Being buried prematurely is one of the most terrifying of all fears. Edgar Allan Poe wrote about it and it has been the subject matter of many horror movies. Surprisingly real life cases of this terrible mistake are more common than one might think. Years ago when embalming wasn’t as common and because of inferior medical equipment to detect life there are numerous cases where people have had the terrifying experience of regaining consciousness in their own coffin. This list includes 10 such cases. Some sources for the list are from newspaper articles or journals and include the exact text which gives you a feeling of the time period. Another main source used for this list is a book written in 1905 called Premature Burial and How it May be Prevented which includes several actual cases of premature burials.
Virginia Macdonald lived with her father in New York City and became ill, died, and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn. After the burial, her mother declared her belief that the daughter was not dead when buried and persistently asserted her belief. The family tried in vain to assure the mother of the death of her daughter. Finally the mother insisted so strenuously that her daughter was buried alive the family consented to have the body taken up. To their horror, they discovered the body lying on the side, the hands badly bitten, and every indication of a premature burial.
Interesting Fact: When the Les Innocents cemetery in Paris, France was moved from the center of the city to the suburbs the number of skeletons found face down convinced many people and several doctors that premature burial was very common.
When Madam Blunden was thought to be dead, she was buried in the Blunden family vault at Holy Ghost Chapel in Basingstoke, England. The vault was situated beneath a boys’ school. The day after the funeral when the boys were playing they heard a noise from the vault below. After one of the boys ran and told his teacher about the noises the sexton was summoned. The vault and the coffin were opened just in time to witness her final breath. All possible means were used to resuscitate her but it was unsuccessful. In her agony she had torn frantically at her face and had bitten the nails off her fingers.
Interesting Fact: A large number of designs for safety coffins were patented during the 18th and 19th centuries. Safety coffin were fitted with a mechanism to allow the occupant to signal that he or she has been buried alive. You can see one of the variations here.
“WOODSTOCK, Ontario, Jan. 18- Recently a girl named Collins died here, as it was supposed, very suddenly. A day or two ago the body was exhumed, prior to its removal to another burial place, when the discovery was made that the girl had been buried alive. Her shroud was torn into shreds, her knees were drawn up to her chin, one of her arms was twisted under her head, and her features bore evidence of dreadful torture.”
Interesting Fact: In the 19th century, Dr. Timothy Clark Smith of Vermont was so concerned about the possibility of being buried alive that he arranged to be buried in a special crypt that included a breathing tube and a glass window in his grave marker that would permit him to peer out to the living world six feet above. You can see his grave here.
“GRENOBLE, Jan. 18- A gendarme was buried alive the other day in a village near Grenoble. The man had become intoxicated on potato brandy, and fell into a profound sleep. After twenty hours passed in slumber, his friends considered him to be dead, particularly as his body assumed the usual rigidity of a corpse. When the sexton, however, was lowering the remains of the ill-fated gendarme into the grave, he heard moans and knocks proceeding from the interior of the ‘four-boards.’ He immediately bored holes in the sides of the coffin, to let in air, and then knocked off the lid. The gendarme had, however, ceased to live, having horribly mutilated his head in his frantic but futile efforts to burst his coffin open.
Interesting Fact: The Fear of being buried alive is called taphephobia. The word “taphephobia” comes from the Greek “taphos” meaning “grave” + “phobia” from the Greek “phobos” meaning “fear” = literally, fear of the grave, or fear of being put in the grave while still alive.
“TONNEINS, Dec. 30- A frightful case of premature interment occurred not long since, at Tonneins, in the Lower Garonne. The victim, a man in the prime of life, had only a few shovelfuls of earth thrown into his grave when an indistinct noise was heard to proceed from his coffin. The grave-digger, terrified beyond description, instantly fled to seek assistance, and some time elapsed before his return, when the crowd, which had by this time collected in considerable numbers round the grave, insisted on the coffin being opened. As soon as the first boards had been removed, it was ascertained beyond a doubt, that the occupant had been interred alive. His countenance was frightfully contracted with the agony he had undergone, and, in his struggles, the unhappy man had forced his arms completely out of the winding sheet, in which they had been securely enveloped. A physician, who was on the spot, opened a vein, but no blood flowed. The sufferer was beyond the reach of art.”
