Exorcism for Headless Ghost: Part 1 -
Coutts and Co Bank.
In 1993, world media reported on a headless ghost that was
haunting Coutts & Co Bank. The bank is sometimes known as The Queen’s Bank
(now King’s) as the Royal Family are customers.
Coutts & Co. was founded in 1692. The bank's headquarters has been
located at 440 Strand in London since the late 1970s, in a building constructed
in the 1820s.
In 1992, several
female employees began to complain of a ghost. Computers and electric lighting
would fail, the temperature would plummet, and a shadowy figure would be seen
floating through the building. A receptionist reported witnessing a full-bodied
apparition crossing the atrium floor, that she knew as a ghost. After this
experience, many female employees refused to work in the building.[1]
Meanwhile, other employees in the
building were reporting a headless phantom at the bank entrances, coinciding
with temperature drops. This apparition was most often seen during the day and
early evening.[2]
The bank sought
someone to investigate the alleged haunting. They contacted the College of
Psychic Studies in Kensington, who recommended, Eddie Burks. During his
investigation, Burks held a séance. He claimed he contacted Thomas Howard, who
told him, ‘I was beheaded on a summer’s day… I have held much bitterness and…I
must let this go. In the name of God, I ask your help…’[3]
After the story broke in the media, a Jesuit priest and
member of the Royal Historical Society, Father Francis Edwards, identified the
headless ghost as Thomas Howard, the fourth Duke of Norfolk. Howard was married
to the daughter of the 12th Earl of Arundel and was widowed in 1557.
Next week, the story continues with Exorcism for Headless
Ghost: Part 2
Researched and written by Allen Tiller. © 2024
[1] Burks, Eddie & Cribbs, Gillian. Ghosthunter: Investigating the World of Ghosts and Spirits, (1995), pp. 37-57.
[2] Rosemary Ellen Guiley, ‘The Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits, (2007).
[3] Burks & Cribbs, Ghosthunter (1995), pp. 37-57.
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