New England Vampire Panic - US History - Extra History

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2022
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    There's a ton of mystery and lore that surrounds vampires, those blood-sucking creatures of the night, but what really inspired those tales? One related event caused the New England Vampire Panic! Where superstitious villagers were faced with an outbreak of consumption. Digging up some of the dark Vampire Superstitions we that are recognized have today.
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Комментарии • 487

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  2 года назад +108

    If you live in Minnesota, learn more at U21checkups.com. If you don’t, check here: www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/benefits/epsdt/index.html

    • @hakeempickering5986
      @hakeempickering5986 2 года назад

      Wouldn't this actually spread tuberculosis oh God they wouldn't know that

    • @mitch8072
      @mitch8072 2 года назад +6

      guy i like your channel buy only in amerika do you need an charity for your medical bills. the rest of the word found the solution it is called universal health care!!

    • @JCResDoc94
      @JCResDoc94 2 года назад +1

      *any1 who lived thru the c19 pandemic does not need an explanation.* people are insane. & not interested in learning. & i hope they all dxe. -JC

    • @figo3554
      @figo3554 2 года назад +7

      Minnesota gang

    • @benjiemanlapaz9192
      @benjiemanlapaz9192 2 года назад

      @Extra credits can you please help support those scientist trying to protect mother nature those who fight and stand against climate change and global warming

  • @schnitzel6852
    @schnitzel6852 2 года назад +1449

    as someone who lives in a small rural community with only about 20 people, i can say that this kind of preassure from neighbors is real, you know everyone and everyone knows you, and a reputation is very important

    • @guisampaio2008
      @guisampaio2008 2 года назад +43

      Guess life sucks for you. :(

    • @The-Plaguefellow
      @The-Plaguefellow 2 года назад +91

      Well, you can't spell 'agriculture' without 'cult' after all!

    • @shadowbannedaccont9479
      @shadowbannedaccont9479 2 года назад +24

      Still beats the narcissism and lonely yet around millions of people in big cities.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 2 года назад +1

      @@shadowbannedaccont9479 Stop projecting kiddo, city inhabitants are exact opposite of your brand of hating education, hygiene, and common sense, stone age stupidity...

    • @shorgoth
      @shorgoth 2 года назад +79

      @@shadowbannedaccont9479 the narcissim part of your statement is provenly false. There is no more narcissism in cities than outside. Loneliness and isolation can be a thing though, especially for people who have social disabilities. But I can say for sure that having grown in a small town, said disabilities becomes a big fat target for bullying in those communities instead of the anonymity of big cities.

  • @NevsTechBits
    @NevsTechBits 2 года назад +1325

    What a terrifying time to be alive. The possibility of losing your entire family like that, and then have then unburied.

    • @NicoBabyman1
      @NicoBabyman1 2 года назад +41

      “The past was the worst.” - Simon Whistler

    • @kestrels-in-the-sky
      @kestrels-in-the-sky 2 года назад +22

      @@NicoBabyman1 “dont write down your crimes” Simon whistler
      Rule number one

    • @idontknoq4813
      @idontknoq4813 2 года назад +1

      @@kestrels-in-the-sky Not to be that guy, but,
      *write

    • @atlanntis8064
      @atlanntis8064 2 года назад

      Coronavirus also has people dying left and right

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 2 года назад +7

      It’s a terrifying time because people believe what’s on TV, instead of what they can actually see. I’ll bet these people knew more about their situation than we do.

  • @jeremy1860
    @jeremy1860 2 года назад +833

    Between this and Lovecraft, I'm convinced that New England is just a magnet for creepy stories 😨

    • @jarekwrzosek2048
      @jarekwrzosek2048 2 года назад +73

      Don't forget Salem!

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 2 года назад

      It’s just another province in the Freemason confederation.

    • @MovieFan1912
      @MovieFan1912 2 года назад +25

      @@jarekwrzosek2048 Oh, yeah. Because of the Witch Trials.

    • @rugiiman8917
      @rugiiman8917 2 года назад +56

      And all Steven King.

