Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Ghostly Pics: The Newby Spectre

 


The photograph of the Newby Church Spectre is often cited as one of the 'best ghost photos ever' and with good reason. It has particular resonance with me because it is one of the first photographs that ever really scared the hell out of me as a child.

I was reading through a book about ghosts. It was full of 'real-life stories' and there were a number of photos. Looking at most of these I was skeptical, even as a rather naive young thing lacking the cynicism that has been beaten into me by years of life since. I'd played around with cameras before, I'd done things like accidentally double expose a film by not winding it on (these being the days before digital cameras or even automatic winding).

 I'd read about things like Pepper's ghost and other stage illusions which could be used to fake a photograph of something fantastical. Even in those pre-CGI days, I knew that the adage 'the camera never lies' was completely wrong.

So, the majority of the shots on display in this book were met with a shrug and a 'could be a fake' - a double exposure or an artifact of light and shadow which happens to coincide with a macabre tale of the place the photograph was taken.

Then I turned to the page on which the Newby Church Spectre was displayed.

And, I am sorry to say, it scared the hell out of me...

Yeah, I know, it could still be a double exposure or a deliberate fake.

Like any ghost photo, there is always the element of doubt which you have to apply when assessing it as evidence of the supernatural. However, the shot is just so very creepy - the religious setting, the figure with its skull-like mask, the whole package. It is easy to see why this shot is often trotted out. What is more, there are hints the figure is not even human. Not only is the face decidedly inhuman, more akin to an Ingmar Bergman vision of death or a Nazgul or a Dementor than a Monk, but the figure has also been calculated as being approximately nine feet tall. This, to my young imagination, hinted at something beyond a mere sad tale of ghostly unfinished business. It held suggestions of demons or other supernatural entities.

This is why I consider this shot to be my all-time favorite ghost photo...

The photo was taken in 1963 by Reverend Kenneth F. Lord on the grounds of the Church of Christ the Consoler in North Yorkshire in the U.K.

Reverend Lord claims the figure was not visible to the naked eye when he took the shot, he just wanted a photo of one of his favorite altars inside the church and the figure showed up when the film was developed. 

Later on, in the latter part of the 1970s, the BBC would do a program on ghosts and hauntings and have the photo and the photo's negative examined by experts including one Karl Denchly who claimed that there was no evidence of double exposure or other photographic trickery.

However the image does look 'too good to be true' but in reality who knows, the photograph of the Newby Church Spectre could indeed be of a ghost and proof of life after death or it could just be a  clever hoax or prank, as the photograph has now been around for nearly sixty years so we may never get a definitive answer to what the photo is of, but it sure is still as scary as the day it was taken. 

-D.A. Lascelles/Thomas Spychalski

See more of David's writing on his website Lurking Musings

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