- The Black Death In Derby -
There are probably more bodies in St Peter's
Churchyard than in any other graveyard in Derby. St Peter's was
once the most densely populated part of Derby and when the Black
Death struck the town in 1349, more people died in St Peter's
parish than in any other part of Derby. Of a population which
then numbered 3,000, one-third died from the Black Death.
One of the symptoms of this plague was a coma or deep sleep. With
so many people dying, so many red crosses painted on the doors
and bells ringing as the carts loaded with corpses rolled through
the streets with "Bring out
your dead" the common cry, it is hardly surprising that some
people, were pronounced dead who were really only in a coma.
There are reports at St Peter's of people clawing their way out
of shallow graves, or pushing up the lids of coffins and climbing
out.
So many people died that the town resorted to burying corpses
vertically instead of horizontally, but even so they still ran
out of space, so many of the unfortunate victims of the Black
Death were buried at the boundaries of the town, one of these
places still being called Deadman's Lane, off London Road.
There is a reported sighting, at the bottom of Ascot Drive, of a
vampire, always accompanied by the smell of rotting fruit. And
there is one more vampire tale connected with Derby. The very
first public showing, anywhere in the world, of Hamilton Deane's
stage adaptation of Bram Stoker's book Count Dracula was
performed in Derby at the Grand Theatre on 15 May 1924. So Derby
theatre audiences were terrified by Dracula before any other in
the world.
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