The                  Legend of the Lambton Worm
In the Northeastern part of England there is a legend                  from medieval times about a giant worm that terrorized the region.                  Now a worm might not seem to be a very interesting creature to                  build a story of terror about until you realize that the old English                  form of the word worm (or wyrm) refers to a humongous snake or                  dragon. Though there are slightly different versions of the tale                  told all around the area, the basic story is as follows:
A rebellious, young man name John Lambton, heir                  of the Lambton estate in County Durham, decided to go fishing                  one Sunday morning, though he was warned by a mysterious old man                  that no good could come of skipping church. Lambton is unsuccessful                  in catching anything out of the local river Wear until he pulls                  in a strange fish. The eel-like creature has the head of a salamander                  and nine holes on either side of its skull. Lambton doesn’t like                  the look of it at all and declares he has caught “the devil.”                  On the advice of the old man, he decides not to return it to the                  river, but instead decides to throw it down a convenient well.
Lambton grows up and goes off to fight in the Crusades.                  The creature apparently thrives in the underground and grows and                  grows inside the well, eventually poisoning the water. When it                  finally emerges, it has grown to a humongous size and begins terrorizing                  the land by eating livestock along with the occasional village                  child. It also approaches Lambton Manor, where John’s father manages                  to placate it on a daily basis by filling a stone trough outside                  the building with fresh milk for it to drink. In between assaults                  on the surrounding countryside, the creature relaxes by wrapping                  itself around the base of a hill. Various villagers and knights come to slay the monster                  but find that slicing off sections of the worm is ineffective                  as the creature seems to be able to reattach lost parts without                  much permanent damage. Moreover, anyone who comes too close to                  the worm finds themselves caught in its coils and slowly squeezed                  to death. 
Young John comes home from the Crusades to find                  his father’s land in ruin from the worm. He vows to destroy the                  creature and seeks the aid of a local witch. The witch first tells                  John that he is responsible for the worm’s existence by his actions                  as a boy and this increases his determination to rid the land                  of it. The witchs’ advice is to go to the local blacksmith and                  have his armor covered with razor-sharp spear points. Then he                  should catch the worm as he lays wrapped around a great rock down                  by the river and fight him there. She warns Lambton that if he                  is successful in his quest, he will be required to kill the first                  living thing he sees after his victory or the Lambton family will                  be cursed for nine generations and no heir will die peacefully                  in his bed.