Interesting Fact: In The Complete Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook, one of the worst case scenarios listed in the book is how to survive if you are buried alive in a coffin. If anyone finds themselves in the same predicament as the people on this list you can read some life saving information here.
“December 8- It appeared from the evidence that some time ago a woman was interred with all the usual formalities, it being believed that she was dead, while she was only in a trance. Some days afterwards, the grave in which she had been placed being opened for the reception of another body, it was found that the clothes which covered the unfortunate woman were torn to pieces, and that she had even broken her limbs in attempting to extricate herself from the living tomb. The Court, after hearing the case, sentenced the doctor who had signed the certificate of
decease, and the mayor who had authorized the interment, each to three months’ imprisonment for involuntary manslaughter.”
Interesting Fact: Today, when a definition of death is required, doctors usually turn to “brain death” to define a person as being clinically dead. People are considered dead when the electrical activity in their brain ceases.
“DAYTON, Feb. 8.-A sensation has been created here by the discovery of the fact that Miss Hockwalt, a young lady of high social connections, who was supposed to have died suddenly on Jan. 10, was buried alive. The terrible truth was discovered a few days ago, and since then it has been the talk of the city. The circumstance of Miss Hockwail’s death was peculiar. It occurred on the morning of the marriage of her brother to Miss Emma Schwind at Emannel’s Church. Shortly before 6 o’clock the young lady was dressing for the nuptials and had gone into the kitchen. A few moments afterward she was found sitting on a chair with her head leaning against a wall and apparently lifeless. Medical aid was summoned in, Dr. Jewett who, after examination, pronounced her dead. Mass was being read at the time in Emannel’s Church and it was thought best to continue, and the marriage was performed in gloom. The examination showed that Anna was of excitable temperament, nervous, and affected with sympathetic palpitation of the heart. Dr. Jewett thought this was the cause of her supposed death. On the following day, the lady was interred in the Woodland. The friends of Miss Hockwalt were unable to forget the terrible impression and several ladies observe that her eyes bore a remarkably natural color and could not dispel an idea that she was not dead. They conveyed their opinion to Annie’s parents and the thought preyed upon them so that the body was taken from the grave. It was stated that when the coffin was opened it was discovered that the supposed inanimate body had turned upon its right side. The hair had been torn out in handfuls and the flesh had been bitten from the fingers. The body was reinterred and efforts made to suppress the facts, but there are those who state they saw the body and know the facts to be as narrated.”
Interesting Fact: In 1822 Dr Adolf Gutsmuth was buried alive several times to demonstrate a safety coffin he had designed. Once he stayed underground for several hours and ate a meal of soup, sausages and beer delivered to him through the coffin’s feeding tube.
Seventeen year old Mary Norah Best was the adopted daughter of Mrs. Moore Chew. Mary was pronounced dead from cholera and entombed in the Chew’s vault in an old French cemetery in Calcutta. The surgeon that pronounced her dead was a man who would have benefited by her death and had tried to kill her adopted mother. Before Mary “died” her adoptive mother fled to England after the second attempt on her life and left Mary behind. Mary was put into a pine coffin and it was nailed shut. Ten years later, in 1881 the vault was unsealed to admit the body of Mrs. Moore’s brother. On entering the vault, the undertaker’s assistant found the lid off of Mary’s coffin on the floor. The position of her skeleton was half in and half out of the coffin. Apparently after being entombed Mary awoke from the trance and struggled violently till she was able to force the lid off of her coffin. It is surmised that after bursting open her casket she fainted from the strain and while falling forward over the edge of her coffin she struck her head against the masonry shelf killing her. It is believed the surgeon poisoned the girl and then certified her death.
Interesting Fact: Some believe Thomas A Kempis, a German Augustinian monk who wrote The Imitation of Christ in the 1400’s was denied canonization because splinters were found embedded under his nails. Canonization authorities determined that anyone aspiring to be a saint would not fight death if he found himself buried alive.
