In 1663, Danish physician Thomas
Bartholin described a woman who „went up in ashes and smoke,“ while the
straw mattress on which she was lying asleep remained untouched by the
blaze. This strange incident, which took place in Paris, is thought to
be the first recorded account of the phenomenon we now know – but
scarcely understand – as spontaneous human combustion.
Most of the some 200 reported cases of spontaneous human combustion (SHC) share some similar characteristics.
First, the corpse is almost completely incinerated while the larger area around it remains undamaged; only the body itself, the floor below it and the ceiling above are affected.
A second common feature of SHC is that, of the human body parts, generally it is the torso that is most completely consumed, with any remains found among the extremities.
Spontaneous human combustion is the name
given to those rare instances when a person has gone up in flames and
been burnt to a cinder, with no apparent external heat source there to
have ignited them.
Characteristics:Most of the some 200 reported cases of spontaneous human combustion (SHC) share some similar characteristics.
First, the corpse is almost completely incinerated while the larger area around it remains undamaged; only the body itself, the floor below it and the ceiling above are affected.
A second common feature of SHC is that, of the human body parts, generally it is the torso that is most completely consumed, with any remains found among the extremities.
A third characteristic is that as well
as there being no evident external source for the blaze, there is
nothing present that might have served to accelerate the fire.
Finally, the victim is usually alone –
and often in their own home – when they meet their fiery end. They are
also held to have been alive when the fire started, yet signs of a
struggle are often scarce.
Theories:
There are a number of theories to
explain the phenomenon of spontaneous human combustion – paranormal
explanations as well as more widely accepted natural explanations
involving more or less verifiable phenomena.
Among the more plausible natural
explanations is the idea that victims – who tend to be old, infirm or
obese – are asleep, otherwise unable to move, or indeed have died from a
natural cause such as a heart attack, are then ignited by a heat source
– commonly a dropped cigarette.
A hypothesis known as the ‘wick effect’
suggests that some external spark or ember ignites the victim’s clothing
enough to split the skin below. The skin in turn releases body fat,
which works in a similar way to candle wax, seeping into the clothing –
which acts like a wick. The wick effect has been tested effectively
using pig tissue, and the human body does contain enough fat to fuel its
own combustion.
Other proponents of supposed spontaneous
human combustion have their own theories based on more ‘out there’
natural explanations. One of these suggests that particles such as gamma
rays might bring about SHC of the victim in an oxygen-free reaction –
but how this might work or where the energy comes from is yet to be
explained.
Yet another unobserved explanation is
that abnormally high levels of alcohol in the blood reach the point it
ignites spontaneously – however, the lethal concentrations of alcohol
this would require render the theory extremely implausible.
A third idea is that the spark from a
buildup of static electricity ignites the clothing of the victim –
though it’s highly unlikely that this could start the kinds of deadly
infernos that have claimed hundreds of lives.
Cases:
7. Mary Hardy Reeser (d. 1951)
In 1951, the burnt remains of
67-year-old Mary Reeser, of St. Petersburg, Florida, were found in the
chair in which she’d been sitting, with nothing left behind but her
shrunken skull, part of her beslippered left foot, and her backbone.
While Reeser’s body had been almost totally cremated, there was little
damage to the room – certainly not the sort one would expect from a
typical house fire.
Local police chief J.R. Reichert sent a
box of evidence to the FBI along with a note that read: „We request any
information or theories that could explain how a human body could be so
destroyed and the fire confined to such a small area and so little
damage done to the structure of the building and the furniture in the
room not even scorched or damaged by smoke.“ The FBI in turn subscribed
to the wick effect theory, with a cigarette held to have set fire to
Reeser’s nightgown.
6. John Irving Bentley (d. 1966)
John Irving Bentley was a 92-year-old
Pennsylvania physician who was found dead (by a man who came to read his
meter) having burnt to death in his bathroom. The only remaining part
of Bentley’s body was his lower right leg, with the foot still wearing a
slipper. The body had burned through the bathroom floor such that the
cremated remains landed in the basement below. One theorist believes
that burning embers from Bentley’s pipe had fallen amongst his clothes
and that matches in the pocket may have helped fuel the blaze. What
appears to have been a broken water pitcher was found in the bathtub,
suggesting that Bentley tried to put out the fire but likely fainted
before he could do so.
5. Henry Thomas (d. 1980)
Seventy-three-year-old Henry Thomas was
found in his living room in Wales almost completely incinerated – except
for his clothed feet, and legs below the knee, and his skull. Half the
chair he was sat in was also destroyed and the heat had melted the
controls of a television set in the room.
Policeman John E Heymer noted: „The
living room was bathed in an orange glow, coming from windows and a
lightbulb. This orange light was the result of daylight and electric
light being filtered by evaporated human fat which had condensed on
their surfaces. The remainder of the house was completely undamaged.”
The forensic team claimed the death was the result of the wick effect,
suggesting that Thomas had fallen into the fireplace and set himself
alight before sitting down again. However, Heymer argued against this,
saying the oxygen in the sealed room would not have permitted the wick
effect, and pointed to the burnt “fringe” of the victim’s trousers legs –
“as though the clothes had been burned through with a laser beam.”
4. George Mott (d. 1986)
Nothing but a shrunken skull and a piece
of rib cage were found after George Mott, a 58-year-old firefighter
from New York, burnt to a crisp along with the mattress on which he had
been lying. Investigators put forward the idea that an electrical arc
might have jumped from the wall socket or else that a gas leak may have
been to blame. Mott was believed to have been a heavy drinker and smoker
and moreover was not wearing the oxygen mask he used at the time of his
death, though the oxygen machine was present in his home.
3. Jeannie Saffin (d. 1982)
One of the few cases of death by
spontaneous human combustion in which a witness was present involved
Jeannie Saffin, a 61-year-old woman with the mental age of a
six-year-old. Saffin was sitting with her 82-year-old father in their
home in London when, according to the father’s testimony, he caught a
glimpse of a flash of light. Upon turning towards his daughter, he saw
that she was covered in flames but was motionless and making no attempt
to put out the fire herself. He tried to douse the flames, apparently
damaging his own hands in the process. Jeannie suffered third-degree
burns to the upper part of her body, but while still alive after the
incident, she died in hospital a week later later.
2. Michael Faherty (d. 2010)
Michael Faherty, a 76-year-old Irishman,
was found burnt to death, with his head near an open fireplace, in his
living room in Galway. Damage was limited to the ceiling overhead, the
floor beneath him, and the body itself, which was totally incinerated.
The police, however, did not believe the open fire was the source of the
blaze. The coroner stated: „This fire was thoroughly investigated and
I’m left with the conclusion that this fits into the category of
spontaneous human combustion, for which there is no adequate
explanation.“ Notwithstanding, others believe some heat source, such as
an ember from the fire, must have been responsible.
1. Robert Bailey (d. 1967)
In an eerie case of spontaneous human
combustion that took place in London, a bus passenger saw blue flames in
the upper window of an apartment and presumed it was a gas jet. The
witness called the fire department, and a homeless man, Robert Bailey,
was found dead on the smouldering stairs inside the building. A
firefighter reported that the blue flames – which they extinguished with
a hose – were coming from a slit in Bailey’s abdomen and that he had
been alive when he started burning, before dying his agonizing death.
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