A bomber and a bottle
Watching the detectives
Get the overview of History Detectives and find out more about the series.
Call in the army
Old soldiers may never die, but their fading away can present a problem if you're tracing military records.
Starting at the end
The deceased speak to us in ways you might find surprising - follow some deathly clues.
A new look at the High Street
We've expanded and revised our guide to the everyday clues to the past. Explore the new High Street History.
The cases
In 1944 Angus McFadyen, then aged 16, watched a Lancaster bomber plough into a hillside by Loch Lomond. Local aviation enthusiasts have managed to recover a lot of the wreckage, but haven’t been able to determine the cause of the crash. 63 years after it happened, and using the expertise of one of the UK’s leading air accident investigators, Claire Barratt pieces together what took place and the staggering loss of life to overstretched and undertrained aircrew as the Second World War drew to its close.
In Suffolk a man has found a sealed bottle buried under his fireplace. He thinks it is a witch bottle and is so afraid of its contents he won’t have it opened. What is a witch bottle? And is this one? Jeevan reveals the tale of the Witch-finder General and the legacy of witchcraft and superstition he left behind.
Along the way the programme supplies some useful information about how to date and preserve paper and ink.
The clues
(some resources that the History Detectives used in the programme)
The Lancaster bomber
Links
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission
The Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB)
Library and Archives of Canada
Organisations
Dumfries and Galloway Aviation Museum
Aviation archaeology and World War II crash sites
Military aircraft crash Sites – Archaeological guidance on their significance and future management
English Heritage, 2002
British Aviation Archaeology Council (BAAC) – the BAAC is the official national body in the UK for aviation archaeologists and researchers of military crashes.
Institute of Field Archaeologists (IFA)
A professional body for Archaeologists which promotes best practice in Archaeology. Their advice relates to Aviation Archeology.
The RAF Museum Department of Research and Information Services in Hendon is responsible for the Museum’s Archive and Library Collection and is open to the public by appointment only: tel: 020 8205 2266
The Royal Air Force Personnel Management Agency is responsible for licensing aircraft excavations. Address:
PMA IM1b (RAF)
Room 5
Building 248A
Personnel Management Agency
Innsworth
Gloucester GL3 1EZ
The Fleet Air Arm Museum holds a wide range of documents from official and private sources related to British Naval Aviation. You may research in person or by post.
The witch bottle
Links
The Museum of Witchcraft houses the world's largest collection of witchcraft related artefacts and regalia.
Documents
The Discovery of Witches
Matthew Hopkins and David Ryan (Ed), Caliver Books
"Ritual Marks on Historic Timber", Weald and Downland Museum Magazine, Spring Ed, 22–28
Timothy Easton, 1999
"Ritual Marks on Historic Timber" Third Stone: Archaeology, Folklore and Myth 38. 11–17
Timothy Easton, 2000.
Organisations
The Society of Architectural Historians
Architectural Historians to help date your house.
The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
(Available in public libraries or online by subscription) for information about Matthew Hopkins, the Witch Finder General.
Content last updated: 03/07/2007








