:INFO Spring Heeled Jack The first confirmed sighting dates to October 1837. A young woman named Mary Stevens was attacked by a figure that leaped from an alley, tore at her clothes with cold metallic claws and fled in bounds no human runner could match. The newspapers named him Spring Heeled Jack. For the next fifty years he appeared across England, always jumping, always gone before anyone could hold him. :IMAGE :STATS :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Jane Alsop] He vomited blue and white flame from his mouth. His eyes were like balls of fire. I screamed but he held me fast. :INFO The suspect One popular Victorian theory named Henry de La Poer Beresford, the Marquess of Waterford, a notorious eccentric said to have bet he could terrify people across England. He died in 1859. The sightings continued for forty five more years. :NOTE.half Historians have never found a credible singular suspect. The geographic spread and fifty year duration make a single human performer implausible. | :NOTE.half Some researchers treat the accounts as collective anxiety given a name. Others think the figure was real and simply never caught. :POLL What leapt through Victorian England? A human performer or elaborate prankster Mass hysteria given a convenient shape Something genuinely unexplained Keep it open :LINK https://www.google.com/search?q=Spring+Heeled+Jack+Victorian+England+sightings Read more about the case