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Radio ghost mystery at former RAF station

World War Two radio continues to pick up vintage broadcasts despite not having any power.

04 June 2010 11:57 GMT

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Radio ghost mystery at former RAF station

Radio mystery: The Pye wireless with Marie Paton whose father owned it

A 70-year-old radio at a Scottish heritage centre has been picking up vintage broadcasts featuring Winston Churchill and the music of Glen Miller.

The Pye valve wireless at Montrose Air Station, a heritage centre that tells the story of the men and women who served there, has no power and is not connected to any source of electricity.

The aerodrome has been a source of paranormal sightings and sounds for almost a century, with reports of ghostly figures, eerie footsteps and door handles turning, but the mysterious wireless broadcasts have had even the most sceptical staff at the station searching for a rational explanation.

The vintage radio set is kept in a recreation of a 940s room. Several people have heard Second World War era broadcasts including the big band sound of the Glenn Miller orchestra and speeches by Winston Churchill. The broadcasts come on at random and can last for up to half an hour.

Technicians who examined it removed the back, but found "nothing but cobwebs and spiders".

MORE MYSTERIOUS SCOTLAND

Bob Sutherland, a trustee of the air station heritage centre and its treasurer, said: "I have heard it playing Glenn Miller and recognised the song as At Last.

"The volume was very low but the music was quite identifiable.

"Graham Phillip, another volunteer, has heard what he was sure was Winston Churchill and others, including centre curator Dan Paton and his wife, have heard it.

"I was a wireless operator with the RAF and know a bit about them. We have also had our resident radio expert, Ewan Cameron, look at it.

"If we had a powerful transmitter in the area the radio might pick up something, but we don't.

"It is an old Pye radio which would probably explode if it was switched on."

Mr Phillip said: "We have all heard the footsteps and seen door handles turn but the wireless is something new and unexplainable.

"It's not just one of us who's heard it - most of us here have. We are talking about highly educated, reliable people.

"My wife Aileen was with me when we heard the Glenn Miller Orchestra last weekend. She's a physicist and not predisposed to believing in things like this but no-one has an explanation.

"If there was a transmitter nearby you'd think it might pick up Radio One or something, but I know what we heard. It went on for half an hour on and off. But the aerial is out anyway.

"We've had the back off and the technicians said there was nothing but cobwebs and spiders."


Volunteer Marie Paton, 67, whose father Jack Stoneman bought the wireless secondhand in 1962, said: "It's a bit scary. I thought someone was playing a prank on us but I heard it myself last Saturday.

"It plays Glenn Miller, and that's what everyone has heard. It is very faint and you have to put your ear to it, but that's what it's playing. All the experts say it should be impossible.

The wireless broadcasts join a long list of mysteries at the air station, where the heritage centre is in the original headquarters building. Visitors have reported strange "energies" around the airfield, phantom footsteps, doors opening and shutting, the sound of aircraft engines, shadowy figures walking in and out of rooms and even the sighting of a pilot in full flying kit.

The most notorious were the sightings of Lieutenant Desmond Arthur of the Royal Flying Corps who was killed when his biplane crashed.
He is said to have haunted the area until honour was satisfied in 1917, when a government inquiry concluded that he had not been killed by his own foolhardiness but because of poor repairs to his plane.

Peter Davis, 65, the heritage centre's secretary, added: "It is most odd and we cannot understand it. The station has a very abnormal presence. Several paranormal groups have been in to investigate various things, but the wireless has everyone including our radio technicians stumped."

The air station was established in 1913 by the Royal Flying Corps as Britain's first operational military airfield. There are more details about the heritage centre at its website.
 

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  1. Default avatar

    1. 06 Jun 2010 03:21Lance L. Landon said

    I hope someone will record these broadcasts from the past for everyone to enjoy. Perhaps use a voice activated recorder.

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    2. 06 Jun 2010 11:15mfritz0 said

    This is lovely, I've had old styled crystal radio sets that would pick up stray radio signals and hauntingly play them while I was trying to sleep when I was a kid. It's a very scarey phenomenon indeed, especially if the signal is coming from over the horizon. Here it seems like a ghost may be reachinging into time and redirecting the radio energy, you may actually be hearing the real thing from way back then. It is said that we are all connected at the origin of the universe through time and space, perhaps this is evidence that the ghost is trying to pass on to us.