“ASHEVILLE, N.C., Feb. 20.–A gentleman from Flat Creek Township in this (Buncombe) County, furnishes the information that about the 20th of last month a young man by the name of Jenkins, who had been sick with fever for several weeks, was thought to have died. He became speechless, his flesh was cold and clammy, and he could not be aroused, and there appeared to be no action of the pulse and heart. He was thought to be dead and was prepared for burial, and was noticed at the time that there was no stiffness in any of the limbs. He was buried after his supposed death, and when put in the coffin it was remarked that he was as limber as a live man. There was much talk in the neighborhood about the case and the opinion was frequently expressed that Jenkins had been buried alive. Nothing was done about the matter until the 10th inst., when the coffin was taken up for the purpose of removal and internment in the family burying ground in Henderson County. The coffin being wood, it was suggested that it be opened in order to see if the body was in such condition that it could be hauled 20 miles without being put in a metallic casket. The coffin was opened, and to the great astonishment and horror of his relatives the body was lying face downward, and the hair had been pulled from the head in great quantities, and there was scratches of the finger nails on the inside of the lid and sides of the coffin. These facts caused great excitement and all acquainted personally with the facts believe Jenkins was in a trance, or that animation was apparently suspended, and that he was not really dead when buried and that he returned to consciousness only to find himself buried and beyond help. The body was then taken to Henderson County and reinterred. The relatives are distressed beyond measure at what they term criminal carelessness in not being absolutely sure Jenkins was dead before he was buried.”
Interesting Fact: Because of the concern of premature burials a Society was formed called Society for the Prevention of People Being Buried Alive. They encouraged the slow process of burials.
In 1901 a pregnant Madame Bobin arrived on board a steamer from Western Africa and appeared to be suffering from yellow fever. She was then transferred to a hospital for those affected with contagious diseases. There she became worse and apparently died and was buried. A nurse later said she noticed that the body was not cold and that there was tremulousness of the muscles of the abdomen and expressed the opinion that she could have been prematurely buried. After this was reported to Madame Bobin’s father, he had the body exhumed. They were horrified to find that a baby had been born and died with Madame Bobin in the coffin. An autopsy showed that Madame Bobin had not contracted yellow fever and had died from asphyxiation in the coffin. A suit against the health officials resulted in £8,000 ($13,000) damages against them.
Interesting Fact: Historical records indicate that during the 17th century when plague victims often collapsed seemingly dead, there were 149 actual cases of people being buried alive.
This is a bonus because this event might be more folklore than fact. In researching premature burials this story came up many times with different names and locations as this Wikipedia article explains. However Snopes.com does give a story similar to this a “True” rating. My guess is that something like this probably did occur somewhere at sometime but the story has been embellished over the years. Margorie McCall’s story seems to be the most popular and goes something like this: Margorie McCall from Northern Ireland fell ill and was pronounced dead. After her wake which lasted for a few days she was interred in Shankill Graveyard. That night her body was exhumed by grave robbers. The robbers tried in vain to remove a ring from her finger and then attempted to cut her finger off to remove the ring. When they were cutting into her finger Margorie suddenly came to and the robbers fled the cemetery never looking back. Margorie then climbed out of her coffin and walked home. Meanwhile her family was gathered at home when they heard a knock at the door. Margorie’s husband still in grief said “if your mother were still alive, I’d swear that was her knock.” and sure enough when he opened the door there she was dressed in her burial clothes, very much alive. Her husband fainted immediately.
Interesting Fact: Many believe the terms “Saved by the bell” and “Dead ringer” has to do with safety coffins with the notion that a recently buried person could pull a rope attached to a bell outside the coffin to alert people that he or she is not deceased. Both of these have been proven false. Saved by the bell is a boxing term dating from the 1930s. Ringer is from horse racing and is a horse substituted for another of similar appearance in order to defraud the bookies. Dead was then added to the term later like ‘dead on’, ‘dead center’ etc.































Wow. I do believe this is the single most morbid thing I have ever read, and I have read some morbid stuff.
Hey, that was my thought when I read list. Awesom scene but completely unbelievable-even more so than the the other scenes. If one managed to poke a hole in the coffin, the weight of the dirt would collapse the coffin and kill the person inside–no tunneling. I also don’t think cremation would be better. I would hat to be burned alive more than suffocated.
Just to increase the sadness of these stories, think how the people who were buried alive under fallen buildings in any of the recent earthquakes- Haiti especially. So many people and not nearly enough rescuers. I find this especially disturbing as I live in an earthquake-prone region of the US. I think we all know from Katrina that being in a rich western country during a major disaster is of little help. Scary thought.
oops, the previous entry was in reposne to flock o’seagulls (69).