    • @fictionfan0
      @fictionfan0 2 года назад +21

      Lovecraft was just a nut.

  • @ChaosDX1
    @ChaosDX1 2 года назад +229

    So that's where the old "Stake the heart" myth came from. And in a weird way "nailing a corpse down so it can't move" makes much more sense than "Vampires can only be killed by a stake through the heart"

    • @annasolovyeva1013
      @annasolovyeva1013 11 месяцев назад +21

      Vampire myth comes from Eastern Europe. Eastern Europeans would heavily keep their pagan beliefs in magic along with Christianity.
      Eastern Europeans believed the world to be full of various unalive and undead mythical creatures. Kinda like of a fantasy world. "The Witcher" universe is a pretty decent representation generally, but there's much more creatures. The multitude of creatures involved ghouls and upyrs, blood sucking undead things.

  • @shawnheatherly
    @shawnheatherly 2 года назад +238

    The pain of losing a loved one and then being told to eat their ashes. Dang.

  • @kingkarnage1315
    @kingkarnage1315 2 года назад +279

    As some who lived most of their life in Exeter R.I, there are still people who hear the superstition but not the explanation. If you happen to visit Mercy Brown’s grave, please show her and the surrounding graves the respect you wish she was shown in this video. Especially since the graveyard is still being used for burials today.

  • @kellybeck4579
    @kellybeck4579 2 года назад +133

    Brain: You've already watched Ask a Mortician talk about this. Do you really need to watch another video?
    Hands: What? I wasn't paying attention. The video already started.

  • @rickhobson3211
    @rickhobson3211 2 года назад +378

    That's why I loved living in New England. No matter the season, Halloween was always just around the corner. :P

    • @maxk4324
      @maxk4324 2 года назад +3

      This sounds oike a comment made before seeing the entire video (I'm guilty of the same, don't worry)

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 2 года назад +4

      Halloween is paganism. That’s all year long. Take Easter for example. Ishtar worship. Satanism. Prefer Christmas? That’s Tammuz worship. Satanism. It never ends.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier 2 года назад +8

      @@memyselfandi8544 You sound like a fan of The Witchfinder General ;)

    • @frick_____you
      @frick_____you 2 года назад

      @@memyselfandi8544 Connections between Easter and Ishtar are unproven; and incredibly unlikely.

    • @johnparla6252
      @johnparla6252 2 года назад +1

      Caneticut 👍👍

  • @ArsanCraft
    @ArsanCraft 2 года назад +369

    If you are interested in other ways people were supersticious towards the dead then read up on medical cannibalism, where we used to eat mummy-parts out of egypt or parts of other deceased as medical treatment.

    • @TheCatholicNerd
      @TheCatholicNerd 2 года назад +13

      To quote Farnsworth, " I was going to eat that mummy"

    • @alexanderbrambila8274
      @alexanderbrambila8274 2 года назад +1

      @@TheCatholicNerd Zevulon the great he's teriyaki style

    • @KyleRayner12
      @KyleRayner12 2 года назад

      Not just out of Egypt: English nobility were sometimes made into medical cures and sold piecemeal to other nobles after their deaths. (Source: Cannibalism: A Perfectly Natural History)

    • @weirdalexander8193
      @weirdalexander8193 2 года назад +9

      The idea was “whatever they did to this cadaver made it last for millennia, so maybe we could ingest it and that stuff for longevity “. With that logic, i’m surprised they didn’t save their money by drinking formaldehyde from those science lab frog jars.

    • @khalidgagnon8753
      @khalidgagnon8753 2 года назад

      Oh...... Wonderful.... I wanted to think about THAT!

  • @Grimmtoof
    @Grimmtoof 2 года назад +124

    You should do a video on the Glasgow necropolis vampire. In the 1950s a story went round the schools in Glasgow about a vampire hiding in the necropolis graveyard, resulting in hundreds of children hunting for it.

