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CF-010 The Red Barn

A group of people and a dog outside a large barn at night under a full moon.

Available Evidence

Classification: Open
Access Level: Public
Status: Monitored
Location: Corder's Farm, Polstead, Suffolk


Official Summary

 

The Red Barn is a nineteenth-century agricultural structure situated on the former Corder family farm near the village of Polstead, Suffolk. Though, further investigation has revealed a much older foundation dating back centuries.

The site entered public record following the murder of Miss Maria Marten in 1827 and the subsequent conviction and execution of William Corder.

While the criminal matter is considered resolved by conventional authorities, continued reports associated with the location have resulted in its inclusion within Victorium records.

These reports include recurring apparitions, occult gatherings, unexplained auditory phenomena, vivid dreams experienced by visitors, and multiple independent accounts involving a female figure believed to resemble Miss Marten.

The location remains one of the most extensively documented haunting sites presently known to the Victorium.


Known Personnel

Murder victim

  •  P.O.I./02/MM  — Miss Maria Marten


Associated Personnel


  • P.O.I./05/WC — Mr. William "Foxy" Corder
  • P.O.I./01/JL — Constable James Lea
  • P.O.I./08/JR — Goody Joan Ruce
  • P.O.I./XX/SHJ — Spring Heeled Jack
  • P.O.I./04/JK — Constable John Kent
  • P.O.I./09/PA — Miss Persephone "Persy" Ayres
  • P.O.I./11/MA — Parish Constable Malkin Ayres


Related Case Files


  • CF-006 — The Black Chandler's Candle
  • CF-009 — Corder's Circle of Villainy
  • CF-013 — S.T.Y.X. Division


Recorded Phenomena


  • Reports of a woman in spearmint appearing within or around the structure.
  • Footsteps heard within otherwise empty sections of the barn.
  • Repeated dreams involving burial beneath grain stores or disturbed earth.
  • Witnesses reporting intense feelings of grief, dread, or urgency upon entering the site.
  • Isolated accounts describing whispered warnings shortly before accidents or injuries.
  • Eyewitness account of occult gatherings, ritual burnings and historic sacrifices.



Public Record


  • 1827 — Maria Marten disappears.
  • 1828 — Her remains are recovered from the Red Barn following information reportedly received through dreams experienced by her stepmother.
  • 1828 — William Corder arrested.
  • 1828 — Corder convicted and executed.
  • Subsequent decades — The Red Barn becomes one of Britain's most famous murder sites, inspiring books, ballads, stage productions, broadsides, and ghost stories.


Further Evidence Available to Public


Witness Statements

Court Records

Newspaper Reports

Broadsides

Ballads

Contemporary Sketches

Architectural Surveys

Restricted Evidence



Custodian's Note 


Most murder sites become quieter with time.


The Red Barn has not despite the building being dismantled by "murderabelia" collectors.


Whether this is because Miss Marten refused to leave, because the story itself became anchored to the place, or because something else learned to wear the shape of the tragedy remains a matter of ongoing investigation.


Visitors are reminded that history and haunting are not always separate phenomena.

Related Dispatches & Acquisitions

Dispatch No. 12/7

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