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Spring-Heeled Jack
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Spring-Heeled Jack (sometimes spelt as Spring Heeled, Spring-Heel or Spring Heel'd) is a famous Boogieman from British folklore dubbed "the Terror of London", who is most renowned for and named after its reported ability to jump incredible heights and distances with absolute ease. The first reported sighting come from 1837 (although reports of similar phantoms date back as early as 1803) when Mary Stevens, a serving girl walking home through the streets of London one night, was attacked by a horrific specter that she claimed jumped out of a dark alley, forcefully kissed her and ripped her clothes, before scarpering when her screams attracted the neighborhood's attention. The next day a short way away, a figure jumped in front of a passing coach, causing its driver to lose control and crash, with the witnesses claiming that entity then casually escaped by jumping over a nine-foot fence whilst emitting a high pitched laugh. The attacker was dubbed Spring-Heeled Jack by the newspapers and the legend was born. Since then there have been multiple sightings (the last official being in 1907, but some claim as recently as 2008). Whilst most commonly seen in London, reports of Spring-Heel Jack range through Britain including Middleborough, Liverpool and Lincolnshire, and even as far north as parts of Scotland. Descriptions differ, but the spectre is generally described as being a tall, thin figure in a long black cloak, with clawed hands and eyes that "resemble red balls of fire". In some cases he's described as seeming gentlemanly from a distance, but possessing a devil-like face. In others he's described as wearing a helmet and an otter-skin cloak. Some versions go as far as to portray him as possessing demonic traits or being clearly inhuman. Many versions also depict him capable of breathing blue or white flames. Whilst generally silent, some reports described Jack as being able to speak English. Modern theories on who or what Jack actually was vary, from a pure Urban Legend with no backing in reality, to a malicious prankster using some kind of stage equipment to pull off apparently supernatural feats (possibly also with some press or rumour-driven exaggeration), to claims that he was some kind of cryptid, supernatural entity, or alien. Due to his hideous appearance and unique attributes, Spring-Heeled Jack became a highly popular figure in fiction, often being the subject of Victorian Penny Dreadfuls. Whilst his literary status has deteriorated since the turn of the 19th century, Spring-Heeled Jack remains a prominent figure in the media. Whilst traditionally a villainous figure, as early as within twenty years of the legend's appearance more complex or sympathetic depictions of Jack appeared. By contrast, some versions go in the opposite direction. Whilst historically there are no reports or legends of Spring-Heeled Jack being responsible for killing anyone, it's not uncommon for adaptations to present him as murderous (and potentially even linked to Victorian London's other infamous Jack). Not to be confused with Stingy Jack, a similarly named but very different Spectre from Irish Folklore. Examples |
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Assassin's Creed Syndicate: Two versions of Spring-heeled Jack appear as a side mission Jacob and Evie Frye can investigate. In the first, they're tasked by Charles Dickens to investigate people's claims of being assaulted by the phantom. They discover that he's a mere cult leader, possessing multiple costumes and is highly skilled at Le Parkour. The Fryes end his reign of terror by eliminating him and his followers. Sometime later, they're called upon again by Dickens to investigate another Spring-heeled Jack. This version, as well as possessing even greater agility and parkour skills than the assassins, is also seemingly capable of teleportation, creates doubles and appears indestructible. Proclaiming it will never die, it escapes the twins by jumping off the building. The story leaves it ambiguous whether this was a genuine phantom or simply an individual with incredible skills and magic tricks. |
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Fortean Times: This has been extensively covered by this World of Weirdness publication and is a firm favourite; based in London, this is pretty much a local story with the locations and the archives a short walk from the office. The magazine returns to Spring Heeled Jack regularly, as new almost-evidence turns up and as new theories are aired. The magazine has also covered similar incidents around the world, including one in Florida and — yes — in Joisey. | |
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Luther: Cameron Pell, the Arc Villain of the first half of season two, is revealed to have had a lifelong obsession with the legend of Spring-Heeled Jack to the point his parents sent him to see a psychiatrist. Following failing as an art student, desiring attention he aims to become a mythical boogieman like Spring-Heeled Jack and Jack the Ripper, donning a Mr Punch mask and going on a killing spree, believing it will immortalise him. | |
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Burton & Swinburne Series: The subject of the first book The Curious Affair of Spring-Heeled Jack in this technologically advanced alternative Victorian London, Sir Richard Burton and Algernon Swinburne are called onto investigate the Spring-Heeled Jack's attacks on numerous women. It turns out that Spring-Heeled Jack is a time traveller and the reason for this alternative timeline. The descendant of the man who tried to murder Queen Victoria, he went back to stop him but only caused the assassination to be a success. To try to undo the damage, he attempts to ensure his relative is never born but can't find the right woman. His incredible leaping abilities are explained as the result of spring-loaded stilts he uses to walk on. | |