  • @DinsRune
    @DinsRune 2 года назад +49

    The modern idea of what we think of as a "vampire" doesn't really start to spread until Bram Stoker's _Dracula._ Originally, vampires were closer in mind to what a DnD player would call a "wight" or "ghoul"- a living corpse that attacks and feeds on the living- or were a spiritual presence like described in the video.

    • @samrevlej9331
      @samrevlej9331 9 месяцев назад +6

      Not true. There were earlier 19th-century works that depicted vampires as able to pass for human-John Polidori's "The Vampyre", Sheridan Le Fanu's "Carmilla"...

    • @ggwp638BC
      @ggwp638BC 23 дня назад +1

      Kinda, the origin of vampires is not singular. There are many origins that eventually coalesced into what we today often associate with vampires. Vampires are sorta like dragons, where the term has a few dozen loose traits that are related to the idea and if what you are describing has two or more you can just it as such. And funnily enough, even vampires and dragons are intertwinned.

    • @ACoolKidsProduction
      @ACoolKidsProduction 16 дней назад

      "Originally, vampires were closer in mind to what a DnD player would call a "wight" or "ghoul"- a living corpse that attacks and feeds on the living- or were a spiritual presence like described in the video."
      So, a zombie?

    • @thehistorynerd8537
      @thehistorynerd8537 2 дня назад

      Not as mindless or fragile, a d for ghouls not decaying

  • @Overhazard
    @Overhazard 2 года назад +99

    A bit of trivia regarding vampires: Jiangshi, a Chinese type of vampire, were traditionally depicted in art depicted as senators. (You might recognize Hsien-ko from Darkstalkers as an example of one; her outfit was based on Chinese senators of the time. Chinese senators wore those domed hats, the jackets with the oversized sleeves, and baggy trousers.) This is because these senators had a reputation of taxing their citizens dry.
    P.S. Has there been an Extra History piece covering the Remington-Rand strike of 1936 to 1937? I found it interesting in that the strike was deliberately engineered by the company with the aim of destroying the union.

    • @bigchum3984
      @bigchum3984 2 года назад +6

      Those are called court officials or court eunuch

    • @mr.q337
      @mr.q337 Год назад +5

      Very interesting, I never draw that connection. No wonder the Jiangshi always depicted to wear official uniform =))) Those cheeky peasants make up that story as a way to satire those corrupted official as they constantly suck their "Life source" away from them LMAO

    • @johnnysun6495
      @johnnysun6495 11 месяцев назад +2

      1) jiangshi 僵尸 means zombie, not vampire.
      2) I've never heard of the whole "depicted as senators" things

    • @Overhazard
      @Overhazard 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@johnnysun6495 A jiangshi technically doesn't conform to western depictions of vampires or zombies, but we refer to them as "Chinese Vampires" as the closest analogue we have. Admittedly, the line between vampires and zombies are not entirely clear cut, as both are undead humans who consume living humans for sustenance. But I've seen them referred to as "Chinese Vampires" far, far more than "Chinese Zombies," hence using the popular naming convention.

    • @-K_J-
      @-K_J- 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Overhazardthanks for the info, that's actually super interesting. I kinda started wondering if the line between vampires and zombies was weird when I was browsing Wikipedia after hearing Powerwolf's "Armata Strigoi" for the first time.

  • @mdelles
    @mdelles 2 года назад +156

    this wouldve been a cool one to sync up with Caitlin Doughtry over at Ask a Mortician, since she recently did an episode on the same thing.
    Definitely would be a cool collab!

    • @RandoNetizen27
      @RandoNetizen27 2 года назад +12

      Lol right? Both of the videos even started the same, a brief recount of a different family before going to the Brown family.

  • @danielhale1
    @danielhale1 Год назад +26

    I remember the Lovecraft vampire story was a lot like this. The corpse below the home just drains the people living there, similar to consumption. The protagonist ends up digging until he finds the corpse and pouring a vat of acid onto it.

    • @davidmccann9811
      @davidmccann9811 10 месяцев назад +1

      Do you by chance remember the name of this story?

