Below are a few incidents at Hopwas woods. All potential material for urban legends. I’ll keep adding any more incidents I find out about to this post. That will be a feature of the blog, I’ll be adding and substracting from posts, it’s not publish the post and move on. I’ll be going back and forth like with any creation and that includes comments that want to add or take away.
>In 1999 nine limousin cattle escaped from a farm at Hints and took refuge at Hopwas wood. There was TV and press coverage and an army of a 100 soldiers, marksmen and mounted police hunting the cattle. Four were shot dead but there was a public outcry and the remaining five were caught and taken to Hillside Animal sanctuary
limousin cow
>>deaths at Hopwas woods. In 1814 or thereabouts; body found by canal at Hopwas Hay with the details Unknown by unknown. When I was a kid heard about a death of a boy at the disused quarry workings in the wood, I remember because my brother told me while climbing among the disused quarry(was it just a story) I recall reading in the local newspaper someone committing suicide by hanging in the wood a few years back.
>> June 1984 police swoop in on 16 naked witches dancing and chanting around a fire in a clearing in a wood-that was how the tamworth herald reported it. The truth was more swingeresque. It was the order of the silver star a group who believe in astrology and were trying to avert a disasters with stars or something, but why Hopwas? This has settled in the local consciousness somewhat. With people talking about witches and the occult in Hopwas.
Came to the Blog via BrownhillsBob and noticed the mention of Hopwas Wood. After taking this picture from Hopwas Bridge…
http://www.panoramio.com/photo/32921218
I came across the story that you quote. I also found…
“Set in the heart of Hopwas Wood, in the rural Midlands, Smith begins his eerie tale of satanic urges…First published back in 1975, The Sucking Pit was Guy N. Smith’s second published novel, following the release of his debut novel Werewolf By Moonlight in 1974. The Sucking Pit was soon to be haled as an all-time pulp horror classic and subsequently saw itself re-issued in 1978 and 1989. Even a board game of the spectacular Sucking Pit adventures was contrived at one stage, but only on a very minimal scale”.
Witchcraft in Hopwas woods near Tamworth, Staffordshire
http://www.reviewcentre.com/reviews78413.html
Regards Pedro
[…] 26, 2010 by lorenzor Continuing with the theme of an earlier post, here are a few more stories of woe from Hopwas Woods spanning six […]