In Victorian Britain, medical schools faced a critical shortage of bodies for anatomy teaching, leading to a thriving illegal trade where body snatchers dug up fresh corpses from graves and sold them to anatomists. Families responded by building iron mort safes, watchtowers, and locked vaults to protect their dead, but protection was a privilege only the wealthy could afford. The Anatomy Act of 1832 ended the illegal trade by providing legal bodies from unclaimed paupers, but this solution was deeply disturbing because it effectively legalized the exploitation of the poor, whose bodies were now taken by the state rather than stolen by grave robbers.
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10 British Graves That Were Locked Shut (The Reason Will Disturb You)Hinzugefügt:
There's a grave in Edinburgh with an iron cage bolted over it, not to keep something out, but because of what someone wanted to take.
There is a churchyard in Aberdeenshire where families paid to lock their dead inside a metal box and lifted it off again 6 weeks later.
And there was a time in Britain when a fresh corpse could be worth more than months of a laborer's wages. And the law did almost nothing to stop men digging them up. These are 10 British graves that were locked shut. And the reason will disturb you.
For about 50 years, Britain had a problem it did not like to talk about.
Its medical schools needed bodies to teach anatomy, but the law would only give them the corpses of executed criminals. And as the schools grew and the hangings fell, the gap was filled by men who dug the recently buried out of their graves and sold them by freshness, by the night, for sums that could change a poor man's life.
The people of Britain fought back the only ways they could, with iron, with stone, with watchtowers and locked vaults and shifts of grieving relatives standing guard over fresh soil through the night.
The evidence is still there today in churchyards from Perthshire to London, rusted, half-forgotten, and far stranger than anything folklore ever invented.
This is a countdown of 10 of them, the cages, the boxes, the towers, and the law that finally ended it all by doing something almost worse.
We begin at number 10.
If you have ever walked past an odd iron structure in an old graveyard and wondered what on earth it was for, keep watching. You are about to find out.
Number 10.
The iron cages of Greyfriars in Edinburgh. Walk into Greyfriars Kirkyard in the center [music] of Edinburgh.
Go past the famous statue of the little dog, and a few yards from the entrance you will find them.
Two iron cages, low to the ground, bolted shut over graves. Visitors assume they are decorative, Victorian railings perhaps, some Gothic flourish.
They are nothing of the sort. They are mortsafes.
And the word tells you everything. Mort, from the French for death. Safe, as in a thing that locks. A safe for the dead.
Greyfriars was one of the most notorious hunting grounds in all of Scotland for the men who stole bodies.
The kirkyard sat surrounded by the medical schools of Edinburgh, the hungriest market for fresh corpses anywhere in Britain.
To be buried here in the 1820s was to be buried within a short walk of the very people who would pay good money to have you dug up again.
So, the cages were not paranoia.
They were a calm, reasonable response to a real and constant threat. And the only reason they survive at all is that for a while, that threat was simply a fact of dying in this city.
You buried your dead, and then you locked them in. Number nine, the shared cages of Logierait in Perthshire.
In the Perthshire village of Logierait stand some of the finest surviving mortsafes in the country.
Heavy iron frames built to be lowered over a coffin and locked into place.
But Logierait shows us something the Greyfriars cages do not.
It shows us how ordinary people actually afforded protection, because a mortsafe was expensive. The iron alone was costly.
The locking mechanisms were skilled, time-consuming work. And most families could never have bought one outright.
So, they shared.
Across Scotland, parishes formed what were called mortsafe societies, groups who pulled their money to buy one or two cages for the whole community.
When a member died, the cage was lowered over the new grave and locked.
It stayed there for 6 weeks, maybe 2 months, long enough for the body inside to decay past the point where any anatomist would want it.
Then it was lifted off, cleaned, and made ready for the next death.
Some societies even rented their cages out to non-members and quietly turned a small profit from other people's grief.
Think about what that really means.
Protection from the body snatchers was not a right in Britain.
It was a subscription.
You paid in or you took your chances.
Number eight.
The private mort safes of Cluny in Aberdeenshire.
Back in Aberdeenshire at Cluny, the mort safes tell a different story again.
And this one is about money.
Most mort safes were communal, shared by a whole parish out of necessity.