    • @danielhale1
      @danielhale1 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@davidmccann9811 Found it: "The Shunned House"

  • @DissonantValues
    @DissonantValues 2 года назад +49

    When you’re so early that the video is still in 480p

  • @eireduchess
    @eireduchess 2 года назад +44

    Caitlin on Ask a Mortician just did a video on this exact topic too and it’s a little longer for anyone who wants to learn more. This is such an interesting video and I loved watching it and getting another perspective on the whole thing. RIP Mercy Brown

  • @duneydan7993
    @duneydan7993 2 года назад +85

    Everytime I hear about Tuberculosis I can hear a good doctor saying
    "I'm sorry for you Son, it's a hell of a thing"

    • @DarkElfDiva
      @DarkElfDiva 2 года назад

      Then just 25 years later there was a cure. Ain't that a bitch.

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 2 года назад +1

      That’s because they lack faith in God.

    • @alext7074
      @alext7074 2 года назад +4

      @@memyselfandi8544 which one?

    • @Disorganized_Religions
      @Disorganized_Religions 2 года назад +13

      @@memyselfandi8544 What a weird reaction to a video game reference.

    • @alext7074
      @alext7074 2 года назад

      @@Disorganized_Religions that's religious nuttery for you

  • @crazykaspmovies
    @crazykaspmovies 2 года назад +257

    George never caught the consumption you say? Well clearly the ritual was a succes, shame help came too late for his son. I think we can all learn a valuable lesson from this tragic tale, don't hesitate overlong to check your recently deceased loved ones for demonic possession. Imagine all the lives it could have saved.

    • @InhalingWeasel
      @InhalingWeasel 2 года назад +17

      Demonic presence detected
      *BFG division starts playing in the background*

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey 2 года назад

      In order to get TB you have to be genetically susceptible. George wasn't but I suspect his wife was. The kids inherited her susceptibility to TB and it was probably sitting there from their childhood until something kicked it off. In this case probably the same event or trigger infection.

    • @dashiellgillingham4579
      @dashiellgillingham4579 2 года назад +5

      @Ordo Alcoholicus We laugh at them today, but the old beliefs are still with us, endlessly expressed in the stories we tell. Much like the old gods of Northern Europe, which became fearful specters of the religion they once comprised and continued to be handed down in spite of their Christianization.

    • @The-Plaguefellow
      @The-Plaguefellow 2 года назад +2

      Rip 'n' Tear or whatever...

    • @mureithikivuti
      @mureithikivuti 2 года назад +6

      Yup.
      You nailed how superstition works perfectly

  • @joshuagreenwood6621
    @joshuagreenwood6621 2 года назад +13

    I didn't realize anyone outside of my home state of Rhode Island had ever heard of this story! It always felt more like local legends than national news.

  • @ashteal5971
    @ashteal5971 2 года назад +24

    You know the Extra History episode is gonna be extra interesting if you see that Child and Teens Checkup sponsorship

    • @radioanon4535
      @radioanon4535 2 года назад

      Gonna be a medical focused video

  • @MultiMariana55
    @MultiMariana55 2 года назад +9

    Ask a Mortician did a video a few months ago about this topic too! It's called "America's Forgotten Vampire Panic" It's 40minutes long, for anyone who wants to know more

  • @bobbluered8984
    @bobbluered8984 2 года назад +32

    People might think the opening is a dramatic example of superstitious times when folk had struggles with death on the daily, and life was little more than finding ways to make yourself comfortable with your inevitable demise, but anyone from RI knows that Exeter just be like that.

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive 2 года назад +5

      we still live in superstitious times.

    • @Bill_Garthright
      @Bill_Garthright 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, haven't you been paying attention to the news in recent years. We're just as superstitious these days, if not more so.

    • @bobbluered8984
      @bobbluered8984 2 года назад

      @@Bill_Garthright why would I ever pay attention to the NEWS??