Hey, This is my first post to the site. I live in the town of your number 1. The town is called Lurgan, in Co Armagh. Im glad to see the old legend of the town made it onto the list! Keep up the good work!!
To the comments about it not making sense to bit your fingers and pull your hair out in this situation:
I agree it does not help you achieve your goal of escaping, but the reason these people did it is at another psychological level. The level is the pure terror that comes with the realization they are doomed.
That’s why.
Think about that for a minute or two by imagining yourself in their place, trapped in a pitch-black box, getting harder to breathe, and horrified knowing the fact that no one can hear you scream, and you are going to die very soon.
Voorloos
what I actually meant to say was-
Spoorloos
a movie from 1988
Insanely great list!!!
damn I wish someone could give a reason why you bite your fingers. can the author maybe go back and try and verify whether the original accounts meant “fingers worn off from scraping” or specifically “fingers bitten off”?
my PhD in neuroscience is doing me no damn good here. I can’t even speculate. obviously it would be some reaction to the stress. but still doesn’t make sense to self-mutilate. some kind of stereotypy, maybe.
maybe a non-sequitur, but when rats self-administer too much heroin, they start gnawing off their front paws.
My parents were children in London during WW2. A German bomb dropped on a cemetry in Kent and a large number of graves had to be re-buried. The word is there were a very large number of coffins that had scratch marks on the inside proving that being buried alive was actually very common.
One more, and this is the worst of them all:
Julia Legare of Edisto Island South Carolina “died” of diptheria in 1852 and was placed in the family mausoleum. Fifteen years later her brother died. When the mausoleum was reopened at his funeral, behind the door was a small skeleton. Julia had woken up, escaped from her coffin, and tried to escape.
*IF* it’s a true story … imagine the horror …
More here:
http://www.snopes.com/horrors/gruesome/buried.asp
Dear Lord, please let me be dead when they bury me. The horror!!! I’m glad they wait now. So very glad! Great list!
best. list. ever.
Please delete this message. I didn’t mean to say something…
@Follower of the word (115): Actually no
man i sure am glad im too much of A g to get buried alive. that must suck
Just bury me like in “Fido”, with the head buried separately. Guaranteed no waking up.
Owh my gosh! That was terrifying!
I’ve been visiting Listverse for several years now and I can honestly say that this list is in the “top 5 best Listverse lists” for me. Great work!!
creepy pics….
the idea of being buried prematurely is really scary…
Perfect, awesome, and extremely horrifying list. Good job, Blogball!
@Voltaire – and you’re so clever for assuming those are the two only prerequisites for someone to be declared dead under Islamic law. Those are ONLY TWO. The others of course include the heart not beating.
Therefore under Islamic law, once the heart has stopped beating, the body has to be cold and stiff to be declared legally dead.
You’re so smart.
@Ahmad (141): How about the rotting of flesh ? This should also be included in islamic law to be sure!
why would you start to bite your fingers?
Interesting List. THe survival techniques kind of freaked me out though as i ended up imagining doing each step. Im hoping that its very very rare of this happening now! Noticed, quite a few occured in England as well!!
Blogball (108) a regular guy who likes to write lists and quote ” read old 19 century newspaper articles and really like the style of writing they used to tell a story back then” unqote!!! I will be going back through all the lists and finding the ones you’ve written!! Any way to do a quick search! Thanks again… D
weow! very scary list but i liked it.
@D-Day (110) (111) (117) (118):
AMEN!!!
Very interesting and dark list!
In response to post 91, about that woman who woke up twice in a morgue, I remember watching that, she had a form of narcolepsy, where she would lose all vital signs when she would fall into the deep sleeps. I think she ended up having to wear a bracelet explaining her condition so that visit to the morgue no.3 would be for real and not another scare.
Karin Slaughter (what a surname) is my favourite author, I remember one of her books “Faithless” contains this subject in the book. Check it out! (The books are great!)
‘why would you start to bite your fingers?’
hunger.
extreme starvation makes you delirious and desperate.
Fantastic list!! Good job.
@109: I live near Stratford-upon-Avon and have also heard that story. She was of the Cloptons, a very wealthy family (they even have a bridge named after them). Apparently she was found with bites taken out of her shoulder.
