SYNOPSIS
When William Harrison left his house on a calm midsummer evening of 1660, no one would have expected him to not return, perhaps not even William himself. Equally surprising would have been the confessions that would follow of his murder from a trio of servants, one of whom was an alleged witch and none of whom can possibly have been guilty, given that the victim was very much alive, a fact proven wholeheartedly upon his dramatic reappearance, two years later. Later to become known as the Campden Wonder, it is the tale of a tightly bound mystery made up of lies, superstition and sensationalism that after 350 years is as bizarre today as it was in the seventeenth Century.