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UNSOLVED MYSTERIES


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Bible John, 1960s Three young women were found murdered in the streets of Glasgow in the late 1960s. All had been strangled with their own tights and raped. All were found partially clothed or naked, their handbags missing, and all had met their killer at the Barrowland Ballroom. Newspapers nicknamed the suspect Bible John after the key witness reported that he had quoted the Old Testament to one victim.


THE FLANNAN ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE, 1900 As the Hesperus sailed past Flannan Island, 20 miles west of Lewis, the lookout noticed there was no beam coming from the lighthouse. On embarking on the tiny island, the captain found an untouched meal waiting to be eaten on the table. There was no trace of the three lighthouse keepers. The superstitious suspect sea monsters, but others have concluded the men were washed off a cliff by a wave.


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THE FAIRY COFFINS In June 1836, five young boys out hunting rabbits came across 17 miniature coffins hidden in a cave on Arthur’s Seat. They were arranged in three tiers and covered by slates. Each coffin contained a small wooden figure in custom-made clothes. Nobody knows what they represented or why they were placed there. One theory is that they represent the 17 victims of Burke and Hare, while some believe they belonged to witches casting death spells on individuals.


The Drumbeg Wreck


On the seabed off Drumbeg in Sutherland lies an unknown wreck site. Three cannons and a wooden hull remain, but archaeologists have failed to fi nd out the story behind the sunken ship. Local fi shermen have known of the wreck since the 1990s but there are no historical records of a ship going down here. One theory is that the vessel was owned by the Dutch East India Company, which collapsed in 1799. Researchers have suggested some or all of the crew may have survived, but no links have been traced.


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THE UNKNOWN BAIRN, 1971 On a dull May day in 1971, a Fife man and his son came across what they thought was a doll washed up on the beach at Tayport. It was the body of a boy aged around three, still wearing what looked like a pyjama top. Despite ongoing appeals by police and huge


news coverage, nobody ever came forward to claim or identify the child. The people of Tayport raised money and he was buried in the village. His headstone reads ‘Erected by the people of Scotland in memory of the Unknown Bairn’.


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