The
rooks of Newstead Abbey
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The rooks
of Newstead were believed to be the souls of the 'Black Monks'
as they were seen to observe the Sabbath...
Washington Irving, the author of the famous American ghost story
'Legend of Sleepy Hollow' stayed at Newstead in the 1800s.
He noted with interest that each morning the rooks would fly
away, en mass, to sweep the countryside for food.
They would return in a similar manner in the evening, where
their discussion of the days events would echo around the estate.
Irving was told that the rooks observed the Sabbath; they set
out every day except Sunday, when they stayed in the abbey grounds.
He didn't believe this until he saw it for himself. Indeed it
appeared that the rooks visited their neighbours and friends,
devoting Sunday to their nearest and dearest, but didn't leave
the estate.
Irving tells us that the local tradition had it that the rooks
at Newstead were the souls of the 'Black Monks' reborn as birds,
still occupying their old abbey.
Indeed so strongly was this belief held that, contrary to common
country practice, the Newstead rooks were not shot, and were
generally left unhindered.
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