The Haunting of the Who’d Have Thought It Inn

4 months ago
27

Tucked in the tranquil folds of Milton Combe, where West Devon’s hills cradle the River Tavy’s gentle flow, the Who’d Have Thought It Inn stands as a timeless haven, its ancient beams whispering tales of two spectral guardians—Abe Beer, the jovial landlord whose pipe smoke lingers in the taproom, and Captain Edmund Fairchild, a Royalist cavalier whose ghostly bell rings for ale and absolution. Since the 1500s, their benign hauntings have warmed the inn’s hearth, but in 1985, a brash landlord’s disregard for tradition sparked a night of reckoning, when these restless spirits unleashed a tempest of shattered glass and mournful chimes to reclaim their sacred ground. The inn’s flagstones still echo that stormy Halloween, a reminder that some bonds—to place, to memory—endure beyond death, binding the living to the past with a pint and a prayer.

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