There’s a curious gravesite in Malew Churchyard on the Isle of Man. The burial plot is cornered by four iron stakes, draped with heavy chains. A huge slate slab covers the grave. It remains a mystery as to exactly why these chains were placed here back in the 1850s, but they still stand to this day.
The grave belongs to Mathew and Margaret Hassal, husband and wife. Little is known about the couple, but their unusual resting place is seeped in myth. The most popular theory being that this is the grave of a vampire.
According to the legend, an ungodly groan was heard coming from Mr. Hassal during his wake, which panicked those attending to the extent that chains were placed around the grave to keep the vampire from rising again. Allegedly a stake was also driven through his heart before his re-burial… just in case.
Another speculative theory, however, is that Mr. Hassal’s death was a suicide, which would have forbade him from being buried on consecrated ground. Some suggest that the grave was dug from behind the stone wall that marks the church boundary as a sort of middle-ground compromise. The chains and stakes, however, remain a mystery.
Know Before You Go
Viewable in the old churchyard, and can actually be seen from the road (A3); you need only climb over a small stile to access it.
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