the A-149 between Clay and Blakeney at around midnight in the summer of 1968. She heard the light dragging and tinkling of a chain but could see nothing. Whatever made the noise, however, followed her as she walked. At the crossroads where there was a street light, she paused to see if whatever was behind her would pass by but saw nothing. Then suddenly she was aware that her invisible walking partner had passed and made its way down Black Lane. Knowing the legend of Black Shuck and realizing he'd be making his way to the Marsh Banks, she fled home down the high street and away from the beast that was so frequently believed to foretell disaster. These tales have been told in Blakeney for well over a century. In a feature about the village in the EDP in September 1896, Old Shuck was mentioned. It is perhaps not generally known that Old Shuck has one of his walks in Blakeney little lane where also an even more wonderful spectral appearance has been seen. According to local legend, nothing less than a ghostly wagon with two ghostly horses wandering through the air, the piece reads. There are men now in Blakeney who could not be induced to walk down that haunted lane after dark. Some believe the tales of Black Shuck were spread joyfully by smugglers who realized that the fear of a devil dog who could condemn you to death with a stare would keep people off coastal lanes at night while they got up to no good. On the website which accompanies Richard Platt's book Smuggling in the British Isles, a history, there is the following passage. If convoys of wagons and horses rolling along these roads attracted too much attention, old superstitions provided plenty of ways of discouraging for their interest. Old Shuck, the ghost dog, is a persistent Norfolk legend that, like the cannibals of clovely, the smugglers exploited. Shuck is an enormous black dog with one glowing eye and fiery breath. Anyone who sees Old Shuck is sure to die within a 12-month. Norfolk smugglers took advantage of the gullibility of the villagers and tied a lantern around the neck of a black ram, sending it running off to frighten noisy locals when a run was due. Weird Norfolk suggests that if anyone is gullible in this matter, it would be the smugglers to believe that county folk would be fooled by a sheep in a necklace. Thanks for listening. If you liked the show, please share it with someone you know who loves the paranormal or strange stories, true crime, monsters or unsolved mysteries like you do. You can email me anytime with your questions or comments at darren at WeirdDarkness.com. Darren is D-A-R-R-E-N. And you can find me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and more along with the show's Facebook group on the Contact Social page at WeirdDarkness.com. If you have a true tale to tell, click on Tell Your Story at WeirdDarkness.com. All stories in Weird Darkness are purported to be true unless stated otherwise, and you can find source links or links to the authors in the show notes. Strange Predelections in Murder Methods is by Carissa Chassanik for Rankers' Unspeakable Times. Six Children, One Grave is by Chris Woodyard for the Victorian Book of the Dead website. How to Get Rich by Stealing and Selling Children is by Noelle Tallman for Weird History. And The Black Shock of Blakeney is by Stacia Briggs and C.O.F. Reconnor for Eastern Daily Press. Weird Darkness Theme by Alibi Music. Weird Darkness is a production of Marlar House Productions. And now that we're coming out of the dark, I'll leave you with A Little Light. Habakkuk 3, Verses 17 and 18. Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God, my Saviour. And a final thought. A Strong Soul Shines After Every Storm. I'm Darren Marlar. Thanks for joining me in The Weird Darkness.