But the examples at Cluny include mort safes that were bought privately by individual families for their own exclusive use. In a world where almost everyone queued for the shared parish cage, a private mort [music] safe was a statement. It said that this family could afford to protect its own dead permanently without sharing and without waiting in line behind the deaths of strangers.
And that is the thread that runs through this whole story.
Hold on to it as the countdown goes on.
The dead of Britain were not all at equal risk. The grave you could lock depended entirely on the money you had while you were alive.
The wealthy slept safe behind their own iron. Everyone else hoped for the best.
Number seven.
The over coffin safe at Bolton in East Lothian.
In the church porch of a small village called Bolton in East Lothian, hangs the finest surviving example of a completely different kind of mort safe.
And it is worth understanding how it actually worked.
Because the design is grimly, brilliantly clever.
The Greyfriars cages sat over the grave like a fence.
The Bolton type was a sheath. A heavy iron case that slid over the coffin itself, fitted with iron rods and specially made nuts and spanners that were tightened shut underground.
To open it again, you needed the matching set of tools.
A body snatcher arriving in the dark would hit solid iron. He would find nothing to grip and nothing to lever.
And he would run out of darkness long before he ran out of grave. And he would have arrived carrying a wooden spade.
That is not a slip of the tongue.
The men who robbed graves used spades carved from wood, not metal.
Because wood made almost no sound biting into soil and stone.
Everything about their craft was built for silence and for speed. A single hole dug at the head of the grave. A hook, a rope, a body drawn out through the dark in minutes.
And everything about the mortsafe [music] was built to defeat exactly that. To take away the one thing the snatcher could not afford to lose. Time.
Number six.
The mortstone of Inverurie, Aberdeenshire.
Before the iron cages, there was a cheaper idea.
And the cheaper idea is the one people tend to remember.
Because of how spectacularly it failed.
It was called a mortstone. And at Inverurie in Aberdeenshire, you can still see one.
Along with something even rarer that survives beside it, the iron tackle. The lifting gear that was needed to move these things at all.
Because a mortstone was exactly what it sounds like. An enormous slab of solid rock laid flat over a fresh grave.
>> [music] >> So heavy that no man could lift it off by hand.
There was just one flaw.
>> [music] >> And the body snatchers found it almost at once. They did not lift the stone.
They dug beside it. They sank a shaft at an angle next to the great slab.
They broke into the side of the coffin underground. And they drew the body out sideways.
While the huge, expensive, protective stone sat undisturbed on top. Faithfully guarding nothing at all.
The mortstone is a monument to a very particular kind of human failure. A heavy, costly, perfectly logical answer.
>> [music] >> To entirely the wrong question.
And it is the reason the iron cage had to be invented in the first place.
If this is the Britain you were never [music] taught about in school, the one made of iron cages and shared coffins and grieving families doing whatever they could against [music] a trade that nobody in authority would properly stop, then take a second now to subscribe.
This channel is built on exactly this.
>> [snorts] >> The strange, the documented, [music] and the deliberately forgotten history that never makes it into the tidy version.
Because from here the countdown changes.
So far, we have looked at the things people [music] built to protect the dead.
From number five on, we look at what they were protecting them from.
At the men who did the digging.
And at the lengths [music] the living would go to when iron and stone were not enough. And yes, you may already know the most infamous names of all, Burke and Hare.
The two men in Edinburgh who skipped the digging altogether and simply murdered 16 people to sell their [music] bodies fresh.
But here is the thing worth understanding.
Burke and Hare were the monstrous exception. [music] They were not the rule.
The real trade was quieter, larger, and in many ways far more disturbing than two killers in a lodging [music] house.
Because it was carried out night after night by ordinary men against ordinary families all across the country.
This is [music] that bigger story.
Number five, the watchtower of St. Cuthbert's in Edinburgh.
In the kirkyard of St. Cuthbert's in Edinburgh stands a squat stone watchtower. It was built in 1827 and it was not built to defend against any army.
It was built so that ordinary people could sit [music] through the night and guard their own dead.
This was the answer for everyone who could not afford a cage.
There was no iron to lock over the grave. So instead, family and neighbors took it in shifts.
