The sleepy hamlet of Meldon in the Wansbeck valley a few
miles west of Morpeth was once the home of one of the county’s most infamous
ghosts, namely, Meg O’ Meldon. As with most such shadowy figures, the story of
Meg is based loosely on fact – in this case that of a misery old woman (and
suspected witch) by the name of Margaret Selby. There are spectral appearances,
tales of misfortune (and good fortune), as well as, of course, hidden treasure...
Margaret was the daughter of William Selby of Newcastle , who was a
well-known money lender. She married Sir William Fenwick of nearby Wallington,
and brought with her to the arrangement the estate of Meldon. This all happened
a long time ago – in and around the late 17th century – and well
before the construction of the current John Dobson-inspired effort known today
as Meldon Park . Anyway, the only facts that seem
to have trickled down to us from these distant days concern the infamy of Meg’s
great meanness and avarice. Any income which came her way was greedily hoarded,
being stashed away in any number of places across the parish. She was
understandably disliked and therefore (of course) branded a witch; and when she
and her husband passed into history, stories persisted of caches buried in
almost every corner of the district.
Such was her reputation, though, that the locals claimed
that her spirit continued to guard over her riches after her demise, wandering
from pillar to post, triggering tales of ghostly apparitions aplenty in its
wake. Meg’s spirit would travel hither and thither by way of a subterraneous
coach road, and she would often be seen on Meldon Bridge
in the shape of a little dog – or, indeed, ‘in a thousand forms, lights and
colours, flickering over the Wansbeck, or under a fine row of beeches by the
river.’ She would sometimes present herself as a mysterious, beautiful woman; or
sit in a stone coffin at the site of Newminster Abbey (water from this trough
was used to treat warts and other ailments).
Most famously, the ghost of Meg would sit guard over a well
near Meldon Tower , where she was thought to have
hidden a bull’s hide full of gold. She once enticed a local man to attempt its
retrieval at the dead of night, but at the point of success he shouted in
triumph, thus breaking the spell and causing the treasure to be dropped and
lost forever.
Understandably, any discovery of value in the neighbourhood
has been attributed to the legend of Meg. Once, when the ceiling of Meldon
schoolhouse gave way, a stash of gold coins issued forth from the attic,
sending the pupils into a ‘rich scramble’ for their unexpected windfall. Every
time a stash is thus revealed and put to some good, so the spirit of Meg rests
ever more soundly. And, though Meldon Well still hides its bag of riches, the
ghost of Margaret Selby has long since disappeared from the banks of the
Wansbeck.
This story shares many themes in common with the White Lady of Blenkinsopp Castle (and many other northern legends): avarice, witchcraft, a ghostly appearance, hidden tunnels and of course, buried treasure...
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ReplyDeleteMargaret Selby was my 11th-Great-Grandmother XD Great post!
ReplyDeleteMargaret Selby was my 12x Great Grandmother
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