Apparently, in the summer of 1940 a meeting of witches at the highest level -The so-called Great Circle or Grand Circle "in the town of New Forest with the aim of influencing distance in the brain of Hitler not to launch the invasion. You can not put into question the very effectiveness of English witches when they intended to refuse invasive, since the only other historical moments in which he called the Great Circle had been during the fight against the Armada and Napoleonic threat ... According to some authors, the meeting of witches in a coven night was held outdoors in a forest in Hampshire, where some of them were exhausted by the effort made magic, although some source raises the possibility that you die because of pneumonia contracted while dancing naked-as-ceremony required a particularly cold night. This sudden boom of everything that made reference to witches also caused a curious episode connected with the construction of an airfield for the U.S. Air Force in Boreham, near the English town of Chelmsford. In May 1943, the 861 Engineer Battalion began to do the work necessary to build a new airfield that would allow U.S. heavy bombers take off from there towards the German cities to release its deadly load of bombs.
What engineers did not know was that in order to smooth the surface, it was essential to move a large stone which was located in the forest of Dukes. Some of the villagers, seeing that the stone would be moved to another place, the engineers warned not to do so, the reason was that the rock had a diffuse sacred to the locals. Not knowing very well specified for the alleged importance of the stone, residents indicated that, according to tradition, under the rock was buried a witch who was burned at the stake centuries ago. Rounding out the truculence of history, the elders claimed that it was precisely at that point where it appeared killed a ranger in 1856, there were no never the culprit. One expert consulted by the frightened engineers said it was likely that in reality they were a pagan altar whose age would go back to a time before the arrival of the Romans, and had remained in the popular imagination through the oral tradition. Whatever the reason, the inhabitants of the region were convinced to move the stone from its original site could not bring nothing but misfortune. The first consequence suffered by the engineers was that no worker dared to move the stone. One did not believe in sorcery stories set out to remove it with his bulldozer, but in the moment that would raise the stone, suffered an inexplicable machinery breakdown, which forced to postpone the operation. For the inhabitants of the area was no longer any doubt, the place was cursed.
the end, another bulldozer moved the stone without suffering any mishap, but the livestock in the area fell victim to a strange disease, which was immediately blamed the revenge of the witch to have been altered his place of eternal rest. Once
, overcoming all these difficulties, the airfield at last entered the service, gave the impression that the curse had been averted, but the facts show that it was far from reality. A plane Thunderbolt from 56 ยบ Fighter Group was forced to make an emergency landing at the brand new track, with such bad luck that his landing gear finally impacting with a bulldozer that was carrying out maintenance work, killing its driver on the spot. This excavator was precisamentela that had moved the stone ...
A few weeks later, the base commander, who had said he did not believe in stories of witches, died suddenly of a heart attack, so the curse that hung over the airport allegedly was fatally confirmed. However, it seems be that the thirst for revenge of the witch was satisfied with the death of the head of the base, and did not return to any other strange event occur. The day to day work at the aerodrome was imposed gradually fantasies surrounding the curse of the sacred stone. The superstitions surrounding the site were being blurred as the planes took off for Germany continued. The end of the war and the subsequent dismantling of the base was the end of the curse. In fact, few locals already shown some interest in the supposed supernatural powers of the stone, as evidenced by the ornaments he had finished serving in the parking lot of a pub ...
Boreham
Source: http://elapocalipsi svaallegar. blogspot. com /
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