Climbing the tower, huddling in the watchhouse, watching the fresh plots until the body below was old enough to be worthless.
Armed guards sometimes fired warning shots across the graveyard to scare off anyone creeping between the stones.
>> [music] >> And the ground floor of towers like this was sometimes used to store the bodies themselves until they were finally safe to bury.
Imagine that for a moment. You have just buried someone you love and instead of being allowed to grieve, you spend [music] the next several weeks sitting out in the cold and the dark staring at their grave.
Because you know, with total certainty, that if you look away for a single night, men will come and carry them off.
That was the reality for thousands upon thousands of British families. Not a ghost story, not folklore, just the price of keeping your own dead where you had laid them.
And the fury this trade could provoke was old, far older than the cages, the towers, or the names you know.
To see how deep it ran, you have to leave the mortsafe era behind entirely and travel back almost 100 years attend >> [music] >> to 1742 and Edinburgh's very first anatomy riot.
It began over the body of a small boy named Gaston, dug up to be sold for dissection.
The city erupted. Mobs roamed the streets for weeks, >> [music] >> tearing apart the homes of anyone they suspected of the trade.
When a man named John Samuel was finally brought to trial for carrying the boy's body into the city, the court could not prove he had done the digging.
So, for the lesser charge, he was given a punishment designed for maximum public humiliation. [music] By most accounts, he was whipped through the streets of Edinburgh in front of a roaring crowd and then banished from Scotland for 7 years.
The bodies had been valuable for as long as the medical schools had existed and so had the rage of the families who lost them. Number four, the mort house of Udny in Aberdeenshire.
Not far away, the village of Udny holds something stranger still.
A round, squat, windowless stone building known as the Udny Moorhouse.
It was, in plain terms, a bank vault for corpses.
The principle behind it was simple and bleak.
A body was only valuable to an anatomist while it was fresh. So, the community built a strong, locked, guarded house.
When someone died, the body was placed inside it instead of in the ground.
It waited there, under lock and key, for weeks until decomposition had quietly made it useless to the trade. Only then was it taken out and finally buried, safe at last, precisely because it was no longer worth stealing.
A loved one held in storage, not out of cruelty, but out of love, kept from the earth until the earth was the safest place left for them.
The minutes of the committee that ran the Oddny Moorhouse stop in around 1836.
The whole apparatus had become pointless, almost overnight.
Because by then, something had changed in the law, something that made the cages and the towers and the vaults completely unnecessary.
We will come to what that change was, but hold on to that date, 1836, because the reason this mort house fell silent is the single most disturbing part of this entire story.
And it is waiting for us at number one.
Number three, the London gangs and the men who fed the surgeons.
So far, this story has been mostly a Scottish one.
Because Scotland's deep reverence for the dead, combined with its great medical schools, made the fight there especially fierce.
But England had precisely the same trade, and London had it worse than anywhere.
At the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in London, a watch house built in 1761 still stands.
Put up for the express purpose of posting a night watchman against the resurrection men.
And in London, the snatchers were not desperate amateurs [music] scraping at the soil.
They were organized gangs who ran the work like a business.
The most notorious was the Borough gang.
And the records of what they took are almost beyond belief.
On a single night in 1812, one London gang lifted 13 adult bodies and two children out of the ground.
And to understand how respectable the other end of this trade was, consider a snatcher named Thomas Vaughan who worked the church yards of Great Yarmouth.
Vaughan dug up at least 10 bodies, two of them children, packed them in sawdust, and shipped them to London in crates.
And his customer was no backstreet quack.
Vaughan supplied Sir Astley Cooper, one of the most celebrated surgeons in the country, and surgeon to King George [music] IV himself.
So, the bodies of the Norfolk poor, dug from their graves in the dark, were ending up on the dissecting tables of the men who treated kings.
Vaughan was only caught when a woman he knew betrayed him.
And it was a fresh body that finally broke the whole trade open.
In 1831, a London gang who came to be known as the London Burkers, men who, like Burke and Hare before them, had crossed the line from digging to murder, tried to sell the body of a boy of around 14 to King's College.
The corpse was suspiciously, impossibly fresh.
A sharp-eyed anatomist refused to look the other way.