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    3. 07 Jun 2010 00:37CuriousYank said

    The article doesn't indicate what technology the radio uses - valves or crystals. I too had a crystal set as a child and it would pick up low-volume signals, so that may be an explanation.

    But a part of me that wants to believe the signals are somehow real ... Can any of the apparent broadcasts be co-ordinated with specific recordings of Sir Winston's speeches or Maj. Miller's broadcasts? If yes, that might point more towards the crystal-set hypothesis. But if no, the mystery becomes very, very deep. The idea that somewhere out there might be echoes of live broadcasts by the ORIGINAL Glenn Miller Orchestra is just overwhelming to this lifelong swing-music fan.

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    4. 07 Jun 2010 06:19RadioGent said

    @CuriousYank: Your answer is in the first paragraph:

    "The Pye valve wireless at Montrose Air Station..."

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  5. Default avatar

    5. 07 Jun 2010 14:25Garibaldi said

    Wonder if this is a prank or we'll see more of this kind of thing as 2012 approaches?

    A recording studio I worked in many years ago had an EMT echo plate which picked up german radio stations. The studio was Sound City in Van Nuys, California.

    Interesting...

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  6. Default avatar

    6. 07 Jun 2010 14:31Robin52 said

    Torchwood is already investigating.

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  7. Default avatar

    7. 08 Jun 2010 17:46Somewhat similar case said

    Here in the States, there was a case of an 1800's era gentlemen's club where similar things were seen and heard. Rather than radio, the sound most often described was the "cracking" sound of billiards being played.

    Scientists studying it came in and left recording devices, probably expecting nothing, but in the room that used to be the billiards room, they *recorded* the sounds onto cassette tape.

    The sounds were compared to a recording of folks playing pool...but they didn't match up well at all. One scientist suggested getting vintage balls (which back then given the club and what was known of it...would have been made of ivory of all things)

    They apparently managed to scrounge up a vintage table and balls (if I remember right the place had been turned into a period museum, so they may have had the original table/balls from the house) and recorded *those* sounds. When they compared those sounds to the ones obtained on the "haunted" site...they matched really well...well enough that a sound analyst who didn't know how the "haunted" recording had been obtained was willing to put out an affidavit saying it was 90% possible it had been played on the same table, etc.

    No evidence was ever found of any type of tampering or electronic device to play a recording to "fake" the sound..and interestingly enough, no one reported hearing anything in the room the day the equipment made the recording.

    The story was on a television show called Unsolved Mysteries -- you folks may want your scientists to compare notes with theirs.

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    8. 08 Jun 2010 21:31piero said

    The subject of anomalus radio communications is covere by one chapter of a book full of plenty interesting things. It is called "21 Days into the Afterlife", was written by a Medical Doctor and university professor, and it makes really an amazing read. The dook is available for free download at http://www.openmindsite.com/

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  9. Default avatar

    9. 10 Jun 2010 23:56CuriousYank said

    Thanks, RadioGent. Apologies for not reading closely enough :(

    I still wonder if there's some sort of "sympathetic" pickup akin to a crystal set. When I was at university I lived relatively near a radio transmitter; one day I accidentally let the jack to an unconnected set of earphones touch the base of a lamp and was able to hear that station's programmes quite clearly. My only explanation is that dissimilar metals in the earphone jack and lamp may have acted as a receiver.

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    10. 14 Jun 2010 14:40feedthereaper said

    There are dozens of reasons why a radio with no electric supply is able to pick up a broadcast. I think the key factors here that have to be investigated are what the radio station tuner is tuned into, and does it always broadcast old WW2 broadcasts.

    We have already had explanations for HOW it can broadcast, but what needs to be known is WHY it is broadcasting what it is, whether it also broadcasts modern day broadcasts and is it tuned into some unlicensed pirate radio that plays old classics from the war era.

    It also has to be asked how much of this could be less about genuine ghost hauntings, and more about boosting tourism numbers to the museum.

    But I have to say that if the evidence is how it appears in the article, it certainly arouses excitement in both believers who want to believe we are hearing "the other side" and scientists that can genuinely look into a challenging conundrum of why its picking up a signal, and why its such an old signal and not modern Radio One type hits.

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  11. Default avatar

    11. 21 Jul 2010 15:51AuraTodd said

    A lot of radio's have clear quartz crystals as they make good receivers. This explains the 'stone tape' theory, where ghostly sounds and images are heard/seen in houses. A lot of old houses have quartz in the brickwork and are able to pick up images and sounds from the past. Something we don't fully understand as yet.

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