Sources

How we research, how we verify, and how we show our work. Every episode is built from documents you can inspect yourself.

Our Method

Lantern & Bone does not rely on secondary accounts, popular histories, or Wikipedia. Every factual claim traces back to a primary source. This is not a policy we advertise; it is a practice we enforce. The difference matters.

For each episode, we begin with the published scholarship — the academic monographs, the journal articles, the PhD theses — to establish the historiographical landscape. Then we go to the sources themselves: the parish registers, the newspaper archives, the court records, the diaries, the correspondence, the maps, the photographs.

Where sources contradict, we say so. Where the record is incomplete, we say so. Where we have made an inference, we mark it as inference. The listener deserves to know what is known, what is suspected, and what is invented by later writers.

Example: Tracing a Single Fact

In Episode 001, The Rectory at Borley, we make the claim that Henry Bull, the rector who built the house, kept a diary between 1863 and 1892. Here is how that claim traces back to its source:

The Citation Chain

1.

The Claim

"Henry Bull kept a personal diary from 1863 to 1892, recording parish business and domestic details."

2.

The Published Reference

Trevor H. Hall, The Haunting of Borley Rectory (Duckworth, 1956), p. 23. Hall notes the diary's existence and quotes from it briefly.

3.

The Archive Location

Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich. Reference HD/11/1/1. The diary is catalogued as "Bull, Henry. Personal diary, 1863–1892. 3 vols."

4.

Our Verification

We examined the diary in person (or via digital surrogate where available) and confirmed the dates, the handwriting, and the content Hall describes.

5.

The Episode Citation

[BULL-01] Henry Bull, Personal Diary, 1863–1892. Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich. Reference HD/11/1/1.

This is the standard we apply to every claim. If we cannot trace it to a primary source, we do not include it. If the primary source is ambiguous, we say so. If the primary source has been misread by previous writers, we correct the misreading and explain why.

Recurring Source Archives

The following archives and collections appear regularly in our research. We list them here with brief descriptions of what each contains, so listeners who wish to follow our tracks know where to begin.