By Bath Paranormal
•
December 19, 2024
Duel at Dawn: The Ghostly Legend of Bathampton’s George Inn History - The George Inn sits on the banks of the Kennet and Avon Canal in Mill Lane, Bathampton, opposite St. Nicholas Church. There is some debate as to when exactly the inn was built. Some sections seem to have been established as early as the 12th century, when it was part of a monastery for the Prior of Bath. Though according to English Heritage, the current building is built from ‘coursed rubble with a Cotswold stone slate roof’ and dates from the mid to late 17th century, while the west gable is dated 1815. It was used for inquests, the Coroners Inquest of local murder victim Elsie Adeline Luke took place here in 1893. Hauntings - The George Inn is said to be haunted by the ghost of Viscount John Baptiste Du Barre, a foreign noble, who died in the last legal duel fought in Britain. A decadent man who held lavish parties, he was also fond of gambling. Following a quarrel over a game of cards, a challenge was thrown down and he and his opponent met on Claverton Down at dawn on 18th November 1778. Additional details- The Vicomte du Barre came to Bath in the summer of 1778 with his wife and sister, and a Captain Rice, an Irish Jacobite whose grandfather had served in the French army. They took a lease on 8 Royal Crescent, and arranged lavish card parties in the house, hoping to profit from the gambling mania that gripped the city at that time. But one night they quarrelled over the sharing of £600 that they had won from a Colonel Champion, who lived at 29 Royal Crescent. Rice threw down his glove, the challenge was accepted, and both men hastily appointed seconds and at one o’clock in the morning, a -coach was procured from the Three Tuns, in Stall Street and they made their way to Claverton Down. A contemporary account describes the combat as follows : — “Each armed with two pistols and a sword. The ground being marked out by the seconds, the Viscount du Barre’ fired first, and lodged a ball in Count Rice’s thigh, which penetrated as far as the bone. Count Rice fired his pistol, and wounded the Viscount in the breast He went back two or three steps, then came forward again, and both, at the same time, presented their pistols to each other, the pistols flashed together in the pan, though only one was discharged. Then they threw away their pistols, and took to their swords ; when Count Rice had advanced within a few yards of the Viscount, he saw him fall, and heard him cry out, ‘ Je vous demande ma vie,’ to which Count Rice answered, ‘Je vous la donne ; ‘ but in a few seconds the Viscount fell back and expired. Count Rice was brought with difficulty to Bath, being dangerously wounded, though now he is in a fair way of recovery. The coroner’s inquest sat on the Viscount’s body last Saturday, and after a mature examination of the witnesses and the Viscount’s servants, brought in their verdict Manslaughter.” The Viscount’s body was left exposed the whole day on the Down, and was subsequently buried in Bathampton Churchyard. His tombstone with an inscription that reads: ‘Here rest the remains of Jean Baptiste du Barre. Obiit 18th November, 1778’. Count Rice recovered, was tried at Taunton for murder, and acquitted. He died in Spain in 1809. At that part of the Down where the Yeomanry were formerly reviewed, a bank slopes towards the wall. It was on the other side of this wall, and a few yards from the gate, that the duel took place, where a stone slab marks the spot. The ivory hilt of the sword once belonging to Count Rice is now attached to the city seal in the Town Clerk’s office.’ Robert Edward Myhill Peach ‘Historic houses in Bath, and their associations’ (Volume 2) (1883) Thoughts - Could the 'spirit' at the pub be a case of mistaken identity? As from historical accounts, the Viscount died at the site of the duel, and there seems to be no link to the pub other than maybe that was were his body was taken for the inquest? Some accounts say a spirit resembles the Viscount, but so far I have found no images of him at all, not even paintings... Could the ghost/s at the pub be attributed to another person more entangled in the pubs history, I would love to find out more about the hauntings there and history. If anyone has anything they can add, please email me at - somersetparanormal@yahoo.com Photos - News article from April 1779 on Captain Rice's trial. The Viscounts Burial Record - Bath Burial Records #hauntedpubs #pubghosts #haunted #hauntings #paranormal #paranormalactivity #bathampton #thegeorgepub #duel #bathduels #clavertondownduel #spirits #supernatural #somersethaunting #somersetpubs