Ever since I became aware that Highgate Cemetery was the reputed haunt of a vampire, the investigations and activities of Sean Manchester commanded my attention. I became convinced that, more than anyone else, the president of the Vampire Research Society knew the full story of the Highgate Vampire which is probably the most remarkable contemporary account of vampiric activity and infestation ~ and cure. Can such things as vampires really exist? The evidence seems to be overwhelming and the author [of The Highgate Vampire] is to be congratulated on his knowledgeable and lucid account of the case which is likely to become one of the classic works on this interesting and mystifying subject.
~ Peter Underwood, President of the Ghost Club Society, UK.
Two seemingly unconnected incidents occurred within weeks of one another in early 1967. The first involved two 16 year old convent girls who were walking home at night after having visited friends in Highgate Village. Their return journey took them down Swains Lane past the cemetery. They could not believe their eyes as they passed the graveyards north gate at the top of the lane, for in front of them bodies appeared to be emerging from their tombs. One of these schoolgirls later suffered nightly visitations and blood loss. The second incident, some weeks later, involved an engaged couple who were walking down the same lane. Suddenly the female shrieked as she glimpsed something hideous hovering behind the gate=s iron railings. Then her fiancé saw it. They both stood frozen to the ground as the specter held them in thrall. Its face bore an expression of basilisk horror. Soon others sighted the same phenomenon as it hovered along the path behind the gate where gravestones are visible either side until consumed in darkness. Before long people were talking in hushed tones about the rumored haunting in local pubs. Some who actually witnessed the spectral figure wrote to their local newspaper to share their experience. Discovery was made of animal carcasses drained of blood. They had been so exsanguinated that a forensic sample could not be found. It was only a matter of time before a person was found in the cemetery in a pool of blood. This victim died of wounds to the throat. The police made every attempt to cover up the vampiristic nature of the death. Sean Manchester informed the public on 27 February 1970 that the cause was most probably a vampire. He appeared on television on 13 March 1970 and repeated his theory. The VRS, whose specialist unit within a larger investigatory organization (now defunct) had opened the case twelve months earlier, established a history of similar hauntings that went back to before the graveyard existed. A suspected tomb was located and a spoken exorcism performed. This proved ineffective. The hauntings and animal deaths continued. Indeed, they multiplied. By now all sorts of people were jumping on the vampire bandwagon; including film makers and rock musicians. Most were frightened off. Some who interloped became fascinated by the black arts with disastrous consequences. Meanwhile, serious researchers considered the possibility that a nest of vampires might be active in the area. Yet there seemed to be one principle source which the media had already dubbed a King Vampire of the Undead.
Sean Manchester led the
thirteen year investigation from beginning to end. There was indeed more than
one vampire for the VRS to confront. However, in early 1974 he tracked the
principle source of the contamination, known as the Highgate Vampire, to a neo
Gothic mansion on the Highgate borders. Here he employed the ancient and
approved remedy. No vampire has been sighted in or near Highgate Cemetery and
its environs since that time. The exorcised remains of the Highgate Vampire
appear on the next page.
"There is no doubt that The Highgate Vampire is an A1 classic. This book will certainly be read in a hundred years time, two hundred years time, three hundred years time ~ in short, for as long as mankind is interested in the supernatural. It has the most genuine power to grip. Once you have started to read it, it is virtually impossible to put it down.
~ Lyndall Mack, Udolpho magazine, UK.
The
Highgate Vampire is a most interesting and useful addition to the literature on
the subject.
~
Reverend Basil Youdell, Literary Editor, Orthodox News, UK.
If you want to read a good
book on the subject which is very well done, then read The Highgate Vampire.
~ Dale Kaczmarek, President, The Ghost Research Society, USA.
Sean Manchester is to be congratulated on this fine piece of research work which I confess to enjoying to the extreme.
~ Dr Devendra P Varma, Professor of English Literature, Dalhousie
University, Canada.
I found the book fascinating in its subject matter and magnificent in the quality of its prose. Sean Manchester=s literary style is refreshingly reminiscent of the Gothic genre.
~
Paul Spencer Vickers, Department of English Literature, University College
London, UK.
Reading The Highgate Vampire was a fascinating experience. I found myself eager to turn each page as the momentum kept building with each new chapter.
~ Vincent Hillyer, arcanologist and author of Vampires, USA.
Superb.
~ Editor of Vampires, Dracula, Werewolves, Delectus Books, UK.