Welsh UFO Sightings 1866

Welsh UFO sightings from 1866. For sightings from other years please click HERE.
PRESS
January
Llandaff
The Cardiff Times of February 2nd reported on local belief in ghosts:
LLANDAFF. SUPERSTITION. —Throughout the neighbourhood of Llandaff, Whitchurch, and Pentyrcb, nothing scarcely is talked of in these days but "the ghost." People at their work, in public houses, in shops, and in going to and coming from churches and chapels, are continually talking about the ysbryd (ghost). Many of the inhabitants of this neighbourhood believe as firmly that a spirit appears in this locality, in the form of a tidy young lady, dressed in white, as they do in their own existence.
The ghost has been seen, they say, by many truthful people, and it is considered by some of them a great insult not to believe them. Of course we need not tell sensible men that this ghost is nothing more than some wag or another taking advantage of the superstitiousness of the people, in order to make fools of them, and that the pretending ghost may have something to laugh at.
The different stories which people are telling about this ghost become the middle of the dark ages much better than the nineteenth century. For men who have open bibles in their hands, and churches and chapels at their doors, to be thus superstitious is not only a reproach to us as a nation, but also a shame to us as christians. Ought not the fact of so much ignorance being in our midst to occupy the serious attention of those who profess to be teachers and guides of the people? Is it certain that we have not been sending money to teach pagans in distant lands which ought to have been used to educate those heathens at our doors?
It is strange to think that within the city of Llandaff, under shadow of a cathedral establishment, there are people to be found as superstitious as in any heathen country. The fact of the ease, Mr. Editor, is this collecting money to send the gospel abroad has come to be too much of a craft, hence we hear nothing about home, but as much as you like of the clap-trap speeches of "deputations from parent societies" seeking money for foreign purposes, whilst many of our own neighbours have only a very superficial knowledge of Christianity. Let us do a little more at home.
PRESS
February
Cymmer
The Cardiff Times again reproached the public for believing in ghost stories in the February 9th edition:
CYMMER. A GHOST OR TWO. -For some time past the inhabitants of Cymmer and its vicinity have been thrown into a great deal of uneasiness in consequence of some ghosts (ysbrydion) perambulatingthe roads, and accosting persons at different times at night.
A male ghost, it is said, makes his appearance generally on the Aerw bridge, about a quarter of a mile below Cymmer, and when asked what he wants, gives no reply; but one night it so happened that a butcher was passing over a bridge. The ghost appeared and stared sternly in his face. The knight of the cleaver asked him what he wanted, but had no reply, upon which the butcher lifted the cleaver in order to give him a taste of it, when in an instant the ghost made his exit, and the butcher was allowed to pass on unmolested. The same ghost is said to have made his appearance often to others since.
The lady ghost who perambulates about Cymmer seems to be very found of mounting carriages, etc., and to seem to make an exit like a flying eagle, when interrogated. The police have been on the look out, but cannot see either ghost, or anything like them. The inhabitants have gone early to bed ever since the appearance of the ghosts in the night time. In one instance it is stated that a certain minister caused himself to be escorted by a guard of his flock to his residence. From this it would seem that in some cases the educated as well as the ignorant labour under the delusion of the existence of a ghost in the locality. It is to be hoped that the nightly disturbers of public equanimity, in the shape of ghosts, will soon be placed in durance vile, as they deserve to be.
The Illustrated Usk Observer and Raglan Herald of April 21st 1866 reprinted a passage from Once a Week on fairies:
Welsh Fairies. —The Tylwyth Teg are friendly towards the human race; they love cleanliness to such a degree that a slovenly person has no rest, and what with pinches, pulls, and sly pricks, is fain to do her lawful labour. Thieving they abhor, lying meets with its just recompense, and chastity being their favourite virtue, any dereliction from it is sure to be severely and promptly punished.
They delight in retirement, and choose the prettiest spots as their haunts: they favour honest love as decidedly as they punish the other. It is said that having the power of transforming themselves, thay have become enamoured of earthly beings, and more than one fair dame in olden days has had the credit of a fairy lover; the famous prophet Merlin, if I am not mistaken, is supposed to have been the offspring of such a union.
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