The Top 10 Historical Hoaxers
By ElicBxn
@ElicBxn (64169)
United States
March 31, 2008 8:25pm CST
How'd you like to pull one of these off? I think these are pretty clever myself.
If the pranksters among you need some inspiration for
April Fools' day, look no further than this list of
the most successful hoaxers from the Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography
Michael Moran
1: Horace De Vere Cole:Horace De Vere Cole was a man devoted to, one might almost say obsessed by, practical jokes. His most memorable prank was probably giving carefully selected free theatre tickets to bald men so that when their gleaming pates were seen from the Upper Circle a rather rude word could clearly be seen. Whether impersonating foreign dignitaries to the consternation of senior naval officals or shocking Edwardian society by performing astoundingly vulgar tricks with a cow's udder in public thoroughfares his was a life devoted to, and ultimately squandered on, the pursuit of japery.
2: Henry de la Poer Beresford
The wildly unpredictable third marquess of Waterford
was never conclusively linked with the mystery of
Spring-Heeled Jack, the demonic apparition who terrorised the women of South London in the 1830s but
'the Mad Marquis' certainly had the athleticism and
the temprament to be at the root of Battersea's own
Urban Legend.
3: Charles Dawson
Although he could still concievably been the hapless
victim of the Piltdown man hoax, it's perhaps kinder
to think of Charles Dawson as the perpetrator of that
celebrated piece of archaeological fakery. Hailed at
the time as ‘by far the most important ever made in
England, and of equal, if not of greater consequence
than any other discovery yet made, either at home or
abroad’ the Piltdown Man skull later proved to be the
combination of two quite disparate hominds. From its
'discovery' in 1912 to the exposure of the fraud in
the 1950s Eoanthropus dawsoni was considered as the
'missing link' between ape and man.
4: Elizabeth Parsons
Perhaps the most successful fake haunting in history
is the C-ock* Lane Ghost.. The site of the haunting, in C-ock Lane in the City of London, attracted many
curious observers. The Duke of York and Samuel Johnson
were just two dignitaries who were drawn to witness
the celebrated phenomena. They were, of course,
entirely fraudulent – the work of an eleven-year-old
girl called Elizabeth Parsons who convinced witnesses
by means of assorted scratchings, feats of
ventriloquism and bumps in the night that the house
was inhabited by the shade of girl murdered by a
former lodger. Her father ended up standing trial for
the imposture, and was sentenced to the pillory but
remained comparatively untouched by a sympathetic
London mob.
* I had to insert the dash "-" to get it allowed.
5: Mary Willcocks
On Good Friday 1817, a young woman wearing a black
turban and speaking an unknown language was found
wandering in Almondsbury, north-east of Bristol.
Convincing the locals that she was the exotic princess
Caraboo she was the centre of much excitement
involving dancing, swimming, and the cooking of
chicken curries. It was only in the June of that year
that Princess Caraboo was exposed as Mary Willcocks, a
former nursemaid from Witheridge. She continued to
trade on the Princess Caraboo name even after
exposure, finally dying in a houseful of cats at the
turn of the last Century.
6: Frances Griffiths
Frances Griffiths and Elsie Wright were the teenage
cousins behind the still-famous Cottingley Fairies
photographs. Although the pictures did not initially
fool the family members to which the girls showed
them, in 1920 they came to the attention of celebrated
author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Conan Doyle, who had
become obsessed with the supernatural after the loss
of his son in the Great War, made a cause célèbre of
the photos, which made it almost impossible for the
girls to admit their deception. The maintained the
veracity of the images for over sixty-five years, only
confessing that the 'fairies' were in fact paper
cut-outs in 1983.
7: Theodore Hook
Theodore Hook anticipated and eclipsed the modern
'unrequited takeaway pizza prank' by orchestrating in
1809 a day-long series of deliveries and official
visits to the home of one Mrs.Tottenham, who had
previously slighted the mercurial writer.
8: Elizabeth Crofts
In 1554, during the reign of Queen Mary I, a crowd of
as many as 17,000 was attracted to Aldersgate steet in
London to hear the anti-Catholic pronouncements
uttered apparently by an invisible spirit who became
known as 'The Bird in the Wall'. After several days
wall from which the voice appeared to emanate was torn
down to reveal a serving maid, Elizabeth Crofts, who
had apparently been persuaded by one or more
Protestant nobles to perpetrate the fraud. Despite the
harsh penalties for treason and religious
non-conformism prevalent at that time Crofts seemed to
suffer little punishment for her actions and was never
heard of again after the incident.
9: Archibald Belaney
Hastings-born Archibald Belaney had a lifelong
interest in American tribes of the Old West and it was
no surprise when he emigrated to Canada in 1906 to
live as a trapper. It was rather surprising though
that, after achieving success as an author under the
name Grey Owl he gave his biography to Canadian Who's
Who as: ‘Born encampment, State of Sonora, Mexico, son
of George, a native of Scotland, and Kathrine
(Cochise) Belaney; a half-breed Apache Indian …
adopted as blood-brother by Ojibway tribe, 1920 …
speaks Ojibway but has forgotten Apache.’ On 10
December 1937, on his second British lecture tour,
Grey Owl, the modern Hiawatha, gave a command
performance at Buckingham Palace attended by Queen
Mary, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, and the two
princesses. It wasn't until after his death that his
true identity was exposed, with Archie having decieved
readers across the English-speaking world.
10: Mary Toft
Mary Toft, born in 1703, was described as illiterate,
was of small stature, with a healthy, strong
constitution, and a sullen temper. Despite her humble
origins she was able to fool several eminent London
physicians including King George I's doctor, Sir
Richard Manningham, into believing that she had given
birth to a large litter of rabbits. Only when
threatened with dissection by a group of Royal
physicians was she persuaded to recant her story.
Toft's case echoed that of Agnes Bowker from Market
Harborough, Leicestershire, who was said to have given
birth to a cat. Unlike Toft, Bowker never confessed to
a hoax, and although deceit was suspected by the then
bishop of London she may, indeed, have been the cat's
mother.
Research taken from The Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography
I want to hoax someone! Closest I ever got was telling a guy that at the all girl's university I went to you knew if your roommate in the dorm was gay when she crawled in bed with you.
What kind of pranks have you done?
1 person likes this
3 responses
@winterose (39887)
• Canada
3 Apr 08
it was pretty interesting but hard to read, as I have bad eyesight and there was just so much posted together,
I love this kind of stuff, I could read about it all the time.
1 person likes this
@stephcjh (38473)
• United States
1 Apr 08
I know this is an awful prank to do on someone, but one time I called a pixxa place and had the deleiver 8 large pizzas with everything on it to a lady who rented a house next door to the one my mom and step-dad was renting out. She was a hateful woman and she caused mom alot of problems. She also cased alot of problems in the neighborhood. she was so nosey and would not mind her business and she treated children bad also. I had her eight pizzas delivered to her door. It was so funny. I thought that was very clever. I hope she had to pay for them too. I bet she didn't since she din't order them but still. I was still young and living at home when I did that. I would never do it again though because of the caller I.D. thing, but to me I got her back for the way she treated others and the problems she caused. I wanted to give her a little taste of her own medicine= "pizza" LOL.
1 person likes this