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Night Shift: Strawberry Spring involves the narrator recapping how during their time at New Sharon College in 1968, they encountered a "Strawberry Spring" (an early false spring, similar to an Indian Summer) which brought a heavy fog which provided perfect cover for a Serial Killer who committed murders on soft, sodden ground without leaving footprints, more than ten feet to the nearest asphalt — the college kids talked about what a good jumper he must be, and so he was dubbed Springheel Jack by the papers. Several students were murdered, but the killer was never caught. The story ends in 1976 with the killer returning with the arrival of a new strawberry spring, causing the narrator to realize that he is Springheel Jack. | |
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The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion: The game is set in a Constructed World wholly unrelated to Victorian Britain but references the urban legend with its own legend of the "Springheel Jak", a legendary thief who lived three centuries before the game's time frame. One of the quests for the Thieves' Guild has you recover the legendary pair of boots originally belonging to Springheel Jak, which are magically enchanted to provide a massive boost to the wearer's Acrobatics skill, which governs how far and high you can jump. The boots also have a secret power to allow you to survive a very, very long fall in a later quest, which is why you need them in the first place. | |
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Whateley Universe: You Don't Know Jak, which is also a Epunymous Title, implies him to be one of the previous identities of the spirit known as "Jak", who was active from at least Geoffrey Chaucer's time, the 14th century, and has had many names, usually based on "Jack". Plus, he gave his host a form capable of leaping a good ten feet. | |
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Jekyll and Hyde (2015): Spring-heeled Jack was a shapeshifter who could leap over buildings and terrorised London, killing multiple people decades previously. Long thought to be dead he seems to make a return in "Spring-heeled Jack" with multiple people turning up dead with their organs missing. However, it turns out the person everyone thought was the killer, is really Jack Burton, an engineering assistant and the grandson of the original Spring-heeled Jack, who has invented a special suit that allows him to replicate his ancestors abilities, and is hunting the killer in an attempt to restore his family name. | |
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Pathfinder: Spring-Heeled Jack is a horned, hoofed and knife-wielding fey capable of prodigious leaps. He's a cruel and often violent trickster, and is believed to have come to the material plane from the First World of the fey precisely to seek a more "appreciative" audience for his mayhem — the natives of the First World, native to an ever-shifting reality and simply reforming after death, didn't think much of Jack's mayhem. In the physical world, where actions' consequences are far more permanent, Jack's tricks and violent sprees leave far more of an impression. He tends to hunt on the edges of cities until people get too suspicious, at which point he goes to ground in the wilderness and preys on wildlife and travellers. His violent attitude means that he has no company besides his knife, which he refers to as "Love" and treats like a living thing. | |
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Houdini & Doyle: "Spring-Heel'd Jack" sees Houdini and Doyle on the trail of the entity. Fitting closely with the legend, Jack is depicted as a tall dark creature in a black cloak, with burning red eyes, capable of incredible feats of agility and able to breathe blue flames. Starting with a businessman falling to his death, after encountering the entity outside his top floor window, London is soon thrown into a grip of terror when multiple attacks by the phantom occur, including another death. Doyle's research comes to the conclusion that Spring-heeled Jack is an omen warning of an upcoming tragedy, as sightings over the last century all occurred right before disease outbreaks and wars. Their investigation eventually discovers that the attacks were in fact caused by an unscrupulous journalist reporting on the story, having hired a Russian acrobat to impersonate the monster using circus tricks to mimic its seemingly supernatural abilities, to give him a story to grip the London public (and the second death being an accident). However, after being caught, he reveals he only started the con after the first death having never even heard the legend before then, with ending showing something moving across the rooftop of a building, implying the existence of the real Spring-heeled Jack. | |
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Skulduggery Pleasant: Dubbed "the Terror of London", Spring-Heeled Jack appears as a minor recurring antagonist. This version is a legendary Serial Killer whose magic empowers his ability to jump great heights and distances. He haunts the rooftops and streets of London looking for people to murder. Imprisoned by Tanith Low, he is freed by Billy-Ray Sanguine to act as his hitman, but turns on him when he learns of his plans to release the Faceless Ones. Returning a few times, he is finally decapitated by Tanith. | |
