
The following extract is taken from the best selling book "Beyond The Highgate Vampire" - Details can be found here.
BEYOND THE HIGHGATE VAMPIRE
~ An Extract ~
"...THE NEXT MEETING OF THE BRITISH PYSHIC AND OCCULT SOCIETY was mainly occupied by arranging an investigation into the Highgate Cemetery affair now that it could be reasonably assumed that at least some of the reports might be authentic.
It was decided that a continuous nightly vigil would take place at the cemetery, two Society members at a time being stationed in turn at the two places where the apparition had been seen to appear. Cameras and tape recorders would be set up, but as yet, no ‘psychic means’ - such as conducting a séance, for example - would be employed to bring about the entity’s materialization. This was because, it was concluded that in the initial stages of the investigation, the gathering of evidence and observation, were of greater importance than any attempt to make direct psychic contact - especially because of the entity’s apparently malignant disposition.
Instead, the cemetery’s history would be checked out; in particular, sightings of any other unusual phenomena in the area that might be in some way connected. Anyone who laid claim to witnessing the entity would be interviewed and statements kept of their accounts. To obtain details of other sightings, it was agreed that a short and ‘non-alarmist’ letter be sent to a local paper inviting people to tell of any genuine experiences so that any subscribers could be interviewed first hand.
When the investigation proper began in January 1970, I undertook the task of checking the cemetery’s history. Some interesting things came to light…First, it became apparent that stories of an apparition at Highgate Cemetery had by no means begun with the current sightings. Indeed, similar tales dated back to the Victorian era and, interestingly enough, many of them had ‘vampiristic’ connotations.
Perhaps the reason for this was that Stoker himself had possibly been influenced by the existence of ‘something’ in Highgate Cemetery. When he wrote his unique book Dracula, he makes direct reference to Highgate Cemetery (or at least, an area in close proximity of Highgate Cemetery) as being the last resting place of one of Count Dracula’s disciples.
Although Stoker may have also been influenced by the eerie case of Elizabeth Siddal who died in 1885 and who was buried in Highgate Cemetery. In 1862, her body was exhumed by a distraught relative anxious to retrieve some poems said to have been buried with her. A witness present, Charles Augustus Howell, described the ‘awesome sight’ of the undecayed body with ‘luxuriant red-gold hair’ that ‘pratically filled the coffin’ - the implication being that Elizabeth was ‘undead’, or in a state of catalepsy.
One of the common tales of that time also told of a ‘tall man dressed in black’ who used to disappear mysteriously through the cemetery wall. It was especially interesting to note the similarity between the Victorian sightings and the present day manifestations - especially as there was approximately 100 years difference between the two. If nothing else, this provided proof that the cemetery had been reputedly haunted for some time.
But perhaps most interesting was the ‘vampire-like element’ that had crept into these stories. Although it was difficult to pin-point the reasons or origins from whence the vampire legend came, it had nevertheless become an integral part of the cemetery’s supernatural traditions. The Victorians, with their deep-rooted fears of the unknown and self-righteous attitudes towards religion, morals and death, may have contributed towards establishing - or perhaps re-establishing - a legend that was already in existence..."