Today this chair can be found
on display at the Thirsk Museum in North Yorkshire, England. It hangs
on the wall five feet up in order to prevent anyone from sitting on it. Legend
states this infamous chair is cursed--if anyone “dares” sit in it they will
shortly meet their death.
This curse began in the 18th
century. In 1702, Daniel Awety, a coin-forger bought a farm and named it
Danotty Hall in the rural area of Kirby Wiske. His son-in-law, Thomas Busby who
partnered him in crime was a thief, drunk and bully who owned an inn 3 miles
from Danotty Hall.
One day, Busby drunk as usual
returned to his inn to find his father-in-law sitting in his favorite chair. He
demanded Awety move immediately, but the older man refused. The two men got in
a heated argument and Busby kicked his father-in-law out of the inn but not
before Awety threatened to take his daughter back with him to his farm.
Later that night, Busby
sneaked into Danotty Hall and murdered Awety, he then hid his body in the
nearby woods. But when it was noticed Awety had disappeared the local police
organized a search. Awety’s body was found and Busby was arrested and sentenced
to death by hanging.
On the day of his execution,
Busby drunk had to be dragged from his favorite chair. As he was led to the
gallows, at the crossroads near his inn, he cursed the chair vowing, “that anyone
who dared to sit in it would die a sudden and violent death.”
Busby Stoop Inn |
In the years following
Busby’s threat, the inn was renamed Busby
Stoop Inn. The new owner at first not believing in this curse kept the
chair out on the floor for use. As news of the curse spread curious visitors
started to flock to the inn.
There were also reports that Thomas Busby haunted the inn. Reliable witnesses announced they had seen
Busby’s ghost wandering around the second floor. This drew even more visitors
to the Busby Stoop.
A chimney sweep who sat in the chair in the late 1800s was found dead the next morning. He was found hanging from a gatepost near where Busby was executed. This incident sealed people's belief in this curse.
A chimney sweep who sat in the chair in the late 1800s was found dead the next morning. He was found hanging from a gatepost near where Busby was executed. This incident sealed people's belief in this curse.
Friends would often dare
friends to sit in the chair--although very few did. The few who were brave
enough to take the dare all met untimely ends.
During the Second World War across
the road from Busby Stoop an airfield was built that the Royal Canadian Air
Force used. These men would often partake of the inn’s ale. Several
crewmembers were dared to sit in the Busby chair. Those who took the dare never
returned home from bombing sorties over Germany.
One previous owner tells how
two airmen dared each other to sit in the chair. Both sat in the chair and
later that day their car hit a tree and both men died.
A group of builders having
lunch at the inn dared a young worker to sit in the chair. This young man
obliged and after returning to the building site he fell through a roof and
died. After this death the landlord locked the chair away in the cellar.
In 1978, a deliveryman sat in
the chair in the cellar. He told the landlord it was a very comfortable.
He suggested that such a fine chair should not be locked away in a damp cellar.
Within hours after this, his truck veered off the road and crashed, killing
him.
There are many more stories
connected to this cursed chair. An Air Force pilot was killed the day after
sitting in the chair. A motorcyclist died on his bike shortly after leaving the
inn, a hitchhiker was knocked down and killed two days after visiting the inn.
A local man in his early thirties died of a massive heart attack the night
after he sat in this chair.
At a recent innkeeper’s
request the Busby chair has been moved out of harm’s way. The chair had been in
this inn for over 275 years.
It is the most popular piece
on display at the Thirsk Museum. Visitors still ask if they can sit in the
chair but it is never taken down off the wall.
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