Brave Sir John takes her suggestions to heart and                  they prove to be the keys he needs to defeat the beast. When the                  animal gets a hold of him in its coils, it cannot squeeze him                  to death as the spear points on his armor will be driven into                  the creature’s body. Because he is fighting the worm on the edge                  of the river Wear, any parts he cuts off the monster fall off                  into the water and are swept downstream so the beast cannot heal                  itself by reattaching them.
After a titanic battle, John Lambton is victorious.                  It has been arranged that at his bugle signal one of his hunting                  hounds will be released. It will run to him and John will slay                  it to save his family from the curse. As it happens, however,                  John’s father forgets about the signal and runs out himself to                  greet his son after the victory. John does not have the heart                  to kill his father and the family is cursed for nine generations.
The Lambton Worm is a fascinating and colorful legend.                  Is there any evidence that it is true?
The                  Realm of the Worm
Certainly parts of the story are rooted in reality.                  Though the present Lambton Castle in County Durham did not exist                  at the time of the legend, is seems likely that a Lambton estate                  has been on the same location for several centuries. The castle,                  in its present form, was built by by John George Lambton, the                  first Earl of Durham, in the early 19th century. During that period                  the Lambton family made a lot of money from the coal mining business                  and put it into reconstructing the castle. Ironically, the castle                  suffered substantial damage when the very coal mines that had                  paid for it collapsed underneath the structure in the 1930’s.                
The river Wear, where John Lambton supposedly caught                  the monster, does really run through Durham County. The hill mentioned                  in the legend as the creatures resting place is said to be either                  Penshaw Hill or Worm Hill. Penshaw Hill, which is topped by a                  replica of a Greek doric temple built to honor the first Earl                  of Durham, is often pictured in modern drawings of the worm. This                  is an anachronism, as the temple wasn’t built until 1844, several                  centuries after the legendary monster was dead. More likely the                  actual hill involved in the story is Worm Hill located several                  miles away. It is said that for many years afterwards the marks                  the worm made while wrapped around that hill could be seen by                  those passing by.
The final portion of the story involves the curse.                  Did nine generations of Lambtons die violent deaths? At least                  some of them may have. Given that the Lambtons were involved in                  such actions as the English Civil War, however, a premature end                  to their lives doesn’t seem all that unlikely. The curse may also                  have been self-fulfilling: It is said that by the ninth generation                  one Lambton slept with a horse whip by his bedside to defend himself                  in fear that his servants might take actions to make the curse                  come true.
Unfortunately, all this circumstantial evidence                  doesn’t add up to the worm legend being based in reality. Indeed,                  the story has all the earmarks of a good yarn including a morality                  lesson - you should go to church on Sunday, not go fishing. Parts                  of it also mirror other tales. The command the witch gives to                  kill the first living thing seen after victory sounds a lot like                  the story of Jephthah from the Bible. Jephthah promised God that                  in return for his victory he would make a burnt sacrifice of the                  first living thing that greeted him on his return to his home.                  Unfortunately he was not met by a goat or lamb, but by his teenage                  daughter. Unlike John Lambton, however, Jephthah kept his vow.
The                  Worm in Story and Song
The fact that the tale isn’t true hasn’t discouraged                  people from telling it over and over in different ways. In 1867,                  C.M. Leumane wrote a folk song about the worm. Many variations                  of the basic song are still sung throughout the region. One version                  starts:
One Sunday                        mornin’ Lambton went A-fishing in the Wear;
An’ caught                        a fish upon he’s hook He thought looked very queer. 
But what kind                        of fish it was Young Lambton couldn’t tell- 
He didn’t                        want to carry it, So he threw it down a well… 
In 1911, Bram Stoker, the Anglo-Irish novelist that                  also wrote Dracula, penned The Lair of the White Worm,                  based on the Lambton legend. Stoker, who spent most of his professional                  life as the business manager of the Lyceum Theatre, earned addition                  money by writing books. His position with the theatre took him                  on tour throughout the world and allowed him to collect legends                  and folktales which he worked into his novels. While Lair of                  the White Worm is considered one of Stoker’s lessor works                  (and his last- he would die the following year) it does reflect                  much of the Lambton Worm legend within its pages. 
In 1978 the story of the Lambton Worm became an                  opera written by Robert Sherlaw Johnson and Anne Ridler. A decade                  later the legend was again brought to the attention of the world                  when producer Ken Russell released his motion picture version                  of the Stoker book: The Lair of the White Worm starred                  a young Hugh Grant as the aristocratic descendant of the legendary                  Lambton hero (whose name had been changed for the film to John                  Dampton). Grant’s character finds himself in trouble when he discovers                  that the giant worm from the myth really isn’t quite dead but                  living under his estate. Russell’s script is partly based on Stoker’s                  book but also draws heavily directly from the legend. The folksong                  by Leumane also finds its way into the movie belted out by a rural                  rock band. The motion picture is notable for its use of picturesque                  locations throughout England including Knebworth house, the Victorian                  residence of novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton and Thor’s Cave, a                  natural wonder that doubles as the lair of the great white worm.
It is still possible to visit County Durham and                  see some of the places connected to the legend: Lambton Castle,                  Penshaw Temple, and Worm Hill as well as others. If you travel                  there, however, it might be wise to avoid fishing in the river                  Wear on Sunday mornings.More Lake Monster reading:
Field Guide to Lake Monsters, Sea Serpents, and Other Mystery Denizens of the Deep By Loren Coleman
Suggested Fun fiction reading: Giant Killer Eels (Kindle)  For years there have been supposed  sightings of Old Slippery the legendary  giant eel of The Lake District, but never quite like this and what’s more Old Slippery  is not alone!Follow us at www.cryptidchronicles.tumblr.com

