The Castle of Comfort Inn - East Harptree
East Harptree – The Castle of Comfort Inn
History
A hostelry since 1684, the Castle of Comfort Inn is believed to have earned its name from its role as a final stopping point for condemned prisoners being taken from Wells Jail to Gibbets Brow, half a mile away, where they were executed in the 1600s. The name itself is thought to reflect this function, offering a last moment of “comfort” in the form of food and drink before death.
During this period, the inn is said to have provided refreshments to prisoners sentenced by the infamous “Hanging” Judge Jeffreys, following the failed Monmouth Rebellion against King James II.
The building stands on a site of considerable historical significance. It is located near the Priddy Circles, prehistoric earthworks dating back to the Neolithic era, and lies on an old Roman road.
The inn also has literary connections to the wider Quantock Hills area, which is closely associated with the Romantic poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Dorothy Wordsworth, adding a quieter, more poetic layer to its long history.
Hauntings
The Castle of Comfort Inn is said to be haunted by the ghost of a murdered landlord, believed to be buried beneath the flagstones of the front bar.
He is often blamed for loud crashing noises that are reportedly heard during the night.
A cloaked figure on horseback has also been seen on the road outside the inn, described as leaping through a hedge on one side and vanishing through the hedge on the other.
In March 1879, a local man named Lewis Franks, aged 39, was crushed by his young horse nearby.
He was carried into the inn, where he later died, and some believe his spirit may also linger around the building.
See his inquest in the photos.
Source - Paranormal Somerset - Selena Wright
Rewritten
Images - Somerset Live & Know your Place 1894
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