@149: i don’t think you’ll be that hungry in there, remember you can do over a week without food. there is absolutely no way you’ll be in the coffin that long
@General Tits Von Chodehoffen (106): I saw that Mythbusters episode. Basically, in a modern coffin, it would really be impossible to get out. You could not open the thing, and the weight of the dirt would be too much, not to mention if the grave had an inner concrete liner, you’d be screwed.
Could you be buried alive nowadays? Well, there are recent stories of people waking on the autopsy table, so it’s possible even a hurried healthcare professional might pronounce you by mistake. If you were autopsied while still unconscious, you might survive that, if the pathologist or the assistant were quick enough to notice something isn’t right. If you died in a licensed healthcare facility, an autopsy might probably be deemed unnecessary. And if you managed to escape being embalmed, then theoretically, yes.
Yes you could.
That is rough as.
You should have a warning for scary images on this list.
i love horror stories. this is scary… whew!
Cool list…am I sick?
OMG nightmares tonight!!
There was a girl who was buried alive here in town a few years ago. Her boyfriend and she got into a fight, and something happened, he thought she died and his grandfather helped him bury the girl. Everyone was looking for her. When he finally admitted it they dug her up and she had tried to claw her way out. She was 15.
This is an interesting story on Mrs. McCall:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A30924119
@Alan (131): OMG how unlucky… she got out of her coffin but poor girl had something else she couldn’t break through. I will never be buried in a mausoleum now.
Oh and imagine how many stories of live burials will never be told!? These are only the ones that were told because someone redug up the body.
AND for those people citing cremation as a better experience: I’d rather wake up comfortable and tranquil inside a coffin than wake up inside a furnace to the horror of those watching my cremation as I try to scream for help in desperation inside the furnance but nobody will be able to do anything about it because i would die from the burns anyway!!!
@archangel (163): But..but.. you are an angel and can not die! I simply don’t get it! Are you immortal, oh i get it fake… fake …fake!
I have taphephobia thats why I am not going to be buried
Mary Norah Best, #3, had she not hit her head would likely have had an even more agonizing death assuming she had no way out of the vault.
Bravo, only on this site could you find such a tantalizing list.
About brain dead. Do you know that a woman can only give birth naturally when still aiive ? Do you know that a braindead pregnant woman can give birth ? Do you know that when you are brain dead and they need your organs, they will tell your family that you are dead ?
Years ago a friend was working at a hospital (med school) and he said there was a young homeless guy who was hit by a car and was going to die but wasn’t really dead yet but he had a heart that they needed for another patient, so they cut his heart out while he was still alive and it was still beating so they could transplant it to another patient.
Wow, that is horrifying…
Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel Roy Sipel
Terrifying prospect, i don’t even want to think of the panic, the fear of discovering you have been buried alive…Not even! I can barely imagine what the family who sees the body that was buried alive…what horror they must hav gone through…great list, very scary!
Man, don’t wanna be buried alive!
This has gotta be the creepiest article I’ve ever read. Knowing that these events were real, I just can’t imagine the horror these people have felt.
im agreeing with godless gambler (125) on the finger biting thing, the pure and unadulterated terror the people were feeling feeling in those tiny boxes would be so great they would do it from knowing that death isnt that far away and theres nothing you can do about it, that the worst feeling imaginable
My first wife ( Or Thrush, as she was affectionately known) told me i was going to be buried face down, just in case. That is one reason why she is now my ex. The second reason is; she will probably be buried in a Y shaped coffin. I think you can use your imagination for that one.
Kinda scared the crap outta me
, Well at least it cured my constipation!
Best. List. Ever. i love creepy stuff like this i probably won’t be able to go to sleep tonight but who cares? i thought number 3 about mary norah best one so frustraiting. i mean come on she broke her way out of a coffin started to get out, then hit her head and died anyway. but like OTP (166) pointed out she was in a vault and even if she hadn’t hit her head she was still locked in. the one about the little girl was really sad…
this one is right up my alley. gr8 list.
thank god i’ll be cremated when i die
Imagine: You're buried alive and running out of air. You actually KNOW your death will be slow and painful.
My thought about the pulled-out hair is either going completely mad from the situation (obviously, who wouldn't?) or making it easier to 'breath'. Being a girl, I sometimes fantasize about shaving my hair off in the summer so that I can breath easier. If that makes any sense at all..