He raised the alarm and the whole gang unraveled.
The boy was never properly identified.
History remembers him only as the Italian boy.
His death and the outrage that followed it helped push Parliament towards the law that would end the trade for good.
These men were despised.
Discovery could mean a riot, a beating, sometimes death at the hands of a furious crowd, and still they kept digging because the money was extraordinary, and because, as we are about to see, the law had left a gap so absurd that body snatching was barely a crime at all.
Number two, the grave that had no law to protect it.
Here is the single detail that, once you know it, changes the way you see every cage, every tower, and every locked vault in this entire video.
Stealing a dead body was not a crime.
In British law, a corpse belonged to no one.
It was not property.
It could not be owned.
So, a man who dug up your dead mother and carried her off to be cut apart on a dissecting table, had, in the strict eye of the law, stolen nothing at all.
And he could not be charged with theft.
What was a crime was stealing property from a grave.
And the only property in a grave was the shroud the body had been buried in.
So, the resurrection men adapted. With a logic that is genuinely sickening to follow, they stripped the body naked there in the dark. And they tossed the shroud back down into the open grave.
Cuz that scrap of cloth was the one and only thing that could send them to prison. They carried off the person, and they left the clothes behind.
In the eyes of British law, the shroud had more protection than the human being it had been wrapped around.
That is what the families of this country were truly up against. Not merely grave robbers in the night, but a legal system that valued a sheet of burial cloth more highly than their dead. Number one, the law that emptied the graves.
The Anatomy Act of 1832.
So, how did it all end?
The cages, the towers, the mort houses, the long, cold nights of the graveside watch.
All of it stopped within just a few short years in the 1830s.
And the reason is the most disturbing thing in this entire story.
In 1832, Parliament passed the Anatomy Act.
On its surface, the Act solved the problem cleanly.
It handed the medical schools a legal supply of bodies, so they no longer needed to buy from the men with the wooden spades.
The illegal trade collapsed almost at once.
The mort house at Ardn fell silent by 1836.
The cages came [music] off the graves and were never replaced. Many were simply scrapped for their iron.
And one in Aberdeenshire ended its long life as a drinking trough for cattle in a field.
But look closely at where the new legal bodies were to come from.
The Anatomy Act allowed the dissection of anybody that lay unclaimed after death. And in practice, that meant one group of people above all others, the poor, who died in the workhouse.
A workhouse master could now hand over the body of someone who had died in his care to be dissected without even notifying their family as long as no [music] one came forward to claim them. And the very poor frequently could not afford to claim or to bury their own dead at all.
The ordinary people of Britain exactly what had been done to them.
They even had their own grim language for it. They drew a hard line between a pauper funeral and an anatomical burial, between being buried and being cut apart.
Dying in the workhouse had always been a thing to dread. Now it carried a fresh and specific horror. The knowledge that the moment you died with no money and no family to claim you, your body might suddenly be worth more than you had ever been allowed to be while you were alive.
So the grave robbing stopped. But it did not stop because Britain had decided at last that the bodies of the poor were sacred. It [music] stopped because the state had found a way to take them legally, quietly, by paperwork and by signature [music] from the people least able to say no.
The cages at Greyfriars were built by frightened families afraid that someone would come in the night and steal their dead.
The law that made those cages unnecessary simply did the taking in broad daylight with a stamp and a form and called it progress.
And in one shape [music] or another, that law stayed on the books of this country well into the 20th century.
What links every [music] grave in this video is not really iron or stone or the men with the wooden spades.
>> [music] >> In the end, it is money.
Whether your dead stayed in the ground or vanished in the night came down to one thing, what you could afford.
A private cage of your own, a share in the parish one, or nothing at all but your own body sitting watch in the cold until the danger passed.
And when the law finally stepped in to settle the matter once and for all, it settled it the same way everything else had been settled against the poor.
>> [music] >> There is an old churchyard near you, go and look for these things, the cages, the heavy slabs, the little watch houses standing by the gate.
A surprising number of them survive [music] unremarked and unexplained all over Britain.
If you have seen one, tell us where in the comments below. We read every single one and subscribe for more of the Britain that is still standing in plain sight, the strange, the buried, [music] and the deliberately forgotten.
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