
Christ Church Parish Church
The
Chase Vault is a burial vault in the cemetery of the
Christ Church
Parish Church
in Oistins
, Christ
Church
, Barbados
. It
is best known for a series of unexplained incidents in the early
19th century involving the
coffins within the
vault. Each time when the vault was opened to bury a family member,
all coffins but one had changed position. When this had happened
several times without explanation over a number of years, the vault
was eventually abandoned.
History
Over the years, different versions and variations of the tale have
been published. But the core story has remained consistent and is
generally told as follows.
The Chase Vault was constructed for
James
Elliot around 1724. The vault was built such that it was
partially underground. It was approximately long and 6 1/2 feet
wide. However, Elliot was never interred there, and the vault
remained empty until Thomasina Goddard was interred on
31 July 1807.
Sometime in 1808, the
vault was acquired by the Chase family, a fairly wealthy and
important clan in Barbados
. Some
writers state that the patriarch of the family, Thomas Chase, was
one of the most hated men on the island. One example is the account
in
The People's Almanac: "The head of the family, a man
with a vicious temper, was so cruel to his slaves that they had
threatened his life."David Wallenchinsky and Irving Wallace,
The People's Almanac (Garden City: Doubleday and Co.,
1975), p. 1366 ISBN 0-385-04060-1
On
22 February 1808
the body of Thomas Chase's infant daughter, Mary Ann Maria Chase,
was taken to the vault for burial. When the vault was opened,
Goddard's wooden casket was found to be undisturbed. The vault was
then opened on
6 July 1812 to bury Thomas Chase's other daughter, Dorcas
Chase. Both Goddard's and Mary Chase's caskets were found to be
undisturbed at this time. Both of the Chase girls were interred in
heavy lead caskets.
One month later, on
9 August 1812, the vault was opened again to accept the body of
Thomas Chase himself. It was at this time that the caskets of the
Chase girls were found to be displaced; however the account in the
People's Almanac states that Mary's coffin was discovered
to have been displaced when the vault was opened to inter Dorcas.
According to reports, Mary Chase's casket was thrown from the
north-east corner of the vault to the opposite corner such that it
was standing on end, head downward. It was assumed the disturbance
was the result of vandals or thieves. As such, the caskets were
reordered and the large marble slab covering the entrance put back
in place.
The vault was opened again on
25
September 1816 to accept the body of
another infant, Samuel Brewster Ames. The coffins, with the
exception of Thomasina Goddard's, were again found to have been
disturbed. Thomas Chase's coffin was supposedly so heavy, it took
eight men to move it. Once again, the coffins were reordered, some
of them stacked on others in the small vault, and the entrance
sealed.
On
17 November 1816,
the vault was opened again to accept the body of Samuel Brewster.
Once again, the coffins were found to be in disarray throughout the
vault. For the third time, the coffins were moved back to their
original positions and the vault sealed.
The vault was opened again on
17 July
1819, to accept the body of Thomasina Clark.
Again, the coffins were found scattered. By this time, the
mysterious incidents attracted the attention of local officials.
Lord
Combermere,
Governor of Barbados,
was reported to have attended Clark's burial. The Chase Vault was
carefully examined by the Governor and his staff. No secret
entrance into the vault was detected, and sand was scattered across
the floor to detect any footprints. The coffins were reordered and
Clark's wooden casket placed in the vault. It was reported that
Goddard's wooden casket was falling to pieces, either through decay
or because of the activity in the vault. The remains of her casket
were tied together and placed against a wall. Finally, the vault
was closed and the marble slab cemented in place. The Governor and
his staff reportedly placed their official seals in the cement to
ensure the integrity of the seal.
On
18 April 1820, some
eight months after the burial of Thomasina Clark, the vault was
ordered to be reopened. The seals were found to be intact, but when
the entrance slab was moved the coffins, with the exception of
Goddard's wooden casket, were again found to be in disarray. The
account in
The People's Almanac includes the macabre
detail that "a bony arm, that of Dorcas Chase, [was] sticking out a
hole in the side of the coffin." The sand on the floor did not show
any kind of human activity within the vault. There was also no
indication of flooding or earthquake.
After this incident, the vault was abandoned, and the coffins were
buried elsewhere. The vault still exists today at Christ Church
Parish Church, and is still vacant.
Similar events have been reported from the older Williams
Vault.
Origins of the story
The story of the Chase Vault appears to originate from Thomas H.
Orderson, Rector of Christ Church during the period of the
unexplained incidents. Orderson gave several accounts to inquiries,
each of which had some variation of the tale. The first published
account of the moving coffins was by Sir J. E. Alexander's
Transatlantic Sketches (1833). It appears that most
subsequent writers referred to sources that could be traced back to
one of Orderson's accounts. In December 1907,
Andrew Lang published an account in
Foke-Lore Journal, where he related his attempt to
determine the veracity of the Chase Vault incident by combing
through existing documentation. Lang was the one who identified the
multiple accounts made by Orderson. Lang also found that the burial
register of Christ Church, as well as contemporary
newspapers on Barbados, made
no note of the mysterious events. He did, however, come across an
unpublished firsthand account by a Nathan Lucas, who claimed to be
present at the opening of the vault in April 1820. The basic facts
of the story are therefore unverifed, though the empty vault
remains otherwise unexplained.
Masonic links
Modern author
Joe Nickell argues that
none of this incident happened in the real world. The available
accounts are loaded with symbols and phrases which
Freemasons would recognize.
Nickell, who had
investigated an earlier alleged Masonic hoax involving a tale of
buried treasure at Oak
Island
, contends the Barbados story was fashioned around
the Masonic allegory of a "secret vault" which, according to a
Masonic text, "was ... in the ancient mysteries, symbolic of death,
where alone Divine Truth is to be found .... We
significantly speak of the place of initiation as 'the secret
vault, where reign silence, secrecy and darkness.' It is in this
sense of an entrance through the grave into eternal life, that the
Select Master is to view the recondite but beautiful symbolism of
the secret vault. Like every other myth and allegory of Masonry,
the historical relation may be true or it may be false; it may be
founded on fact or the invention of imagination; the lesson is
still there, and the symbolism teaches it exclusive of the
history."
Along with other suggestive evidence Nickell quotes these words
from Nathan Lucas: "I examined the walls, the arch and every part
of the vault and found every part old and similar; and a mason in
my presence struck every part of the bottom with his hammer and all
was solid." Nickell remarks, "In the Royal Arch degree of Masonry –
to which the 'arch' above may have been in cryptic reference (just
as the 'vault' suggests the 'secret vault' which, in Masonry, is
said to have been 'curiously arched') – there is a reference to the
'sound of a hammer'. According to Macoy's
Illustrated History
and Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, 'The blow of the Master's
hammer commands industry, silence, or the close of labour, and
every brother respects or honors its sound."' He goes on to quote
from the Royal Arch decree ("We have examined the secret vault")
and notes that the striking of stone to determine its solidness" is
the means by which the secret vault is sought for and finally
located!"
References
- Gould, Rupert T. Oddities. New York: Paperback
Library, 1969.
External links
- http://home.chattanooga.net/~henson3/cof.html
- http://www.horrormasters.com/Text/a2782.pdf
- http://www.castleofspirits.com/coffins.html
- http://www.qsl.net/w5www/coffins.html
- http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Meteor/9175/
-
http://www.caribbeantravelforums.com/Chase_Vault/ChaseCryptofBarbados.htm
- http://www.dexterdyne.org/402.HTM
- http://www.skygaze.com/content/strange/MovingCoffins.shtml