In mid-April 1943, four teenage boys slipped into Hagley Wood in Worcestershire, looking for bird nests, when one of them climbed a large wych elm and spotted something inside the hollow trunk that didn’t look right.
At first glance it seemed like animal remains. But when they noticed strands of dark, curly hair and the shape of teeth, it quickly became clear they had found part of a skull. Startled and aware they weren’t supposed to be there, the boys put it back and agreed to keep their discovery to themselves.
That lasted until one of them, Tommy Willetts, told his parents, who contacted authorities. With that, investigators headed to the tree, where they found far more than just a skull. Hidden inside the hollow trunk was a nearly complete set of remains.
Examiners determined they likely belonged to a woman around her mid-thirties who had been there for well over a year. Based on the condition and the confined space within the tree, investigators believed she had been placed there in the not long after she died, before stiffness would have made it difficult in such a tight area.
Then, months later after she was found, mysterious graffiti started popping up on walls and buildings around the town. Written in large, uneven capital letters, asking a question no one could answer: “Who put Bella in the wych elm?”
It was the first time the woman had been given a name and whether or not “Bella” reflected her real identity or something else entirely has never been confirmed.
More than eighty years later no one knows who she was or how she ended up there.
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