Difference between revisions of "Bettiscombe"

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Latest revision as of 12:18, 15 May 2020

Bettiscombe
Dorset
Bettiscombe - Church of St Stephen - geograph.org.uk - 1224315.jpg
Parish church of St Stephen
Location
Grid reference: ST395005
Location: 50°47’46"N, 2°51’18"W
Data
Population: 50  (2013 est.)
Post town: Bridport
Postcode: DT6
Local Government
Council: Dorset
Parliamentary
constituency:
West Dorset

Bettiscombe is a small village in western Dorset, in the Marshwood Vale four miles west of Beaminster. The local council's 2013 mid-year estimate of the population of the civil parish was just 50.

Parish church

The parish church, dedicated to St Stephen, has two windows in the chancel and possibly one in the west tower dating from about 1400, although the rest of the structure was rebuilt in 1862.[1]

Bettiscombe viewed from the north

Skull legend

Bettiscombe Manor, a manor house in the village, is known as "The House of the Screaming skull" due to a legend dating from the 19th century. Other ghost stories are also associated with the manor. The legend maintains that the skull is that of a Jamaican slave belonging to John Frederick Pinney.

Azariah Pinney's descendants disposed of their estates on the island of Nevis and returned to the family home of Bettiscombe Manor in 1830, accompanied by one of the family's black slaves.[2] While in his master's service, the servant was taken seriously ill with suspected tuberculosis. As he lay dying, the servant swore that he would never rest unless his body was returned to his homeland of Nevis, but when he died, John Frederick Pinney refused to pay for such an expensive burial and instead had the body interred in the grounds of St Stephen's Church cemetery. After the burial, ill fortune plagued the village for many months and screams and crying were heard coming from the cemetery. Other disturbances were reported from the manor house, such as windows rattling and doors slamming of their own accord. The villagers went to the manor to seek advice. The body of the servant was exhumed and the body taken to the manor house. In the process of time the skeleton has long since vanished, except for the skull where it has remained in the house for centuries.

In 1963 a professor of human and comparative anatomy at the Royal College of Surgeons stated that the skull was not that of a black man but that of a European female aged between twenty-five and thirty.[3]

See also

Outside links

References

  1. 'Bettiscombe', in An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 1, West (1952), pp. 28–29 (British History Online)
  2. Hubbard, Vincent: 'Swords, Ships & Sugar' (Premiere Editions International 2002) ISBN 9781891519055 pages 170–172
  3. Roland Gant (1980). Dorset Villages. Robert Hale Ltd. p. 111. ISBN 0-7091-8135-3.