  • @abcdef27669
    @abcdef27669 2 года назад +10

    8:40 - That was a nice touch, and a beautiful homage for someone who suffered so much because of that disease, even without dying from it.
    RIP George Brown and his family.

  • @FrankBlissett
    @FrankBlissett 2 года назад +6

    In other words, "don't spit on the sidewalk" killed all the vampires.

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 2 года назад +1

      That explains why it shows up on so many "dumb laws" lists...

  • @CaraTheStrange
    @CaraTheStrange 2 года назад +23

    If you like this topic, Ask a mortician made a fantastic 40 min video discussing this event

  • @giladpellaeon1691
    @giladpellaeon1691 2 года назад +7

    Glad to see you guys cover a topic from my home state, even if it is a rather gruesome one. I grew up in Coventry which is about 15 minutes away from Exeter and there are numerous tales of ghosts and vampires. Probably why H. P. Lovecraft wrote so much horror including "The Shunned House" which has a vampire as described in the video. Also a quote from another of his stories is "can't trust those Nooseneck Hill people", which is just north of Exeter.

  • @enman702
    @enman702 2 года назад +16

    I'm always here for haunted New England stuff.

    • @lechindianer
      @lechindianer 2 года назад +3

      If you like New England folklore check out the Lore podcast. Aaron covered a lot of fantastic stories :)

    • @enman702
      @enman702 2 года назад

      @@lechindianer I absolutely love that podcast!! It's wonderful for writing inspiration!

  • @evanthedank554
    @evanthedank554 2 года назад +30

    I love these Medical History episodes, their so interesting and I always appreciate them. Thank you EC and Child and Teen Checkups

  • @pyrosymphonyfireworksdesig5690
    @pyrosymphonyfireworksdesig5690 2 года назад +9

    For a more comprehensive video regarding this, you can check Ask A Mortician!

  • @maxleroux
    @maxleroux 2 года назад +7

    While we're on the subject of superstition in the early days of America, it would be awesome if you guys could do a series on the grim history of Witch Hunts.

  • @lakes665
    @lakes665 2 года назад +3

    I have MS and if I didn't live long enough to name my killer- well I can't imagine. One of the best in years, thank you.

  • @thehorrornauts5623
    @thehorrornauts5623 2 года назад +9

    Been waiting for this! We also dove into this topic with our puppet show a little while back. We are hugely inspired by your work- thanks, EC!

  • @ajc558
    @ajc558 2 года назад +2

    I've been watching EC for years and always found the little intro jingle super familiar, but could never place it until recently. It's the game Act Raiser! Love it!

  • @BrianMelancon
    @BrianMelancon 2 года назад +39

    ... and 100 years from now Extra Credits does a story on people actually taking horse de-wormer instead of a perfectly save vaccine.

  • @elizabthharris6741
    @elizabthharris6741 5 месяцев назад +1

    The fact that there are years of these makes me so happy!!

  • @EokaBeamer69
    @EokaBeamer69 2 года назад +1

    I love Extra Credits. The style of narration combined with the brilliant animation makes this the most entertaining youtube channel out there.

  • @azamimido6972
    @azamimido6972 2 года назад +1

    I truly love this channel so much, it just brings me a lot of happiness so thank yall for what you do

  • @godofamphibians
    @godofamphibians 2 года назад +25

    A bit of topic: Vampires are WAY to overrated. In most classical stories they die to everything. Sun, holy water, they have to count rice and cant enter a house if not invited. Only in modern stories, where they are a bit more resilient and often hotter, are they kinda cool.

    • @CollinMcLean
      @CollinMcLean 2 года назад +6

      Yeah but hypnosis, shapeshifting, superhuman speed and strength, longevity, that's not something to scoff at.
      But yeah compared to Werewolves they are kind of losers.
      Vampire:What's your weakness?
      Werewolf:Wolfsbane
      Vampire:Where would you even get that?
      Werewolf:Exactly. So what's your weakness?
      Vampire:Stake, sunlight, holy water, garlic, can't enter a house unless invited, can't approach a cross...
      Werewolf:So pretty much every farmers market or hardware store?

