Odd this day

Coates
4 min readSep 23, 2023

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Well, if it’s 23 September… yes, of course: the 69th anniversary of the hunt for the Gorbals Vampire, in which hundreds of children aged 4–14, armed with dogs, knives and sharpened sticks went looking for an urban myth.

Daily Mirror front page shows grainy image of horde of children in a cemetery, and the headline “Amazing scene as hundreds of children rush cemetery”

This is not to be confused with the invasion of Highgate Cemetery in 1970, involving grown adults in London believing that there was a bloodsucker on the loose who needed staking…

No, this was quite different. This was some children who had heard the Established Fact that “a 7ft tall vampire with iron teeth … had … kidnapped and eaten two local boys”. And where would such a fiend be found? Well, in Glasgow’s largest cemetery, of course.

Ronnie Sanderson, 8 at the time, told the BBC in 2010: “It all started in the playground — the word was there was a vampire and everyone was going to head out there after school” — ‘there’ being the magnificently named Southern Necropolis.

Southern Necropolis — a cemetery in Glasgow — image shows large gravestones and memorials in mist with sunlight leaking through clouds

No one knows how the story started, or why, although The Scotsman had some theories when it revisited the story in 2016:

Well, many theories have been offered. There was an American comic book at that time entitled: “The Vampire with the Iron Teeth”. There is also a passage in the Bible, Daniel 7:7, that reads: “Behold a fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it had great iron teeth”. The children may also have been inspired by ‘Jenny wi’ the Iron Teeth, an old woman said to haunt Glasgow Green in the early 19th century.

Two academics, though, who presented a paper about the event at a conference in 1985, looked into the idea of the comics, and said — in academic terms, at least — it was complete balls.

However, its status as evidence is highly dubious. No attempt was made to check on the reading habits of children who participated in the vampire hunt, and although contemporary horror comics do contain various monsters and other frightening figures, no one has identified one which contained a “vampire with iron teeth”…

One version of the story suggests that it might have been December 1953’s issue of Dark Mysteries, and, certainly, only one copy needed to have found its way to that part of Glasgow for it to have sparked an urban myth.

Front cover, Dark Mysteries, issue 15, with the headline Terror of the Vampire’s Teeth, and tagline WEIRD TALES OF HORROR, and a gloriously lurid illustration of a skeleton emerging from an open grave to menace a Brad and Janet-type couple. The live man is saying “Kiss me, Mary! No one will ever find us here!” Mary replies: “Wait… Harry’s come back from the dead!”. The skeleton, presumably Harry, says “Now I have the pickax you killed me with… you’ll never kiss again!”

…and that certainly seems more plausible than a lot of schoolchildren, even in the 1950s, having a familiarity with Daniel 7:7 (although, again, it only takes one to start a rumour, and if that rumour is appealing enough…)

The most likely explanation, surely,is that some half-heard, or half-remembered folk tale (or movie, or TV show) popped into some kid’s head one day, that kid told another, and… soon the graveyard was heaving with children — some, apparently, brandishing “homemade tomahawks”.

Depending on which source you believe, police tried to disperse the mob without success — and “a local school headmaster was summoned to the cemetery to scold the children into submission” — but, apparently, they only went home when it started to rain.

…and then came back for the next two nights, ultimately sparking a moral panic about the American comics they might not even have seen, bringing together a distinctly unholy alliance of teachers, communists and fundamentalist Christians who all had their own reasons for their frankly rather silly campaign.

Perhaps you don’t think it was silly, but I put it to you that deputy head George Pumphrey’s 1954 pamphlet Comics and Your Children is bilge of the highest order.

Various pages and cells from Comics and Your Children — sorry for the lack of alt text, but you can get a flavour from one of the pull-quotes: “children’s minds are being fed Crime, Sex, pseudo-Science, Horror and War”

Perhaps the most remarkable thing in all this is that the campaign was successful, and what started as a bizarre playground rumour ended in 1955’s Children and Young Persons (Harmful Publications) Act — still in force, if hardly ever used.

It is, as Neil Gaiman points out “said to be the only piece of legislation the UK Communist Party ever managed to get on the books”.

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Coates
Coates

Written by Coates

Purveyor of niche drivel; marker of odd anniversaries

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