The Legend of the Lambton Worm


In the Northeastern part of England there is a legend from medieval times about a giant worm that terrorized the region. Now a worm might not seem to be a very interesting creature to build a story of terror about until you realize that the old English form of the word worm (or wyrm) refers to a humongous snake or dragon. Though there are slightly different versions of the tale told all around the area, the basic story is as follows:

A rebellious, young man name John Lambton, heir of the Lambton estate in County Durham, decided to go fishing one Sunday morning, though he was warned by a mysterious old man that no good could come of skipping church. Lambton is unsuccessful in catching anything out of the local river Wear until he pulls in a strange fish. The eel-like creature has the head of a salamander and nine holes on either side of its skull. Lambton doesn’t like the look of it at all and declares he has caught “the devil.” On the advice of the old man, he decides not to return it to the river, but instead decides to throw it down a convenient well.

Lambton grows up and goes off to fight in the Crusades. The creature apparently thrives in the underground and grows and grows inside the well, eventually poisoning the water. When it finally emerges, it has grown to a humongous size and begins terrorizing the land by eating livestock along with the occasional village child. It also approaches Lambton Manor, where John’s father manages to placate it on a daily basis by filling a stone trough outside the building with fresh milk for it to drink. In between assaults on the surrounding countryside, the creature relaxes by wrapping itself around the base of a hill.

Various villagers and knights come to slay the monster but find that slicing off sections of the worm is ineffective as the creature seems to be able to reattach lost parts without much permanent damage. Moreover, anyone who comes too close to the worm finds themselves caught in its coils and slowly squeezed to death.

Young John comes home from the Crusades to find his father’s land in ruin from the worm. He vows to destroy the creature and seeks the aid of a local witch. The witch first tells John that he is responsible for the worm’s existence by his actions as a boy and this increases his determination to rid the land of it. The witchs’ advice is to go to the local blacksmith and have his armor covered with razor-sharp spear points. Then he should catch the worm as he lays wrapped around a great rock down by the river and fight him there. She warns Lambton that if he is successful in his quest, he will be required to kill the first living thing he sees after his victory or the Lambton family will be cursed for nine generations and no heir will die peacefully in his bed.

Brave Sir John takes her suggestions to heart and they prove to be the keys he needs to defeat the beast. When the animal gets a hold of him in its coils, it cannot squeeze him to death as the spear points on his armor will be driven into the creature’s body. Because he is fighting the worm on the edge of the river Wear, any parts he cuts off the monster fall off into the water and are swept downstream so the beast cannot heal itself by reattaching them.

After a titanic battle, John Lambton is victorious. It has been arranged that at his bugle signal one of his hunting hounds will be released. It will run to him and John will slay it to save his family from the curse. As it happens, however, John’s father forgets about the signal and runs out himself to greet his son after the victory. John does not have the heart to kill his father and the family is cursed for nine generations.

The Lambton Worm is a fascinating and colorful legend. Is there any evidence that it is true?

The Realm of the Worm

Certainly parts of the story are rooted in reality. Though the present Lambton Castle in County Durham did not exist at the time of the legend, is seems likely that a Lambton estate has been on the same location for several centuries. The castle, in its present form, was built by by John George Lambton, the first Earl of Durham, in the early 19th century. During that period the Lambton family made a lot of money from the coal mining business and put it into reconstructing the castle. Ironically, the castle suffered substantial damage when the very coal mines that had paid for it collapsed underneath the structure in the 1930’s.