    • @Nerdnumberone
      @Nerdnumberone 2 года назад +2

      Modern vampires are sort of like Superman: They have a laundry list of powers paired with a number of crippling weaknesses that any competent opponent that faces them will know and exploit. Obviously Superman has a better power-for-weakness exchange rate, but you get the idea.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz 2 года назад

      Liches on the other hand...

  • @patrickcoin9457
    @patrickcoin9457 2 года назад +2

    Was hoping this was the basis of Stephen King's 1978 novel Salem's Lot, about vampires in rural Maine, but it appears he was inspired simply by Bram Stoker's Dracula. Darn, it would have been a great historical connection.

  • @colinmerritt7645
    @colinmerritt7645 Год назад +3

    I was born and raised in Connecticut. New England is absolutely this creepy.

  • @sourabhmayekar3354
    @sourabhmayekar3354 2 года назад

    You guys know how to tell a story!
    The way u ended with George getting closure was simply ❤️

  • @CollinMcLean
    @CollinMcLean 2 года назад +5

    You know just a few years later, Bram Stoker would publish Dracula.

  • @Nerdnumberone
    @Nerdnumberone 2 года назад +12

    And yet we have seen people with access to effective preventative measure against a disease ignore and even actively resist them in favor of pseudoscience and/or prayer.

  • @KristenRowenPliske
    @KristenRowenPliske 2 года назад +1

    TB is still around today & requires a long treatment program. It’s still very contagious & it’s very important to get yourself & your kids vaccinated.

  • @owaingray3480
    @owaingray3480 2 года назад

    Hell yeah, I thought you'd already made a video on this. The subject matter suits your style perfectly. Great video!

  • @riverAmazonNZ
    @riverAmazonNZ 2 года назад +13

    I can imagine the conversation:
    Doctor, examining the exhumed body: There are Tuberculin germs here. This is the cause of her illness.
    Villager: So the germs invite the spirit. We must do the ritual.
    Docter: No, there’s no spirit. The ritual won’t accomplish anything.
    Villager: What do you know? You’re a doctor, you only know about germs. Leave this to us.
    Doctor: (facepalm)

  • @Ecliptic-P
    @Ecliptic-P 7 месяцев назад +1

    Im so happy i live in new england (Massachusetts specifically) because i love the creepy stories from around here

  • @RobMarchione
    @RobMarchione Месяц назад

    “Consume some of her ashes” is a very gentle way to say he “sipped some sister smoothie”.

  • @evanulven8249
    @evanulven8249 2 года назад +28

    When it comes to medical science and teaching people what is really going on with a contagion or other medical condition, there is one thing to always keep in mind.
    *People are stupid.*
    Example: The last two years.

  • @skelliebeeper5693
    @skelliebeeper5693 2 года назад +1

    Poofy kitty drawing was a great and cute bit of levity!
    Great video too!

  • @LoneTiger
    @LoneTiger 2 года назад +2

    Harker: _"My god, now she's dead."_
    Van Helsing: _"No, she's not."_
    Harker: _"She's alive?"_
    Van Helsing: _"She's nosferatu."_
    Harker: _"She's Italian?"_
    Van Helsing: _"No, it means 'the undead.'"_
    Dracula. Dead and Loving It (1995)

  • @aroma13
    @aroma13 2 года назад +2

    For anyone interested,there is a video on youtube called ,,the exorcism of the moroi" ,which is about one of the last romanian vampire hunter,who got into trouble for doing the ritual in the video when talking about eastern europe

  • @Ace_of_the_Chaos_Element
    @Ace_of_the_Chaos_Element Год назад +1

    the one thing that can strike human kind with more fear than any monster is death, and it's aftermath of grief

  • @brianfong5711
    @brianfong5711 2 года назад +1

    My most favourite Extra History subjects are the sherlock holmesy stories of disease and finding their cures.
    Like with John Snow and the sewer water.

  • @jatlarge6354
    @jatlarge6354 26 дней назад

    Love your illustrator, they’re awesome!

