Author: lincolnshirefolktalesproject

  • The Serpent Slain at Walmsgate

    A tradition, which probably took its rise at an early period, tells of a huge serpent that devastated the village of South Ormsby and was slain at the adjacent hamlet of Walmsgate.’ This is said to have been the handiwork of Sir Hugh Bardolph, more famously associated with dragon-slaying at Castle Carlton, a few miles…

  • William of Lindholme

    William is accused of selling his soul to the Devil. Legend has it that he agreed to construct a causeway across the wetlands from Lindholme to Hatfield, on condition nobody could watch him, and was subsequently seen working on it at great speed with the assistance of scores of miniature demons.

  • The Wild Man of Stainfield

    The Wild Man of Stainfield

    A ‘wild man’ allegedly once lived in the woods near Stainfield, and would make raids to kill the locals and their livestock. Variations of the tale exist. In one, a band of local farmers known as the Hardy Gang, angry that livestock keeps being stolen and their families terrorised, hunt the wild man down between…

  • The Drake Stone

    The Drake Stone

    Outside Anwick’s church, a plough horse vanished in quicksand, and a drake flew out in its place. The following day, a boulder shaped like a drake’s head appeared on the spot. In a competing narrative, recounted in the Gentleman’s Magazine in 1833 and quoted by Maureen James in Lincolnshire Folk Tales (2013), the devil, or…

  • The Dead Moon

    The Dead Moon

    The moon comes down to the Carrs to investigate the evil spirits that inhabit the place on moonless nights, but slips and is trapped, managing only to shine a path for a man who is lost before she falls down in exhaustion. Bogles and will-o-the-wykes (will-o-the-wisps) hide and guard her, in some versions burying her…

  • Crazy Kate, the Witch of Swineshead

    Crazy Kate, the Witch of Swineshead

    ‘Crazy Kate’, the woman on whom this legend is based, was probably, like most ‘witches’, simply a slightly reclusive woman to whom the locals took a dislike, encouraged by their disposition towards superstition…