The river Wear, where John Lambton supposedly caught the monster, does really run through Durham County. The hill mentioned in the legend as the creatures resting place is said to be either Penshaw Hill or Worm Hill. Penshaw Hill, which is topped by a replica of a Greek doric temple built to honor the first Earl of Durham, is often pictured in modern drawings of the worm. This is an anachronism, as the temple wasn’t built until 1844, several centuries after the legendary monster was dead. More likely the actual hill involved in the story is Worm Hill located several miles away. It is said that for many years afterwards the marks the worm made while wrapped around that hill could be seen by those passing by.

The final portion of the story involves the curse. Did nine generations of Lambtons die violent deaths? At least some of them may have. Given that the Lambtons were involved in such actions as the English Civil War, however, a premature end to their lives doesn’t seem all that unlikely. The curse may also have been self-fulfilling: It is said that by the ninth generation one Lambton slept with a horse whip by his bedside to defend himself in fear that his servants might take actions to make the curse come true.

Unfortunately, all this circumstantial evidence doesn’t add up to the worm legend being based in reality. Indeed, the story has all the earmarks of a good yarn including a morality lesson - you should go to church on Sunday, not go fishing. Parts of it also mirror other tales. The command the witch gives to kill the first living thing seen after victory sounds a lot like the story of Jephthah from the Bible. Jephthah promised God that in return for his victory he would make a burnt sacrifice of the first living thing that greeted him on his return to his home. Unfortunately he was not met by a goat or lamb, but by his teenage daughter. Unlike John Lambton, however, Jephthah kept his vow.

The Worm in Story and Song

The fact that the tale isn’t true hasn’t discouraged people from telling it over and over in different ways. In 1867, C.M. Leumane wrote a folk song about the worm. Many variations of the basic song are still sung throughout the region. One version starts:

One Sunday mornin’ Lambton went A-fishing in the Wear;

An’ caught a fish upon he’s hook He thought looked very queer.

But what kind of fish it was Young Lambton couldn’t tell-

He didn’t want to carry it, So he threw it down a well…

In 1911, Bram Stoker, the Anglo-Irish novelist that also wrote Dracula, penned The Lair of the White Worm, based on the Lambton legend. Stoker, who spent most of his professional life as the business manager of the Lyceum Theatre, earned addition money by writing books. His position with the theatre took him on tour throughout the world and allowed him to collect legends and folktales which he worked into his novels. While Lair of the White Worm is considered one of Stoker’s lessor works (and his last- he would die the following year) it does reflect much of the Lambton Worm legend within its pages.

In 1978 the story of the Lambton Worm became an opera written by Robert Sherlaw Johnson and Anne Ridler. A decade later the legend was again brought to the attention of the world when producer Ken Russell released his motion picture version of the Stoker book: The Lair of the White Worm starred a young Hugh Grant as the aristocratic descendant of the legendary Lambton hero (whose name had been changed for the film to John Dampton). Grant’s character finds himself in trouble when he discovers that the giant worm from the myth really isn’t quite dead but living under his estate. Russell’s script is partly based on Stoker’s book but also draws heavily directly from the legend. The folksong by Leumane also finds its way into the movie belted out by a rural rock band. The motion picture is notable for its use of picturesque locations throughout England including Knebworth house, the Victorian residence of novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton and Thor’s Cave, a natural wonder that doubles as the lair of the great white worm.

It is still possible to visit County Durham and see some of the places connected to the legend: Lambton Castle, Penshaw Temple, and Worm Hill as well as others. If you travel there, however, it might be wise to avoid fishing in the river Wear on Sunday mornings.

More Lake Monster reading:

Field Guide to Lake Monsters, Sea Serpents, and Other Mystery Denizens of the Deep By Loren Coleman

Suggested Fun fiction reading: Giant Killer Eels (Kindle)  For years there have been supposed sightings of Old Slippery the legendary giant eel of The Lake District, but never quite like this and what’s more Old Slippery is not alone!

Follow us at www.cryptidchronicles.tumblr.com