  • @slintirreg
    @slintirreg 2 года назад +8

    Really a very unfortunate breach of the Masquerade. ^^

  • @nathanthaxton7492
    @nathanthaxton7492 2 года назад

    Awesome content as usual. Love to see it.

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 2 года назад

    I love your channel keep up the great stuff!!

  • @cheyneanderson4875
    @cheyneanderson4875 2 года назад +1

    I definitely heard "TV is a vicious bacterial infection" 😂

  • @augustrempelewert4377
    @augustrempelewert4377 2 года назад

    I wasn't expecting this video to make me cry, but that ending got me.

  • @DaudAlzayer
    @DaudAlzayer 2 года назад +3

    There is a precedent for the word "Vampire" being known in New England. I found a near-full-page article in an mid-18th-century newspaper (100 years before the panic) describing "Vampyres". The article was actually posted in an April 1st issue of the paper, and I've never figured out if this was an early April Fools prank headline.

    • @DaudAlzayer
      @DaudAlzayer 2 года назад

      oh, I found it: The Boston Evening-Post, 1 April 1765- "The Surprising Account of those Spectres called Vampyres"

  • @jlshel42
    @jlshel42 2 года назад +5

    Nearly 2k views in 7 minutes? Dang...
    Also, RIP Arthur Morgan

  • @UNION_JACK_THE_RIPPER
    @UNION_JACK_THE_RIPPER 2 года назад +4

    Heads up in May for the 125th anniversary of dracula. Fans of the book will be gathering in whitby to try and break the record for most vampires in 1 place. Keep an eye out for that

  • @michaeldonahue1009
    @michaeldonahue1009 2 года назад +1

    Note: Rhode Island native H.P. Lovecraft adapted this precise phenomenon into a horror story, "The Shunned House". Ian Gordon does a solid audio-narration on his RUclips channel, Horrorbabble.

  • @zensunni1715
    @zensunni1715 2 года назад +1

    Great story, as always.

  • @kammieceleek5113
    @kammieceleek5113 2 года назад +1

    If I remember correctly, this panic helped inspire Dracula. Like, Bram Stoker had a copy of a news article about the panic in his pocket when he was working in theater.

  • @o.mcneely4424
    @o.mcneely4424 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’m from the same area in Vermont where the first case was recorded in the 1790s, and I’ll admit that I love to drop facts about this into conversation. Maybe Shirley Jackson wasn’t far off about small towns being secretly cultish.

  • @scarletletter4900
    @scarletletter4900 2 года назад +4

    And now I have context for keeping and using all those cloth masks accumulated over the past couple of years.

  • @jonathanscott8994
    @jonathanscott8994 2 года назад +2

    As a Rhode Islander I love seeing out bizarre history covered

  • @woodlandleshy3876
    @woodlandleshy3876 2 года назад +1

    Some of the earliest instances of "anti vampire measures " were found in Poland

  • @ChefAndyLunique
    @ChefAndyLunique 2 года назад

    I grew up in Cranston, RI and we were told this story in the fifth grade. We were told the story as damn near fact and not as a history lesson (I know) so it’s wild to see this picked up by one of my favorite channels

  • @mechtim
    @mechtim 2 года назад +2

    TB was called consumption but to be confusing scurvy was also called consumption so have fun with that.

  • @artornis606
    @artornis606 2 года назад +2

    Except TB isn't defeated, its still out there. Its extremely important that you take your medication exactly as your doctor says for this very reason 1.4million died from it in 2019. TB is still poking and proding at our defenses and if we are too lax it will find a way through again stronger than ever before.

