In the past, I’ve covered Victoria (my home) and New South Wales, the site of the first landing when Australia was colonised. As such, you’d expect New South Wales to have the strongest history of hauntings, but you could be wrong.
Down below mainland Australia lays an island, shaped like an inverted pyramid, which has a very chequered history indeed.
Tasmania aka Van Diemen’s Land was first settled as part of the British colony in 1803, just fifteen years after the arrival of the first fleet on the shores of mainland Australia. The early arrivals were almost all convicts and their guards, tasked with developing industries and agriculture on the isolated island. Resistance to the colonisation by Indigenous Australians led to particularly fierce fighting between the two forces, likely resulting in many massacres. Death seemed a common occurrence here in the Australia’s most southern area.
The first official prison on Tasmania, Port Arthur Penal Settlement, opened its cells in 1830 as a working prison and timber station. As more industries began there, suited to both heavy and light labour, Port Arthur held a key position in Australia’s penal system until it closed in 1877.
These days, Port Arthur is allegedly Tasmania’s most haunted area, likely a result of the many and varied deaths and ongoing misery that took place there over its 47-year history as an operating penal colony.
Tourists often report ghostly figures seen throughout the buildings of Port Arthur, and legend has it that on a Monday afternoon, the old, ruined church rings with the sound of bells that no longer hang there.
The tragic events of 1996 have only added to the carnage of the area. On April 28, Martin Bryant opened fire with an assault rifle on tourists at Port Arthur, killing 35 – and wounding 21 – men, women and children. Bryant was found fit to stand trial and is currently serving 35 life terms plus 1,035 years without parole in Tasmania’s Risdon Prison.
As a result of the many, many years of death and suffering, Port Arthur maintains the pride-of-place in Tasmania’s most haunted list.
Another location that has made the headlines with paranormal activity is National Trust registered Franklin House.
A sprawling property with gardens and a massive colonial house filled with antiques, Franklin House was built in the late 1830s by Britton Jones, a former convict who moved into brewing and inn-keeping. Four years after it was finished, he leased the property to a schoolmaster, William Keeler, Hawkes, who turned the mansion into a boys’ academy.
Nation Trust volunteers who now run the tourist destination have reported many experiences of a paranormal bent. Objects moving by themselves, noises in empty rooms, shadow figures in empty wings. Not-for-profit group Tas Ghost Hunting Society volunteered to find out what happened on the premises after dark, and believe that they found hard evidence of haunting and spirit activity. High levels of electromagnetic energy, and a recording where they claim to have the whispered response to a question have the group excited. In an upstairs bedroom, when asked ‘what is your name’, the group recorded a disembodied voice replying ‘Will’.
According to an article on ABC’s site, “There are other mysteries, such as a beam of light that seems to travel up and down the main staircase before disappearing,” said the lead investigator.
The Old Hobart Gaol, is the site of many ghost tours now, yet back in the 1800s, it was the site of many executions. There are numerous stories told by the tour guides, most common the stories of the recurring smell of blood near the gallows area, and of shadow figures moving in the night. Re-enactments of historical trials and the constant tours would hardly allow the restless dead to truly rest, now would they?
There are too many stories around the convict areas of Tasmania to go into fully in just one column, so I’ll leave you all to research your own on any further hauntings there.
I do, however, have to relate one last story. Not of a haunting, but of a crime so foul that is taboo amongst most so-called civilised societies. Cannibalism.
The name Alexander Pearce doesn’t ring with the same notoriety as many other criminal figures, but he was well known on the Tasmanian isle.
Criminal, convict, forger, escape artist and cannibal, Pearce was an Irish thief who escaped from prison in Tasmania a number of times, until he was finally hung and dissected in Hobart in 1824.
Pearce escaped one time with seven other prisoners, yet fifteen days into their journey through the primeval forests of the island, food ran out. Straws were drawn to see who would be killed and eaten, and after the foul deed was done, three of the remaining men lost heart and fled into the night. After the meat ran out, another died from snakebite (how fortunate) and he too was eaten. Another died, and was also a source of fresh meat, leaving Pearce and one other, Robert Greenhill, to continue the journey of escape. It was cat and mouse after that, but Greenhill finally was the first to fall asleep. At that point, Pearce allegedly murdered and ate his last companion. Eventually, Pearce found his way back to civilisation. When finally caught after 113 days, over half of which were spent in the isolated forests eating the others, Pearce confessed his crimes to a priest and was tried and hanged, later to be dissected to see just what made up a man who could sink to such lows in cuisine choices. It is reported that just before he was dropped through the trapdoor, Pearce said, ‘Man’s flesh is delicious. It tastes far better than fish or pork’.
Welcome to Tasmania, ladies and gents. Don’t forget to tenderise your travelling companions. Long pork is the meal of the day.
GEOFF BROWN
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