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Jackie Chan Adventures: Spring-Heeled Jack appears in "The Return of the Pussycat". This version departs greatly from the legend, being portrayed more akin to The Fair Folk as a jovial but malevolent, short troll-like creature, who speaks entirely in rhyme and with a British accent, possess the ability to track people by scent, and has literal springs on his heels enabling his incredible ability to jump. Imprisoned over a hundred years ago by Simon Magnus, he is accidentally freed in the present and seeks revenge for Magnus's descendent, who happens to be Jade's classmate Simone. He also expresses a desire to eat children. He possesses a weakness to salt, to the point that even a pinch will turn him into a statue, while a drop of water will free him. | |
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Scribblenauts: Spring-Heeled Jack is of the characters you can spawn. He's capable of flying, and will attack every other character, including the player. The game portrays him as an actual cryptid, rather than a human in a suit. | |
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Gunnerkrigg Court: Referenced in the chapter "Spring Heeled", which focuses on the character of Jack. Jack turns out to be able to fly, and flies up to a window in a manner that looks like leaping. | |
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Zombina and the Skeletones have a song titled "Spring-Heeled Jack" about him. | |
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Cassette Beasts: The Springheel is a bat-like monster based on Jack. Its entry in the bestiary mentions the Victorian character, hinting that he might have been a Springheel. | |
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes: In this The Asylum production Spring Heeled Jack is the villain, presented as a Steampunk mechanical man. He is actually Holmes' estranged brother Thorpe. | |
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Secret Histories: Spring-heeled Jack in a more positive portrayal is a recurring ally of Edwin Drood and the Drood family as well as romantic partner to the Bride of the Frankenstein. The two act as protectors to humanity with Eddie getting their help in order to put an end to the vile Family of Immortals in the novel, From Hell with Love. Jack is also occasionally mentioned in its sister series Nightside and even makes a brief appearance in the final book, when he's seen at a party necking with his lover. | |
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Green Antarctica: In an In-Universe Sherlock Holmes story, Sherlock and Watson discover that "Jack" is a sicaripodnote an Antarctic predator related to a kangaroo but with claws like a Deinonychus wearing clothes and with an amputated tail. | |
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Kolchak: The Night Stalker: The first episode, "The Ripper" features an interesting version. A seemingly immortal, superhuman Serial Killer is terrorizing Chicago, and his methods and choice of victims convince Kolchak he's Jack the Ripper. However, when cornered by the police on several occasions the killer displays Spring-heel Jack's abilities, leaping from fire escapes and four-story buildings without injury, and he also has superior strength. | |
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Myths Retold retells the story as "Spring-heeled Jack is Basically Batman, if Batman Were a Huge Asshole". | |
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Sorcerer Conjurer Wizard Witch: Jack is among the wax statues brought to life for a Historical Domain Crossover. Edwin drops a quick throwaway line about how much trouble he was to put down in real life. | |
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d20 Modern: Spring-Heeled Jack is a sub-variety of demon that terrorizes urban environments. | |
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The Springheel Saga: The entire series details the exploits of Jonah Smith, a Victorian policeman, hunting for the creature over the course of his career. Some of the events in the series are in fact based on "real" historical sightings of Spring-heeled Jack. | |
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Spring-heeled Jack appears as a supervillain in Knight and Squire, where he's presented as a demonic beast with grey skin, curved horns, burning red eyes and cloven hooves. He appears primarily as an enemy of the heroes Knight & Squire; having killed Percival Sheldrake, the original incarnation of Knight. | |
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Sanctuary: Spring-heeled Jack appears briefly in "Tempus". A humanoid abnormal with white skin who Looks Like Orlok and possess superhuman leaping abilities, Jack preyed upon humans in Southern England during the Victorian era, until Dr. Helen Magnus convinced him to become the first inhabitant in the UK sanctuary. | |
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Primeval: Whilst the boogieman doesn't appear in the show, he's is referenced in an episode where the team has to track down a wild raptor that's loose and has been killing several people in Victorian London, with the natives mistaking it for Spring-heeled Jack. Matt Anderson and Emily Merchant are also framed for the murders by the people. They eventually manage to return to the present and send the raptor back to its own time. | |
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