  • @heliosdelsol
    @heliosdelsol 2 года назад +36

    LOL This isn't surprising at all! There are people who believe in vampires TODAY! People taking horse medicine for COVID and whatnot. 😂

  • @dylantobler1135
    @dylantobler1135 7 месяцев назад +1

    “Living just long enough, to see the disease that had taken so much from him, defeated at last.”
    - Passionately angry John Green stitch incoming

  • @andywest6768
    @andywest6768 6 месяцев назад +1

    I heard about this in an episode of Spooky Saturday/Scouts (ep. 1.5), which described the girl's death, the digging up of her heart, the feeding it to her brother and the brother's subsequent death. I had thought this was a colonial thing, but now you tell me it was just before the twentieth century? 😞

  • @aaroncastro9029
    @aaroncastro9029 2 года назад

    There’s another great video on this topic on the askamortician channel!

  • @upssuckmyballs
    @upssuckmyballs 2 месяца назад +1

    Am I the only one that usually isn't interested in history but loves this? It's so entertaining HOW

  • @alicerivierre
    @alicerivierre 2 года назад +3

    Yep, a crazy time period to live, what with Gothic fiction and horror (thanks Bram Stoker!).

  • @johanroyce6324
    @johanroyce6324 2 года назад +3

    Awesome, another vampire episode

  • @almostclintnewton8478
    @almostclintnewton8478 11 месяцев назад +1

    God, that was a lovely ending. teared up a bit 🌻

  • @jonathanaron8864
    @jonathanaron8864 2 года назад

    I’ve literally just finished rereading Salem’s Lot!

  • @walterscogginsakathesilver6246
    @walterscogginsakathesilver6246 2 года назад

    Thank you. For not making me wait to Halloween. To get my fix of the Macop.

  • @bl1754
    @bl1754 Год назад

    Some New Englander: *starts coughing*
    The townsfolk: Let's exhume-a-zoom-zoom!

  • @maximepelchat9019
    @maximepelchat9019 6 дней назад

    I love the actraiser song too

  • @SEELE-ONE
    @SEELE-ONE 2 года назад

    “We shall dig up everything about a family member to expose it for the monster they are!”
    Oh! A family gathering!

  • @stephenflint3640
    @stephenflint3640 2 года назад +1

    Here I am listening to Carpe Jugulum by Terry Pratchett, and what does EC do?? Talk about Vampires

  • @drstrangeluv25
    @drstrangeluv25 2 года назад

    The Dollop podcast did an episode on this for anyone who wants more vampire panic

  • @ktakatheo
    @ktakatheo 2 года назад

    surprising ending. Very uplifting.

  • @promiscuous5761
    @promiscuous5761 2 года назад

    Thank you..

  • @Shadowreaper5
    @Shadowreaper5 2 года назад +2

    Imagine living in a world where the majority of the population doesn't understand medical science, and a pandemic sweeps across the planet killing entire families or leaving individuals completely untouched. Wow so hard to imagine that.

  • @owenvader9413
    @owenvader9413 2 года назад

    one of the best channels to eat food to imo

  • @MrBerg-jv4wv
    @MrBerg-jv4wv 2 года назад +1

    You cannot get a simpler yet respected name than "George Brown"

  • @stoneman472
    @stoneman472 2 года назад

    Geez, that's heartbreaking

  • @jerryeskridge4798
    @jerryeskridge4798 2 года назад +1

    Many Victorian era writers like Edgar Allan Poe Mask of the Red Death and Bram Stoker Dracula who research Vlad the Impaler for count Dracula used tuberculosis as a plot device in writing...

  • @williamburroughs9686
    @williamburroughs9686 2 года назад

    Got to love that ending!

  • @giantred
    @giantred 2 года назад +1

    This is why I am glad to live in a city, everyone does everything they can to not engage with their neighbors.

  • @Sierra-208
    @Sierra-208 2 года назад +3

    We've really come far in terms of medical science, looking at tales from history like this one makes me uncomfortable about living in that time

    • @KynElwynn
      @KynElwynn 2 года назад

      And yet, anti-Vaxx exists to this day

    • @Sierra-208
      @Sierra-208 2 года назад

      @@KynElwynn yeah, what a goddamn shame. People like that are pretty much stains on the history of humanity

  • @lilygamingtheories1410
    @lilygamingtheories1410 5 месяцев назад +1

    I wrote a playscript about this story!